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 |
---|---|
36653 | A. Allen( 1874:49) reported pocket gophers from Kansas under the generic name"Geomys?". |
37210 | 16| Aug.? |
37210 | 28| Oct.-Dec.| Oct.? |
11485 | He looked at his boys, then he turned to them nigger traders and yelled out,"What you all doin''here?" |
11485 | How old was I? |
11485 | My mammy said she''d never forget Mother Hulsie wringing her hands and crying,''Oh Lawd, what will I do?'' |
34429 | Common transient and summer resident in west, rarely east to Stafford County( breeding?) |
34429 | Five specimens known: four males, Morton County, April 8 to May 1, 1950, Richard and Jean Graber; one specimen( sex? |
34429 | One record: male? |
34429 | Recorded in migration( possibly breeding?) |
377 | If, in a bird- heart happy sunbeams shine, Why not in mine? |
377 | If, in a flower- face, beat down by rain, The hope of clear skies be in spite of pain-- If, in a flower- face a great hope shine, Why not in mine?" |
377 | Mrs. Mary A. Cornelius, while a resident of Topeka, wrote four books,"Little Wolf,""Uncle Nathan''s Farm,""The White Flame,"and"Why? |
377 | grow old before our time, Yet-- would we stray to Morning Hills again? |
40698 | Could any other result have been expected? |
40698 | Did sensible men at the North-- did the abolitionists themselves, expect any other? |
40698 | Is Massachusetts herself overrun with population-- obliged to rid herself of paupers whom she can not feed at home? |
40698 | Is Nebraska, which was opened to settlement by the same law, less desirable, less inviting to northern adventurers, than Kansas? |
40698 | Was it not well understood by all, that the Federal Convention alone had the right to fix upon the line of 36Â ° 30'', or upon any other line? |
40698 | Why, we might well enquire, if simple emigration was in view, are these extraordinary efforts confined to the Territory of Kansas? |
36559 | Elkswatawa, N- tha- thah( my brother), why do you seek my life? 36559 A native orator, speaking of the good qualities of his people, said:Are we brave and valiant? |
36559 | Are our women beautiful? |
36559 | Are we strong? |
36559 | But art thou hungry?" |
36559 | Did the Great Spirit manifest displeasure? |
36559 | Had bad spirits entered the brain of Pa- che- ta, whose noble deeds would ever after be celebrated by the nation? |
36559 | Had he taken refuge in the mountains of the West and left his helpless daughter at the mercy of the enemy? |
36559 | Is it a matter of surprise that he should oppose, with ceaseless energy, the encroachment of the white man? |
36559 | Might it not be more just to explain that daily baths in the river, in a cold climate, were the causes of mortality? |
36559 | That his talents should be unsparingly used in the hopeless endeavor to stay the westward progress of civilization? |
36559 | The Pottawatomie, disclosing a great wound in his side, said:"Did n''t you shoot an owl at your house, last night? |
36559 | The Shawnees said:"Can you show us anything better than we have-- good wives, good children, good dogs and plenty of deer?" |
36559 | The fourth night something touched him and said:"What are you doing here?" |
36559 | The gentle voice said:"Why does he who is the kernel of the snail look terrified? |
36559 | The question now obtruded itself,"What should be done with Maune ´?" |
36559 | Was all hope lost? |
36559 | What was the cause of that cruel, crafty expression? |
36559 | Whence came these legends and traditions? |
36559 | Where was the Kansas chief? |
36559 | Why is he faint and weary?" |
36559 | Will you pity my age and helplessness and release him to me?" |
13560 | 6"''What you doing here?'' |
13560 | 7"You do n''t blame me, do you, Billy, If I did go in and stay, Warming by your stove and fire, Just to hear what he would say? |
13560 | Ai n''t he here?'' |
13560 | Ai n''t it purty? |
13560 | Are you here with that-- that scoundrel, After all that I''ve gone through? |
13560 | Both wheel hosses white- nosed sorrels, Lead team of a dun and gray?" |
13560 | But this case is kind o''different; Though I ai n''t the kind that grieves, How you goin''to work that motto When the job gets up and leaves? |
13560 | Can this thing be true? |
13560 | Charging like you got a fit? |
13560 | Do you stand there, fiend or human, After lending him your hand, First to break an honest spirit, Then to steal away my land? |
13560 | Have you seen a prairie schooner-- Old style freighter-- pass this way? |
13560 | I''m in earnest; let me ask you--''Cause I want to reason fair-- What durn business has that rope- necked Johnson sneaking over there? |
13560 | Johnson ai n''t in-- just at present-- Wo n''t you stop and rest a bit? |
13560 | Must a man who loves a woman Like a devil''s imp be driven Through the tortures of damnation For a single glimpse of heaven? |
13560 | Now, ca n''t you see her? |
13560 | One thing happened since you left there That I call a burning shame-- Did you know that rope- necked Johnson Jumped your eighty- acre claim? |
13560 | Recollect? |
13560 | Think I''d let them take my daddie? |
13560 | Wal, let me tell you-- T''aint no use to take on so-- Where is Nancy? |
13560 | Well, some others left''fore I did-- You remember Mac, of course, How he got the moving notion When Bill Kelly missed his horse? |
13560 | What new game you playing now? |
13560 | What you saying? |
13560 | Where is Billy? |
13560 | Where''s the girl? |
13560 | Who''d a thought a man''s whole future Could get twisted up like this? |
13560 | Why, Billy, where d''you come from? |
13560 | You are friendly? |
13560 | You gone crazy? |
13560 | You remember on your birthday How I drove''round kind o''late, And we went to Donkey Collins''To a dance, to celebrate? |
39674 | And what became of the pig? |
39674 | Have you seen any Cheyennes hereabouts, gentlemen? 39674 How dare you deface one of nature''s castles with a patent name?" |
39674 | Out from Hays, sirs? |
39674 | --Indian and short for"How are you?" |
39674 | Again Buffalo Bill lifted his voice in the solitude, and again came an answer, this time in a form of query,"Is it developed, my boy? |
39674 | And why? |
39674 | But the reader inquires, What is the nature of these creatures thus left stranded a thousand miles from either ocean? |
39674 | But where was the doctor? |
39674 | Did you tell me by the old tune? |
39674 | Does it look like one? |
39674 | Does the sight appall and bring him to his senses? |
39674 | Echo answered,"Where?" |
39674 | How came they in the limestones of Kansas, and were they denizens of land or sea? |
39674 | In the presence of such heroism, what right had we, though bruised and tired, to complain? |
39674 | Is it impossible that vessels plowed this ancient ocean with a speed which would have left our Cunarders out of sight? |
39674 | Is the theory true that germs fall down to us from other planets? |
39674 | Lot''s wife, you remember, looked back,( What woman could ever refrain?) |
39674 | Mr. Colon, who had given a startled turn of the head over his right shoulder, exclaimed,"Bless me, what''s that?" |
39674 | No struggle was visible where he fell, and it is probable that they approached him with a treacherous"How, how?" |
39674 | On the plains the first question asked is,"Are they friends or foes?" |
39674 | Or that we gazed anxiously at the huge chief as he sat, silent and motionless, awaiting the approach of our guide? |
39674 | Or, do not the plains offer a strong argument on behalf of spontaneous generation? |
39674 | SHOULD THERE NOT BE COMPULSORY EMIGRATION? |
39674 | The cunning savage, seeing his foe prepared, approaches with signs of friendship, and cries of"How, how?" |
39674 | Was it impossible, we mused, that ancient mariners, with whole cargoes of bells, went down on this inland sea centuries before Rome howled? |
39674 | Was there ever another so big a bison? |
39674 | We heard the chief''s loud"How, how?" |
39674 | What if the bottom grass was full of creeping savages? |
39674 | What say you?" |
39674 | What would be thought of a hunter, in any of the Western States, who shot quails and chickens and left them where they fell? |
39674 | Why not desert the city and lose yourself for awhile in this great grand waste? |
39674 | Why should not the great public share in it also? |
39674 | Would he have fired? |
39674 | You did, eh? |
40574 | All right, Kate; you have grown into a kind of savage since your life with the Indians, eh? |
40574 | Are you going to ask to go with the party to the Elkhorn, Joe? |
40574 | Certainly; why not? 40574 Do you purpose to eat them?" |
40574 | Do you think the savages will continue on their raid, and come further down the Saline valley? |
40574 | Had you no family? |
40574 | Have you any idea how many of the savages there were in the band that raided Spillman Creek settlement? |
40574 | Have you ever had a personal encounter with any of the terrible beasts? |
40574 | How many families are there in the settlement? |
40574 | How many of the buffalo were killed after all that terrible yelling and shooting? |
40574 | I do wish that we had ponies,began Rob for the hundredth time,"so that we could go anywhere in a hurry; do n''t you, Joe?" |
40574 | I never saw an animal so frothy in my life before; did you, Rob? 40574 I suppose that you, mother and Gert, want to know how puppy- stew is prepared? |
40574 | Is that a fresh track, Joe? |
40574 | Kate, you must be very tired; do n''t you want to go to bed and sleep like a Christian once more? |
40574 | No more stealing pretty little girls from their homes, eh? |
40574 | What are Dog soldiers? |
40574 | What shall it be, hunting or fighting? |
40574 | What time ought we to leave here? |
40574 | Where did the herd go? |
40574 | Who is Charley Bent? |
40574 | Why do n''t the Indians raise corn? |
40574 | A Kaw brave told me the other day that there are a good many wild horses there yet; will you go, too?" |
40574 | Arrived in front, they all halted, and with their usual"How? |
40574 | Did you ever hear the Indian legend about the reason?" |
40574 | Did you ever see such a resemblance, Gert?" |
40574 | Did you ever think of that, Rob?" |
40574 | Do n''t you see his hoof- marks point the other way? |
40574 | Do n''t you think it''s delicious, Kate?" |
40574 | Do you know that they very frequently go mad, and then many savages are bitten, and die a horrible death from hydrophobia? |
40574 | Do you know, Rob, that the corn is a native plant of North and South America, yet it has never been found wild?" |
40574 | He spoke up boldly:"When do you expect to go, Colonel? |
40574 | How?" |
40574 | Looking at his wife he said,"Wo n''t you get this man a bite to eat while I''m catching another animal for him? |
40574 | Now, mamma and father, do n''t you think that I have made a famous ride?" |
40574 | Rob looked over at his brother and sarcastically said, as he held up his cat and stroked it:--"I say, Joe, who''s got the biggest fish now?" |
40574 | Suppose, Joe, we say the day after to- morrow? |
40574 | The wind is just right for the dogs''noses, though I suppose those beautiful hounds of yours run both by scent and sight?" |
40574 | There Joe suddenly stopped, and turning to Colonel Keogh, who had on the instant also halted, said,"Does n''t that look a little deerish, Colonel?" |
40574 | What do the Indians say about it, Joe?" |
40574 | When the band had arrived at the house the Indians dismounted, and after a series of"How s?" |
40574 | When you go fishing, why do n''t you catch something like this?" |
40574 | Who are the best men in this settlement, and where shall I go to warn them?" |
40574 | Wo n''t that be jolly?" |
40574 | Would they be able to hold out with ten miles of the same cruel lope ahead of them, before the breaks of the main Elkhorn would be reached? |
40574 | You know that, and I just bet that we lose lots of game; do n''t you?" |
40574 | You must have taken a great deal of pains to teach them to do their work so splendidly?" |
40574 | could n''t we have lots of fun,"he continued,"with old Bluey and Brutus, after jack- rabbits and wolves, if we only had something to ride?" |
40574 | exclaimed her mother,"if the Indians have captured her and carried her off, what shall we do?" |
40574 | mamma, do n''t you know me?" |
40574 | said she,"why did I ever consent to part with Ginger? |
1318 | Do you see that thing there? |
1318 | Have you any decayed teeth? |
1318 | Have you ever had the chicken- pox? |
1318 | Have you ever had the itch? |
1318 | Have you ever had the measles? |
1318 | Have you ever had the mumps? |
1318 | Have you ever had the thresh? |
1318 | Have you ever lost any teeth? |
1318 | Have you ever mined any? |
1318 | How did you happen to get caught? |
1318 | How long a term have you? |
1318 | How long are you in for? |
1318 | I suppose when your time is up you will hunt her up and fit up another suite of rooms, wo n''t you? |
1318 | Reynolds, what is the matter with him? |
1318 | Shall I give him John Robinson''s clothes? |
1318 | The old fashioned seven year kind? 1318 Well,"said I,"if this coal is about ready to drop, had I not better get out of here into the entry, so that I may be out of danger?" |
1318 | What are you going to do, Doc.,said I,"when you get out of this place?" |
1318 | What became of the tramps that came so near being compelled to suffer the penalty of your crime? |
1318 | What became of the woman? |
1318 | What did you do with them after you had stolen them? |
1318 | What did you do with your money, John? |
1318 | What kind? |
1318 | 3? |
1318 | After all, is not this contract system a regular jobbing business? |
1318 | After he had gone and my room- mate and myself were left alone, about the first question that George asked me was,"How long have you got?" |
1318 | Although in the garb of a felon, was not the vote I received a grand vindication? |
1318 | And what does the State do to put him on his feet or to give him a chance? |
1318 | Are these boys and young men not worth saving? |
1318 | But how can they accomplish this? |
1318 | By the way,"he continued,"are you alive at the present moment after all that you have suffered?" |
1318 | Can he ever be a man among men who has for a time been numbered with the debased of earth? |
1318 | Coming in contact with hardened and vicious criminals, what hope is there for getting these boys into the paths of honesty and uprightness? |
1318 | He then looked at me over the top of his spectacles, and, in a rather doubting manner, said,"and you really have had all these diseases? |
1318 | His next question was,"Are you a sound man?" |
1318 | How can one commit the crime of forgery who can not write? |
1318 | How long were you in prison, and what was your offense?" |
1318 | How was I to secure this? |
1318 | However deplorable the condition of these men while in prison, is it much better when they regain their freedom? |
1318 | I reached out my hand to him, and said:"Charley D----, do n''t you know me? |
1318 | I said to him,"John, tell me how many horses you have stolen during the time you have been engaged in that line of business?" |
1318 | I said,"Bob, is there anything I can do for you? |
1318 | I was never in such a place before, and I said:"George, had I not better get out of this place? |
1318 | If this be the real and true condition of affairs, what can be done to change them? |
1318 | Is it possible for him to be clothed in the garments of respectability who once has been attired in the habiliments of disgrace? |
1318 | Is the penitentiary the proper place to send those youthful offenders? |
1318 | Is there any hope for the ex- convict? |
1318 | Is this boy guilty? |
1318 | Now what does he mean by that?" |
1318 | Reader, did God listen to the wails of that poor heart- stricken prisoner? |
1318 | Reader, how would you like to dine in this condition? |
1318 | Reader, is it not a sad thought that these four young men, brothers, should spend ten of the best years of their lives in a prison? |
1318 | Reader, what do you suppose was the object this convict had in view in thus feigning death? |
1318 | Reader, what would you have done? |
1318 | Reynolds, is this you?" |
1318 | The main question is: Was he in the penitentiary? |
1318 | The question:"What shall I do in the future?" |
1318 | This farmer, like all the rest, put the question,"For whom did you last work?" |
1318 | We have controlled them, and have maintained a discipline second to none in the country, How did we accomplish this? |
1318 | What can be done to lessen this fearful increase of crime? |
1318 | What can be done to snatch them from a career of crime, and to save them from becoming miserable wrecks? |
1318 | What can they accomplish in so short a time? |
1318 | What could I do with five dollars, in the way of assisting me in getting another financial foot- hold in life? |
1318 | What did he hope to gain thereby? |
1318 | What else could I do? |
1318 | What frail mortal of passing time would dare lift up his hand and say, this poor wanderer is forgotten of his God? |
1318 | What was your life''s mission? |
1318 | What, then, are the remedies, as far as the prison system is concerned? |
1318 | Who can say these boys are vicious and hardened criminals? |
1318 | Who of us dare excommunicate him? |
1318 | Who was the monster that had committed this terrible and atrocious act? |
1318 | Who will employ a convict? |
1318 | Who will give him work to do? |
1318 | Who will lend him a helping hand in his struggle to regain a foothold in the outside world? |
1318 | Why are they so docile? |
1318 | Why is it they do not make a rush for liberty whenever an opportunity presents itself? |
1318 | Why was it that I was the only one sent to the penitentiary when there was the secretary, treasurer, and six directors equally as guilty as myself? |
1318 | Why was this? |
1318 | Will you do this for me? |
1318 | Would it not be better to give these boys a term in the county jails, or in some reformatory, instead of sending them to a penitentiary? |
1318 | You would decline his services, and who could blame you? |
1318 | Young man, as you read the history of this convict, can you not persuade yourself to let whisky and cards alone for the future? |
1318 | Young man, as you read this, had you not better make up your mind to go rather slow in pouring whisky down your throat in future? |
1318 | and who am I, anyway?" |
1318 | did you ever behold such a sight? |
1318 | is such a human being entitled to the endearing term?) |
19071 | ''How are we ever going to get them down?'' 19071 ''What on earth is the matter?'' |
19071 | ''Where are we at?'' 19071 And have n''t you ever seen them since?" |
19071 | And then the peccary flew away again? |
19071 | And what about me? |
19071 | Been theah long? |
19071 | Cyclona what? |
19071 | Did n''t he? |
19071 | Did the horse have its hide on? |
19071 | Do you know? |
19071 | Have a lif''? |
19071 | Have you heard the news? 19071 How shall we still the winds that the soun''of them shall not disturb her?" |
19071 | How shall we still the winds? |
19071 | If the Wise Men come out of the East,it was his last plea,"and build the Magic City, then you will come back?" |
19071 | If the crops succeed,he ventured,"and I build you a beautiful house, then will you come back?" |
19071 | Is this the place where the Indians pitched their tents? |
19071 | Is you gwine away, chile, widout tellin''youah black Mammy good- by? |
19071 | Of what, sweet? |
19071 | Seth,said Cyclona, to whom no dream was too fanciful,"are you goin''to build this house just like that one?" |
19071 | Seth,said she,"where is the room for the Prince?" |
19071 | Seth,she said, presently, touching him on the shoulder,"are n''t you getting this house mixed up with the House of the Lord?" |
19071 | Seth? 19071 Shall we have so many windows?" |
19071 | Tell me more about the Princess,soothed Cyclona,"is she so beautiful?" |
19071 | The corn is fine, John, is n''t it? |
19071 | The man who owns the ground on which they are to build the Magic City? |
19071 | There be''n''t many neighbors hereabout, be there? |
19071 | Was that to be his fate? |
19071 | Was there anything for him? |
19071 | We ca n''t rise all at once from our station in life, can we? 19071 What made you move, then?" |
19071 | What right has that Celia got to any money that comes out of the West she hated so, out of this wind- blown place she would n''t live in? 19071 What sort of man is the father?" |
19071 | Wheah did you come frum? |
19071 | Wheah do you live? |
19071 | Where is it? |
19071 | Where is she now? |
19071 | Where is the house? |
19071 | Who is it? |
19071 | Who is the girl? |
19071 | Who is we? |
19071 | Whut diffunce does it maik? |
19071 | Why do you call them cyclones? |
19071 | Why? |
19071 | Wo n''t Cyclona and father do till then? |
19071 | You goin''away, Miss Celia? |
19071 | You see that little dugout''way ovah theah? 19071 You will come back to the child?" |
19071 | After a long time Seth raised beseeching eyes to her in an unspoken question:"Does he breathe?" |
19071 | After a time:"Is it possible?" |
19071 | Already they had reared a town that dared approach in size to a city on the edge of the desert, but what had happened? |
19071 | And Seth? |
19071 | As for Seth, he could only articulate one word:"Why? |
19071 | Besides, had n''t he Cyclona? |
19071 | But how?" |
19071 | But what can you do for him? |
19071 | But what of the boy then? |
19071 | Cyclona put the baby back on the bed, faced the fury of the wind a moment, then cried out to it:"Why ca n''t you behave?" |
19071 | Cyclona, has no one written to Celia that she has no child?" |
19071 | Do n''t they? |
19071 | Do n''t you know the little baby has n''t any mother now; that she''s left him and gone away?" |
19071 | Do n''t you know the little baby''s mother has gone away? |
19071 | For mere amusement after the manner of children? |
19071 | Have I read that or dreamed it? |
19071 | How could He look after so many? |
19071 | How could we? |
19071 | How many months has she been away from him now? |
19071 | How much time would it take? |
19071 | How was it possible for her to remain apart from her husband and child so long? |
19071 | How would she receive him? |
19071 | If ever a man deserved a good wife it''s that man, Seth, and what did he get? |
19071 | If he put them here with all their faculties, was it His fault if they failed? |
19071 | If not, then why? |
19071 | If you could, would you build her a bath like that, Seth?" |
19071 | It seems like magic, does n''t it?" |
19071 | It was pretty cute of her, was n''t it, to jump Seth''s claim?" |
19071 | It''s awkward, ai n''t it? |
19071 | Or had He forsaken the people and the country, as Celia had said? |
19071 | Or would they always stop just short of it? |
19071 | Seth had listened to these stories undismayed; for what had they to do with his ranch and the Magic City upon which it was to be built? |
19071 | Should they not cling together? |
19071 | Some lives must invariably be sacrificed to the upbuilding of any new country, but why so many? |
19071 | The way the wind blew? |
19071 | Then, in the outspoken manner of the prairie folk he asked:"Who ah you?" |
19071 | Was Seth in the dugout then, or in that other room? |
19071 | Was he not very young to leave for such a length of time? |
19071 | Was it his Mother Nature, his Guardian Angel, or God? |
19071 | Was it the wind or his heart? |
19071 | Was not that a strange mother who could thus separate herself from a babe in arms; who could deprive him of the warmth and comfort of her embrace? |
19071 | What earthly father would create hearts only to crush them? |
19071 | What earthly father would demand that his children rush headlong into danger unquestioningly? |
19071 | What earthly father would knowingly permit his children to stumble blindly along dangerous pathways into dangerous places? |
19071 | What had happened? |
19071 | What if the ghastly spectacle should turn his brain? |
19071 | What of him? |
19071 | What sort of woman can she be anyway to leave a little nursing baby?" |
19071 | What sort of woman is she, anyway? |
19071 | What was it? |
19071 | What was it? |
19071 | What was it? |
19071 | What was it? |
19071 | When? |
19071 | Which way was home? |
19071 | Who knows? |
19071 | Who was Seth that he should be exempt from this law? |
19071 | Why had He created the Seths to weary for love of the Celias and the Cyclonas to eat out their hearts for love of the Seths? |
19071 | Why had He created this huge joke of an animal, part body, part soul, all nerves keen to catch at suffering, only to laugh at it? |
19071 | Why had He made of it a slate upon which to draw lines of human beings, then wipe them aimlessly off as would any child? |
19071 | Why had He made others all soul? |
19071 | Why had He seen fit to fashion some all body and no soul? |
19071 | Why had He taken the pains to fashion this Opera Bouffe of a world at all? |
19071 | Why had He thrust human beings onto this earth against their will, without their volition, to suffer the tortures of the damned? |
19071 | Why not stand it on oxen like that, Seth?" |
19071 | Why not use some other wood? |
19071 | Why should a cyclone that could snatch up a river and toss it to the clouds, fight shy of the forks of two? |
19071 | Why should n''t she hate the wind? |
19071 | Why waste his life, then, in dreams and fantasies, in regrets, and hopings, when here lay a glowing, breathing, living reality? |
19071 | Why? |
19071 | Why? |
19071 | Why?" |
19071 | Will you?" |
19071 | You know that, do n''t you, Cyclona?" |
19071 | asked Charlie,"or him?" |
19071 | exclaimed Hugh,"but must you have gold door knobs?" |
19071 | he asked dreamily,"how I shall match that rose color of her cheek, not havin''her by? |
19071 | he cried,"Must we bring cedar all the way from the South? |
19071 | he exclaimed,''is the matter with the roof?'' |
19071 | he mused, half to himself, half to Cyclona,"to build a house without a cellah?" |
19071 | she asked,"how ha''d the wind blows if you''ve got youah husband?" |
19071 | they asked,"because no cyclones come here?" |
12973 | ''But,''said Butler,''I''ll warrant the dogs are after a bear; do n''t you hear old Beaver? 12973 And they mobbed you at Atchison?" |
12973 | Anybody hurt? |
12973 | Anybody killed? |
12973 | Are you a correspondent of the_ New York Tribune_? |
12973 | Baptism, its Authority and Design;"From Whence Ami? 12973 But why do n''t you run away? |
12973 | But,says the old gentleman,"they do n''t allow convicted murderers to go about in this way, without a guard to watch them?" |
12973 | Can you tell me,he inquired,"where the prison is where these robbers and murderers are confined?" |
12973 | Did you come to make Kansas a free State? |
12973 | Does Pardee Butler ride a bay horse? |
12973 | Have you had your breakfast? |
12973 | Let every man look out for himself? |
12973 | Now,said the Judge,"was it whisky you bought of this saloonkeeper?" |
12973 | Oh, is that it? 12973 Wall, do n''t you know thar''s a woman thar that''s goin''to skin you?" |
12973 | Well, what did you come for? |
12973 | Well, where did you lodge? |
12973 | What is your name? |
12973 | When Jesus said,''Into thy hands I commend my spirit,''did he mean,''Into thy hands I commend my breath''? 12973 When do you do most of your thinking?" |
12973 | Who cares? |
12973 | Who''s your boss? |
12973 | Why did n''t you take it? 12973 Why, I look all right, do n''t I?" |
12973 | Why, what''s the matter? 12973 _ Are You an Abolitionist_?" |
12973 | _And what is your name?" |
12973 | After some desultory talk, they asked me:"_ Are you an abolitionist_?" |
12973 | Am I told that the safety of slave property requires that Abolitionists should not be heard in the slave States? |
12973 | An African lion hunter, when questioned,"Is it not fine sport to hunt lions?" |
12973 | And do not the people of freedom like it? |
12973 | And do not these considerations go far to explain the contrast that is everywhere seen to exist between Protestant and Catholic countries? |
12973 | And now, my friends, will you not demean yourselves worthy of the high place that God has given you? |
12973 | And now, my friends, you are laying the foundations of many generations, and will you not take heed how these foundations are laid? |
12973 | And what should I do? |
12973 | And what were the purposes of the Emigrant Aid Society that it should be such an offense to the people in Missouri? |
12973 | B., did the people expect me, uninvited, to pitch into a quarrel with which I have nothing whatever to do?" |
12973 | B., was it not a good sermon?" |
12973 | Be permitted to run at large among our slaves, sowing the seeds of discord and discontent, jeopardizing our lives and property? |
12973 | But I kept thinking of the question:"Are you an abolitionist?" |
12973 | But does it never mean more than this? |
12973 | But religious and thoughtful men looked far beyond this question of what shall we eat and what shall we drink, and wherewithal shall we be clothed? |
12973 | But somebody has to do this frontier and pioneer work; and might it not as well be me and my wife as any other man and his wife? |
12973 | But these men were impatient, and said:"We just want to know will you sign these resolutions?" |
12973 | But what of the spirit? |
12973 | But whence had he his knowledge of the mobbing at Atchison? |
12973 | Butcher''s rifle out of the wagon, saying,"I am going down there to see; who will go with me?" |
12973 | Ca n''t we submit this to the people, and who wants another?" |
12973 | Can you repent if you take God at his word and do as did the apostles and the primitive Christians? |
12973 | Did he see the folly of his course? |
12973 | Did they not have on their side the President and his Cabinet? |
12973 | From whence then came this overwhelming majority? |
12973 | Geary? |
12973 | Had I any right as a Christian and as an American citizen, when providentially called to this work, to withdraw myself from aiding in its settlement? |
12973 | Have they killed my husband?" |
12973 | Have we not made our constitution? |
12973 | He did so, and received a letter from Gen. Lane, asking,"How much will you pay for the place?" |
12973 | He said bluntly at the table:"Well, Mr. Butler, they treated you rather roughly at At- Atchison, did they not?" |
12973 | He took it and with something of hesitation said,"Wo n''t you come in and drink with us?" |
12973 | He works by_ means_:"How shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard?" |
12973 | Here they caught me by the wrists, from behind, and demanded,"Will you sign?" |
12973 | Here was Col. Sumner with his United States dragoons, and he was a man to obey orders; and what were we going to do about it? |
12973 | How did such growth in Kansas come to be? |
12973 | How, then, could I understand you as referring to anything else than to my own published Cincinnati utterances? |
12973 | I asked,''Who is that aged veteran? |
12973 | If I was sometimes charged with abolitionism, was not this man blacker than myself? |
12973 | If Protestantism seas done so much in spite of all its divisions, what will it not do if these hindrances are taken out of the way? |
12973 | Is it any wonder that the cause does not go forward faster? |
12973 | Is the moon less beautiful because the man in the moon does not wear a handsome face? |
12973 | Is the sun less glorious because there are spots on the sun? |
12973 | It is asked: What have we to do with slavery? |
12973 | It will be asked, What, then, do we gain who live in these river counties, and in these cities, by the passage of this prohibitory law? |
12973 | Jones demanded:"What''s up?" |
12973 | Kelley turned short on him and said:"Do you belong to Kansas?" |
12973 | Man has a spirit, and can man''s spirit die? |
12973 | Many will ask now, as they have asked already, what is the true and proper cause of all these troubles I have had in Atchison? |
12973 | Moreover, it forbade a farmer to manufacture_ hard_ cider from his own orchard, and would not this be a_ hard_ and tyrannical law? |
12973 | Mr. Kelley did not know me, and asked:"What is it?" |
12973 | Mr. Pomeroy came forward and shook hands with Sheriff Jones-- should not_ gentlemen_ shake hands when they meet? |
12973 | Needs it to be said, that to do this work well, the teachers in this school of the prophets have need to be well qualified? |
12973 | Now we believe that this man is an innocent man; and what will the Lord say to us if we turn him out of doors?" |
12973 | Now who does not see that to touch any one of these was to touch all? |
12973 | Now, who does not see that here is the basis of hearty co- operation, whether in the church or in the world, of men from the South or from the North? |
12973 | Of course we did not quarrel; why should we? |
12973 | One of their number bristled up to me and said,"Have you got a revolver?" |
12973 | One thought was ever present in my heart, how far could brethren co- operate together who had been on opposite sides? |
12973 | Paradise sometimes means the happy garden where Adam and Eve dwelt; but does it never mean more than that? |
12973 | Pardee Butler? |
12973 | Should a cowardly Yankee be allowed to defy them, and scoff at them, and call them"bull- dogs and blood- hounds,"with impunity? |
12973 | Should we fight, or should we not fight? |
12973 | So, granting that spirit sometimes means breath, may it not also mean more than that? |
12973 | Springer said,"I once heard him begin a sermon with the question,''Are we dogs, or are we men?''" |
12973 | The Free State men began to falter and to ask each other,"Is it not best to try the Governor, and see if he will be as good as his word?" |
12973 | The Sheriff had got as far as the door when the witness called out:"Judge, are you going to lock me up?" |
12973 | The first commanded universal attention:"Does the spirit die when the body dies?" |
12973 | The question, Shall slaveholders be received as church members? |
12973 | Then another company came in and demanded:"What''s all this fussing about?" |
12973 | Then the question came up, What kind of a raft shall it be? |
12973 | Then they had asked for a Southern Governor, for would not he be true to the South? |
12973 | They asked incredulously,"An''kin ye haul that thar slide up that slippery bank?" |
12973 | They say,"We beg leave to ask respectfully, what are the demands against us?" |
12973 | They therefore asked his wife:"Has your husband a rifle, musket, or fire- arms of any kind?" |
12973 | This I did, but my friend Mr. Snyder concluded:"This is a hard saying, who can hear it?" |
12973 | This broke the silence, and the men that had me in charge asked:"Did the Emigrant Aid Society send you here?" |
12973 | This question, however, we did often ask ourselves:"What had we done that we should be made to suffer thus?" |
12973 | This seemed very fair, but what did it amount to? |
12973 | Was it Lane coming to attack him? |
12973 | Was it possible that Lane was even now in the neighborhood? |
12973 | Was not Congress on their side? |
12973 | Was not Persifer F. Smith, Commandant at Fort Leavenworth, at least indifferent to all their deeds of violence? |
12973 | We ask, Shall a man expressing such sentiments be permitted to reside in our midst? |
12973 | We have come all the way from South_ Carliny_ to see a Yankee trick an''haint we got it?" |
12973 | We shall see how it will be?" |
12973 | Well may the writer ask,"Is it any wonder that the cause does not go forward faster?" |
12973 | Were my prospects blighted from this time forward? |
12973 | What could it be? |
12973 | What did it mean that citizens of Missouri should go over in force and vote in the Territory of Kansas? |
12973 | What did it mean? |
12973 | What did you come for?" |
12973 | What do you think he had found? |
12973 | What for? |
12973 | What is it we can do for you?" |
12973 | What shall we do?" |
12973 | What treasures untold reside in the Lord''s house, the Lord''s day, the Lord''s book, and the ordinances of the Lord? |
12973 | What was that?'' |
12973 | What was the meaning of the Kansas- Nebraska bill? |
12973 | What was the_ New York Tribune_ doing, that it should raise such a tumult? |
12973 | What were the intentions of the Black Republicans? |
12973 | What would become of Kansas, or of the United States? |
12973 | What would become of my wife and children? |
12973 | What would become of myself? |
12973 | What would the brethren say of me? |
12973 | What, then, is the remedy? |
12973 | When a good square meal had somewhat thawed them out, I said,"Boys, what made you quit swearing last night?" |
12973 | When he saw father, he exclaimed, with a great oath,"------------, what you driving my cattle off for?" |
12973 | Who were these men that had come to Atchison county to ride rough- shod over him in his own house? |
12973 | Why, then, were not these bloody counsels made good by deeds? |
12973 | Will you not go along with us?" |
12973 | Wood asked:"Is Jacob Branson in this crowd?" |
12973 | You the terrible murderers about whom I have heard so much?" |
12973 | Your name is Butler, is it not?" |
12973 | _ This was my only offence._ What must you think of yourself, sir, in this notice you take of this transaction? |
12973 | and Whither Am I Going?" |
12973 | and what shall I drink? |
12973 | and wherewithal shall I be clothed? |
12973 | that old building, falling to pieces, without either doors or windows?" |
12973 | you convicted felons? |
55720 | ''Twon''t be necessary-- wait a minute,returned Tom as he passed the old envelope to Jack and me with the query:"Do you men recognize that paper?" |
55720 | ''Why, man,''says Bob Chambers,''where''ve you been all this time that you ai n''t got acquainted with that estimable old gentleman, Kernel Rich? 55720 Ai n''t you never learnt how to keep beans from stickin''to the bottom of the camp- kettle?" |
55720 | Am I to have that fine horse without paying you a dollar? |
55720 | An now what are we to do with him? 55720 Bill,"I asked,"do the officers at the garrison seem to think there''s any danger of the Indians going on the war- path?" |
55720 | But how did the buffalo, man, and horse happen to die so close together? |
55720 | But what will you do for a horse? |
55720 | But, Tom,I asked,"what are we going to do with so much venison?" |
55720 | But, Tom,said Jack,"how can we work our passage in a bull train when ne''er a one of us knows anything about driving bulls?" |
55720 | But, sergeant,I asked Tom,"what will the captain do with the jayhawkers after he takes''em in-- take''em back to Leavenworth as prisoners?" |
55720 | But, sergeant,I put in,"wo n''t the jayhawkers down at their camp, waiting for their chief, suspect something wrong when he do n''t show up?" |
55720 | But, sergeant,inquired Jack,"what will we do with this feller? |
55720 | By the way, how is the old chief? |
55720 | Ca n''t we do something to help him? |
55720 | Can you do it again, Bill, or was that just an accident? |
55720 | Changin''the subject,said Jack,"it''s about five miles from here up to Charley Rath''s ranch, at the mouth of Walnut Creek; ai n''t it, Tom?" |
55720 | Could they be a reinforcement of Kiowas going to join Satank''s party? |
55720 | Did you find out anything about them from the storekeeper? |
55720 | Do n''t that beat the devil? |
55720 | Do you mean it, Tom? 55720 Do you mean that you can tell the points of the compass by a watch?" |
55720 | Do you mind old Rich, the sutler at Fort Leavenworth? |
55720 | Do you s''pose I''ve been a- cookin''an''eatin''Uncle Sam''s beans all these years an''ai n''t learnt how to cook bean soup without burnin''it? 55720 Do you think they''ll go on the war- path, Bill?" |
55720 | Do you think, Adkins,I asked,"that there is any likelihood of To hausen''s band moving up this way? |
55720 | Have you seen any fresh signs, Tom, that make you think there''s Indians about? |
55720 | He say,''Maybe so you lie,''said Joe, making the sign of the forked tongue; then continued,"Any mans in casa-- house?" |
55720 | How about tobacco and pipes? |
55720 | How about whiskey? |
55720 | How in the world did you do it, Tom? |
55720 | How long do you and Adkins expect to be gone on this trip, Bill? |
55720 | How long''s it going to take you? |
55720 | How many did you get? |
55720 | How many do you expect to find in the morning? |
55720 | How many of you will go on this trip? |
55720 | How would''Black Prince''do? |
55720 | How? |
55720 | I noticed that you do n''t carry any picket- pin,I remarked;"how do you picket your horse out?" |
55720 | I wonder if I hurt him much? 55720 In a buffalo?" |
55720 | In what? |
55720 | Is supper most ready, boys? |
55720 | Is that so? |
55720 | It''s a great scheme, Tom,I added,"and it seems to me there ought to be money in it; but have we the capital?" |
55720 | It''s sure a fine plan,said Jack,"if we can carry it through; but how much money is it going to take?" |
55720 | Jack, have n''t you been a little too brash? 55720 Now tell us what to do to get ready for travelling?" |
55720 | Oh, come now, Tom,said Jack with an incredulous smile,"you do n''t expect us to believe such a yarn as that?" |
55720 | Ol''Dave asked me:''Where you find''em?'' 55720 Peck, do you believe him?" |
55720 | So this new quartermaster is short of greenbacks and has to pay off in vouchers, hey? |
55720 | That would n''t be a bad idea,I replied,"but what shall we call it? |
55720 | That''s a good idea; but what if the mustangs wo n''t work? |
55720 | Well, Tom, what are the orders for to- morrow? |
55720 | Well, Tom,I asked,"what are your plans for meeting this emergency if you think these fellows are going to give us trouble?" |
55720 | Well, but did you find out how many there are in this gang? |
55720 | Well, who''s going to mind camp, an''who''s going over to the fort? |
55720 | Well,I continued,"I suppose each one of you is studying out how he can quickest blow it in before re- enlisting?" |
55720 | Well,said Tom,"why not compromise and call it''Camp Coyotelope''?" |
55720 | What are you going to do with him, Jack? |
55720 | What can we do, Tom? |
55720 | What did I tell you? |
55720 | What do you mean, sir? |
55720 | What do you mean? |
55720 | What do you take me for, young fellow? |
55720 | What does Dave say about the Kiowas? |
55720 | What is your plan, Tom? |
55720 | What seems to be their principal grievance against the white men? |
55720 | What will you take for it delivered to me there in as good condition as it is now? |
55720 | What''s happened? 55720 What? |
55720 | When are you going over to Camp Coyotelope? |
55720 | Where do you expect to find the Kiowa trail, Bill? |
55720 | Where''s your company, and how many of you is they? |
55720 | Whoever taught you that watch trick, Tom? |
55720 | Why not call him''Captain Tucker,''after the jayhawker? |
55720 | Why, Jack,I began,"how in the world did you happen to kill a buck? |
55720 | Why, Tom,asked Jack innocently,"do they catch otter with fish- hooks?" |
55720 | Why, fellows,whined the big jayhawker,"you shorely do n''t mean to leave me in this fix all night, do you? |
55720 | Why, he''s a bad one, ai n''t he? 55720 Why, pardner,"exclaimed Tucker in apparent astonishment,"you do n''t mean to say you''d be so foolish as to compel us to use force? |
55720 | Why, what brought you back so soon? |
55720 | Would you do that for me, Tom? |
55720 | Yes, but where? 55720 Yes,"he replied,"and I have been wondering at it and was going to ask you if many of the Indians have such vehicles?" |
55720 | ''What''s the matter, Shutts?'' |
55720 | ''You''re Tucker, the jayhawker, an''I''m Jack, the giant- killer''--an''was n''t that a big bluff? |
55720 | 60"It must have been the work of Injuns"154"Go to Tom"250 THE WOLF HUNTERS CHAPTER I TOM''S PLAN"Well, men, what will we do?" |
55720 | After giving him time to study the problem out, I asked:"Well, Tom, what do you make of it?" |
55720 | Ai n''t there some trick about it, Bill?" |
55720 | And I? |
55720 | And how did you get your clothes wet?" |
55720 | And then asked, looking anxiously into my face:"You savvy?" |
55720 | And then suddenly stopping to listen to a rattle of firearms out toward the wagon, he exclaimed:"There, do you hear that? |
55720 | As he took the glass to examine it, he asked:"How much is it worth?" |
55720 | As soon as the interpreter had moved up to him Satank spoke a few words to Mexican Joe, who asked in broken English:"Where your pardners? |
55720 | As the big captain halted a few feet from us he demanded angrily:"What do you men mean by drawing your guns on us an''halting us this way?" |
55720 | As we entered the dugout and sat down to dinner I thought to ask:"What medicine is it that you want me to get, Tom? |
55720 | As we gathered around the mess- chest I inquired:"When do they expect the volunteers that are coming to relieve the regulars?" |
55720 | As we trotted along I asked the scout:"How many Kiowas did you and Saunders''party kill?" |
55720 | Before he started: Jack asked,"Tom, what are we to do with Tucker''s horse?" |
55720 | But how can the blind lead the blind? |
55720 | But what could three of us do against a gang of unknown numbers of these lawless men? |
55720 | But why do n''t they come here, instead of going by on the trot?" |
55720 | By and by the lieutenant got his horse saddled an''called back into the stable:''Are you all ready there, boys?'' |
55720 | CHAPTER IV BACK TO THE BUFFALO RANGE As we started back up- town Bill exclaimed gleefully:"Well, boys, what do you think? |
55720 | Did you notice any bullet hole in his horse''s skull?" |
55720 | Do n''t you want to git rid of him?" |
55720 | Easy as rollin''off a log when it''s explained to you, ai n''t it?" |
55720 | Had I been dreaming? |
55720 | Had n''t we better take them fore wheels off and throw them into the river overnight?" |
55720 | Hang him in the mornin''?" |
55720 | Has he been any account to you?" |
55720 | Has the old rascal been here? |
55720 | Have either of you seen any signs of such a layout in your rambles up or down the creek?" |
55720 | Have you any objections to that?" |
55720 | Have you anything to eat?" |
55720 | He pulled up, sudden like, with a jerk, an''asked:''What''s up? |
55720 | How about old To hausen, Bill; is he still camped at the same place?" |
55720 | How are we going to stow''em away to take care of''em till spring?" |
55720 | How do you account for these misfit names, Jack?" |
55720 | How do you do it, Bill?" |
55720 | How do you read it?" |
55720 | How far off from the man''s bones was the bones of the Injun ponies that you found?" |
55720 | How is it with Jack?" |
55720 | How many skins are you going to get this haul?" |
55720 | How would it do to call our place''Camp Antelope''?" |
55720 | I asked:"What do you think of the outfit, Tom?" |
55720 | I exclaimed as I reined up and dismounted,"how in the world did you live through the fire? |
55720 | I kept asking myself:"What can I do to help them?" |
55720 | If he had a camp he''s had a pardner or two, an''what must have become of them? |
55720 | In reply to his question,"What do you say?" |
55720 | Is he any good?" |
55720 | Is it a whack, Cap?" |
55720 | Is that so, boys?" |
55720 | It was near the ranch, when Peacock had it, that Pawnee, the Kiowa chief, was killed by Lieutenant Bayard; was n''t it?" |
55720 | Noticing To hausen''s dilapidated old ambulance standing near his lodge, I said:"Captain, do you see that old government ambulance?" |
55720 | Now, do you men''savvy''all them instructions?" |
55720 | Now, what do you say to that?" |
55720 | Now, what do you say to that?" |
55720 | One of them called out to Tucker as though soliciting an order to charge on us:"_ Cap, do n''t you want us up there to settle that matter? |
55720 | Other mans? |
55720 | Our tent was fast becoming filled with bales of wolfskins, and one day I asked:"Tom, what are we going to do for some place to store our wolfskins? |
55720 | Savvy? |
55720 | Savvy?" |
55720 | See the big smoke over the tree tops? |
55720 | Seeing old Tom examining the wheels, I asked:"Well, Tom, what are we going to do about it? |
55720 | Seen any fresh signs about?" |
55720 | That is a pretty useful thing in travelling across the prairie, where there is no road or trail to follow?" |
55720 | The captain opened the door and stepped out, when we all three saluted, and as he returned it he asked:"Well, men, what''s wanting?" |
55720 | Then he added pleadingly:"But, sergeant, is they no way we could fix it so that me an''Peck could go with you on this round- up? |
55720 | Turning to us, he called out in a tone of indignant surprise:"What do you mean?" |
55720 | We''ve named the mules-- or Wild Bill did--''Dink''an''''Judy''an''the broncos''Polly''an''''Vinegar''; now, what''ll we call the horse?" |
55720 | Well, what''ll we do with these things?" |
55720 | What are your plans for getting these men there? |
55720 | What do you expect to do with yourself?" |
55720 | What do you say to it?" |
55720 | What do you say to the job?" |
55720 | What do you say, Peck?" |
55720 | What do you think of it?" |
55720 | What if Jack''s rashness should bring this gang of desperadoes down on us? |
55720 | What were we to do for bedding for the soldiers who had come away from the garrison in a hurry without any thought of being out overnight? |
55720 | What will you give me for the whole lot?" |
55720 | What''s up?'' |
55720 | When the examination was completed Bill asked:"What do you think of the outfit, Tom, and what will you give me for the whole caboodle?" |
55720 | When?" |
55720 | Where do you think we''d better locate our winter camp, Tom?" |
55720 | Where wagon?" |
55720 | Where''s Vinegar?" |
55720 | Who comes there?" |
55720 | Who do you take me fur and who are you, anyway?'' |
55720 | Why did n''t you kill him?" |
55720 | Why?" |
55720 | Will Adkins come, too?" |
55720 | Will you please tell us what yours is?" |
55720 | Wonder what''s up?" |
55720 | Would your men consider such a bid as that?" |
55720 | You savvy the philosophy of it?" |
55720 | an''then move out''by fours,''how do you suppose he did it? |
55720 | asked Jack,"an''the dead oodles of money he rakes in all the time? |
55720 | what''s this?" |
29129 | ''Hog- and- hominy,''how would that suit? |
29129 | And did they really trust you three boys for your passage- money? 29129 And did you shoot him all by your very own self? |
29129 | And do they always pay? |
29129 | And side- meat? |
29129 | And what Indians are there who use this trail now? |
29129 | And what''s them thar cattle follering on behind? |
29129 | And you are going back to Illinois? 29129 Are you a free- State man?" |
29129 | Baggage, sah? |
29129 | Baggage? |
29129 | Blanket Indians? |
29129 | Border Ruffians? |
29129 | Busted? 29129 But suppose the money should n''t turn up?" |
29129 | But the Smoky Hill is twenty- five or thirty miles from here,said Mr. Bryant;"why should they strike across the plains between here and there?" |
29129 | But what have the troops from Fort Riley to do with it? 29129 But you do n''t often trust anybody with cards coming down the river, do you?" |
29129 | Car''yer baggage aboard, boss? |
29129 | Car''yer baggage aboard, boss? |
29129 | Cash down? |
29129 | Changing legs? |
29129 | Clay- eaters? |
29129 | Could n''t we catch some of those leeches and sell them to the doctors? |
29129 | D''ye s''pose they break those up every day? |
29129 | Did ever anybody see such luck? |
29129 | Did n''t I hear you playing a violin in your room last night? 29129 Did n''t you ever see an Injun trail before?" |
29129 | Did war parties ever go out on this trail, do you suppose? |
29129 | Distressed gentlemen, do n''t you see? |
29129 | Do n''t you suppose your father could give it to him, Charlie? 29129 Do you call that dropping corn? |
29129 | Do you suppose, father, that they have from Washington any such instructions to discriminate against us? |
29129 | Do you think you could fight, if the worst comes to the worst, Sandy, boy? |
29129 | Eh? 29129 Have you seen a ghost?" |
29129 | How can you laugh at such a shameful sight, Aleck Howell? 29129 How do you suppose Uncle Oscar knew I was an Abolitionist?" |
29129 | How far down did you go? |
29129 | How many acres are there in a quarter- section of land? |
29129 | How many grains of corn to a hole, Uncle Aleck? 29129 How many men are there at the post?" |
29129 | I asked Younkins if he ever had any trouble with a buffalo when he was hunting, and what do you suppose he said? |
29129 | I wonder if the other fellows can see them as I do? |
29129 | If that''s the case,said the easy- going Younkins,"what''s the use of going home? |
29129 | If you like Mr. John G. Whittier''s poetry, why did you say he was n''t any good? |
29129 | Is it really music? |
29129 | Is n''t Charlie too awfully knowing for anything, Oscar? |
29129 | Just think of an Indian girl-- a squaw-- wearing hoops, will you? |
29129 | Lapwing? |
29129 | Leg- weary work, is n''t it, Sandy? |
29129 | Love''s Last Greeting,and"How Can I Leave Thee?" |
29129 | Lugged it aboard ourselves? 29129 Manhattan?" |
29129 | No neighbor nearer than Hunter''s Creek, did you say? 29129 No settlers anywhere?" |
29129 | Not so solemn, my laddie? 29129 Oh, you will all go, will you?" |
29129 | Only do n''t you think that''s a very long name to say in a hurry? 29129 People have to pay fees, do n''t they, Uncle Charlie?" |
29129 | Quindaro? |
29129 | Ride up? 29129 Saw off?" |
29129 | See here, Sandy,said his uncle,"how would you like to go to Kansas with your father, Oscar, Charlie, and myself?" |
29129 | Side- meat? |
29129 | Skip out of the place? |
29129 | So that is a dibble, is it? |
29129 | Stay? |
29129 | Stolen the money? |
29129 | That would n''t be a free country, would it, with one man owning another man? 29129 Then what made you talk like that, just now?" |
29129 | Things do not look very encouraging for a winter in Kansas, bleeding or not bleeding; do they, Charlie? |
29129 | Timber? 29129 Timber?" |
29129 | To Kansas? 29129 We do n''t cross the prairies as of old our fathers crossed the sea, any more, do we, Charlie?" |
29129 | We''ll chance it, wo n''t we, Aleck? |
29129 | Well, what is a quarter- section, as you are so knowing? |
29129 | What are these clumsy rings for? |
29129 | What are you going to do now? 29129 What did he do?" |
29129 | What if they have gone down to our cabin? |
29129 | What in the world are you two boys up to now? |
29129 | What in the world took you so far off your track as Fuller''s? 29129 What is all this about stakes and quarter- sections, anyway, father?" |
29129 | What is it? |
29129 | What is there west of this? |
29129 | What makes you in such a hurry? 29129 What then?" |
29129 | What will mother say to this-- if she ever gets here? |
29129 | What would you have, Sandy? |
29129 | What''s a dibble? |
29129 | What''s a lapwing? |
29129 | What''s that by the cabin- door? |
29129 | What''s that on your leg? |
29129 | What''s the great joke? |
29129 | What''s to be done now? |
29129 | What''s up? |
29129 | What, for goodness''sake, is that? |
29129 | What? |
29129 | What?--free, gratis, and for nothing? |
29129 | Where is that place? 29129 Where''s that?" |
29129 | Which way are you bound? |
29129 | Who is it? 29129 Who is this that rides so fast?" |
29129 | Who will go down to the post and get them? |
29129 | Who''s afraid? |
29129 | Who''s shot another buffalo? |
29129 | Why ca n''t we have some hens this fall, daddy? |
29129 | Why do n''t yer go aboard, boys? 29129 Why not call it the John G. Whittier cabin?" |
29129 | Why should they buy when they can get land for nothing by entering and taking possession, just as we are going to do? |
29129 | Why, did you notice, father,he continued,"that he actually had on high- heeled boots? |
29129 | Why, how could we exchange legs? |
29129 | Why, is there any notion of going back? 29129 Why, what on earth do you mean?" |
29129 | Will they come to- night, do you think? |
29129 | Yes, how many acres in a quarter of a section? |
29129 | You are a musician, are you not? |
29129 | Afraid of work? |
29129 | Afraid of work? |
29129 | And Uncle Aleck? |
29129 | And all these people that we are going to be passengers with for the next four or five days watching us while we did a roustabout''s work? |
29129 | And away from home? |
29129 | And take us? |
29129 | And, seeing that this is our first day out of camp on the last stage of our journey, suppose we stop for dinner at Indian John''s, Aleck? |
29129 | Back from''bleeding Kansas''? |
29129 | Besides, I do n''t believe he has any right to vote here; do you?" |
29129 | But it ca n''t be possible that they actually eat clay?" |
29129 | But what does Amanda say?" |
29129 | But what was this so hot in the mouth? |
29129 | But, then,"he added, doubtfully,"it is n''t everybody that would know which Whittier was meant by that, would they?" |
29129 | Ca n''t you give us something lively? |
29129 | Ca n''t you nail these down, daddy?" |
29129 | Charlie''s gun?" |
29129 | Could it be possible that anybody could raise melons so thickly together as Mr. Younkins had said he had seen them? |
29129 | Could they divide and settle this far apart for the sake of getting a timber lot? |
29129 | Dear me, why ca n''t the Missourians keep out of here and let us alone?" |
29129 | Did anybody ever see the like?" |
29129 | Did you come direct from Parkville?" |
29129 | Did you never hear of splitting rails? |
29129 | Did you notice how all those big fellows at dinner sat down with us and the stage passengers, and the poor women had to wait on everybody? |
29129 | Did you, Oscar? |
29129 | Do n''t you know that this is a solemn age we are in, and a very solemn business we are on? |
29129 | Do n''t you think so?" |
29129 | Do you hear me?" |
29129 | Do you really suppose that he will go? |
29129 | Do you suppose your uncle would take me along if Dad would let me go? |
29129 | Do you, Oscar?" |
29129 | Eh?" |
29129 | Ginger? |
29129 | Had he ever heard of such a thing? |
29129 | Had the boys ever killed any buffalo? |
29129 | Have you that beautiful hymn? |
29129 | Hear him?" |
29129 | Hey, Charlie?" |
29129 | How could they have left the trail without his sooner noticing it? |
29129 | How did that happen?" |
29129 | How do you suppose we are going to live if we have nothing to eat but wild game that we kill, and breadstuffs and vegetables that we buy?" |
29129 | How far off is that?" |
29129 | How is it with you, Aleck?" |
29129 | How is that for a tall story?" |
29129 | How much do you need?" |
29129 | How much does it cost in fees to enter a piece of Government land?" |
29129 | Hunter''s Creek? |
29129 | I think I heard your brother call you Sandy? |
29129 | I wonder what mother would think to see us at it?" |
29129 | If Indians could do that, why could not white men? |
29129 | Is n''t that so?" |
29129 | Is that all right?" |
29129 | It seems too good to have happened to us; does n''t it, Oscar?" |
29129 | Louis?" |
29129 | Louis?" |
29129 | Never you fear''the Dixon boys who fear no noise''--what''s the rest of that song?" |
29129 | Nothing worth saving?" |
29129 | Now, then, how much land should there be in a quarter- section?" |
29129 | Oh, would n''t that be too everlastingly bully for anything?" |
29129 | Or was it one of your brothers?" |
29129 | Oscar burst into a laugh, and said,"Wish you were an Indian!--so you could go hunting when you like, and not have any work to do? |
29129 | Ruined, daddy? |
29129 | Sandy had heard the shots? |
29129 | Say, I never do grumble, do I, Oscar?" |
29129 | See it bob up and down?" |
29129 | See? |
29129 | See? |
29129 | See?" |
29129 | Side- meat? |
29129 | So he said to his father, when the Ohio man had passed on:"If they settle on Solomon''s Fork, wo n''t they be neighbors of ours, daddy?" |
29129 | Something not quite so solemn?" |
29129 | Suppose we get away by to- morrow morning?" |
29129 | Suppose we take it up and put it somewhere else, out of harm''s way?" |
29129 | Suppose you try changing legs?" |
29129 | Tears? |
29129 | That''s the reason why they say he is sparring his way, is n''t it?" |
29129 | The boys looked at him with amazement, and Sandy said,--"Why, daddy, it''s the loss of a whole summer; is n''t it? |
29129 | The handsome clerk looked approvingly at the boy, and said:"Found your friends? |
29129 | The lively young darky came up again with,"Car''yer baggage aboard, boss?" |
29129 | The minister''s eyes sparkled, and he replied,"What? |
29129 | This is your brother, is it not?" |
29129 | To Kansas? |
29129 | We are Kansas Emigrants, are n''t we?" |
29129 | We ca n''t get along without it, and that is a fact; hey, Charlie?" |
29129 | We expect to raise something to eat, do n''t we?" |
29129 | What are we going to live on this whole winter that''s coming, now that we have no corn to sell?" |
29129 | What d''ye say? |
29129 | What does Younkins say?" |
29129 | What had become of the sheep? |
29129 | What is the use of borrowing trouble about that?" |
29129 | What should they do? |
29129 | What use was that confounded old quarter, anyhow? |
29129 | What was to be done? |
29129 | What will you do, you cheeky boy, if they ask us for our board in advance? |
29129 | What with? |
29129 | What would happen if that great mob should suddenly take a notion to gallop furiously in their direction? |
29129 | What would mother say if she knew I was lost out here on Flyaway Creek?" |
29129 | What would mother say if she knew it? |
29129 | What''s happened to stir you up so?" |
29129 | What''s to prevent a band of Indians raiding through the whole place? |
29129 | When the ploughmen met them, on the next turn of the team, Uncle Aleck said,"Did you catch the lapwing, you silly boy? |
29129 | Where be you from?" |
29129 | Where''s that, father-- do you know? |
29129 | Which way were the Dixon boys going? |
29129 | Who is it?" |
29129 | Who should be the lucky one to take that delightful horseback ride down to the post, as Fort Riley was called, and get a glimpse of civilization? |
29129 | Who would be willing to be left behind in a chase so exciting as this? |
29129 | Who would dare to ask such a great favor? |
29129 | Who''s afraid?" |
29129 | Will our three yoke of cattle do it?" |
29129 | Will you go too?" |
29129 | Will you return to Kansas in the spring?" |
29129 | Would he kill them, if he had the weapon to kill with? |
29129 | Would n''t Charlie be of age before the time came to take out a patent for the land? |
29129 | Would n''t it?" |
29129 | You ought to be ashamed of yourself to be so-- what is it, Charlie? |
29129 | Younkins?" |
29129 | and how many bushels to the acre?" |
29129 | are n''t they fine?" |
29129 | are you crazy?" |
29129 | broke in Sandy;"why will you always look on the dark side of things? |
29129 | shooting buffaloes, deer, Indians, and all that? |
29129 | what''s that?" |
26992 | A circular? 26992 After me? |
26992 | Ai n''t you goin''t''th''funeral? |
26992 | Alone? |
26992 | And you expect me to take a school that''s all upside down from that kind of handling-- and me without any experience? |
26992 | Anything more than usual? |
26992 | Are n''t you well, Hugh? |
26992 | Are you going to look for a girl to- day? |
26992 | Are you ready to dress? |
26992 | Are you sure you are not hurt at all? |
26992 | But how does it happen that the school is without a teacher? |
26992 | But why not? |
26992 | But, ma, are you crazy? 26992 But, ma, if a man loved a woman could n''t she get him to leave her free? |
26992 | Ca n''t I come, Uncle Nate? 26992 Call myself John?" |
26992 | Can I make them see it-- and see how? |
26992 | Can I put my trunk away? |
26992 | Can you hold his head,Luther shouted in her ear,"while I get him out of the harness?" |
26992 | Could n''t you stay? |
26992 | Could you get me a bite to eat? |
26992 | Dead? |
26992 | Did Lizzie''s baby make you feel that way too? |
26992 | Did it ever occur to you that you were a lucky dog to come into this country and run off with the nicest girl in it the first year you were here? |
26992 | Did n''t he ask you what colour to put on it? |
26992 | Did you ask Luther to the wedding? |
26992 | Did you ever have a little girl? |
26992 | Did you know Sadie was sick? 26992 Did you know that Hugh left a will?" |
26992 | Did you see Morgan to- day? |
26992 | Did your baby make you feel that way? |
26992 | Do it for? 26992 Do n''t you know me, Sue? |
26992 | Do they get along well together-- Hunter and his wife? |
26992 | Do you have to go, Hepsie? |
26992 | Do you know where those blank deeds are? 26992 Do you like to read?" |
26992 | Do you think they''ll give her the school? |
26992 | Dress? 26992 Ever see anything like''er?" |
26992 | From Hunter''s, you say? |
26992 | Funeral? |
26992 | Gittin''warm there, Elizabeth? |
26992 | Glad? |
26992 | Had n''t I better get down and scrub it for you with the brush? |
26992 | Has Jake left for good? |
26992 | Have you family ties? |
26992 | Have you met them yet? |
26992 | Honestly, Lizzie, why do n''t you bring him over? |
26992 | Hornby? 26992 How are you, partner?" |
26992 | How could you do it? |
26992 | How could you expect an old fellow like him to care for babies? |
26992 | How do you do, Uncle Nate? |
26992 | How do you know where our cobhouse is now, Lizzie? 26992 How is he?" |
26992 | How is she? 26992 How long is that child going to stay at Hornby''s?" |
26992 | How long? |
26992 | How old did you say the Ransom boy was? |
26992 | How''s that? |
26992 | However could you know that I was wanting you so bad to- day? |
26992 | I wonder if I''ve brought you out here t''get you wet? |
26992 | I wonder if they read in heaven? |
26992 | I''ve come to help-- where shall I begin? |
26992 | If that woman could make something that''d do, what''d she ask for one of them expensive coats for? |
26992 | If that''s so, why did n''t you come t''see''er? |
26992 | If that''s true, why do n''t you come t''see us as you ought t'', Lizzie? |
26992 | If you loved''er, why''d you let''er go down to''er grave a pinin''for you? 26992 If you''re sure of that, why do n''t you leave him? |
26992 | Into town? 26992 Is Mrs. Hunter getting down on our hands too? |
26992 | Is it goin''t''be painted? 26992 Is it going to rain?" |
26992 | Is it really you, Luther? |
26992 | Is it snow? |
26992 | Is it so, that Mr. Hunter wo n''t take you? |
26992 | Is it true that Hunter wo n''t take you anywhere? |
26992 | Is n''t he a fine, big fellow? |
26992 | Is n''t he cunnin''? 26992 Is n''t it like me to think you knew all about that? |
26992 | Is th''house done? |
26992 | Is that something I''m not to talk about, Lizzie? |
26992 | Is that th''damned fool kind of coat she was talkin''about? |
26992 | Is that why you insisted that I bring the baby? 26992 Is your name Jake or Jacob?" |
26992 | Is-- is it possible you all did n''t know Mrs. Hornby was sick? |
26992 | Lizzie, Bess, Elizabeth, or Sis? |
26992 | Lizzie, how do you feel about it? 26992 Lizzie, what''s this I hear about Hunter?" |
26992 | Lizzie, you could n''t tell Hunter, could you? |
26992 | Lizzie,asked Luther gently,"would you like to talk to me about it?" |
26992 | Luther, could you get Hepsie back for me, if you told her Mother Hunter was gone and would not come back? |
26992 | Luther, will he die? |
26992 | Married? |
26992 | Maybe you''uns do n''t drink coffee? |
26992 | Me? 26992 No one but Aunt Susan has ever wanted to do anything for me,"she said, and opening her arms held them out to him, crying,"Am I to be happy? |
26992 | Now ai n''t that jes''like me? |
26992 | Now look here, Lizzie, you''re goin''t''let him come? |
26992 | Now may I ask that what we have said be kept quiet? 26992 Now that you''re goin''away you''d like t''be on good terms with me, would you? |
26992 | Now, and what have you done? |
26992 | Of course he loves her; how could he help it? 26992 Oh, I kin do''rithmetic all right, but I ai n''t no good in nothin''else-- an''--an''--wouldn''t I look fine teachin''school?" |
26992 | Out of here? |
26992 | Sadie Crane? |
26992 | Shellers? 26992 Shellers?" |
26992 | Smells pretty good in here,he said, and then surveying the room in surprise added,"What on earth be you churnin''for? |
26992 | So you are the''Jake''I have heard about? |
26992 | So you got a man, did you? |
26992 | That you, Carter? |
26992 | Then ca n''t I be taken into town? |
26992 | Then why did n''t you go into the law? 26992 There, Mr. Chamberlain, was there ever another like him?" |
26992 | They ca n''t? |
26992 | Thinking about me? |
26992 | To Topeka? |
26992 | Was it too heavy? |
26992 | Was-- was my papa here then? |
26992 | Well, just tell him that ma sends the invitation, will you? |
26992 | Well, pa, how do you do? |
26992 | Well, what''s wrong? |
26992 | Well? |
26992 | Were your wife and Mrs. Hornby great friends? |
26992 | What about the land, Doctor? |
26992 | What are you taking me in with you for, John? |
26992 | What are you working on now? |
26992 | What became of the horses that day-- the ones on the binder? 26992 What did you say?" |
26992 | What do you mean by that? |
26992 | What do you think of them? |
26992 | What does it matter_ who_ is wrong in anything? 26992 What does possess you when you''re cross?" |
26992 | What have you done to him now? |
26992 | What in Sam Hill''s the difference how he views it? |
26992 | What is a man to do? 26992 What is it, John? |
26992 | What is it, John? |
26992 | What is it, mamma? 26992 What is it?" |
26992 | What is it? |
26992 | What must he have thought I meant? 26992 What university?" |
26992 | What was it you said? |
26992 | What was the row with you about, anyway? |
26992 | What will I do without you? |
26992 | What''d I say that Mrs. Hornby did n''t like? |
26992 | What''d you fall out with him for? 26992 What''d you say?" |
26992 | What''ll you do if all them eggs hatch out an''eat th''crops in th''spring? |
26992 | What''ll you do with all that bunch of cattle, anyhow? |
26992 | What''ll you do? 26992 What''s gone wrong with the school here? |
26992 | What''s he been comin''here so steady for? |
26992 | When did you lose the baby? |
26992 | When do you intend to let me get out of here, Doctor? |
26992 | When may I come to see you again? |
26992 | When''s it goin''t''be? |
26992 | Where are you going with a horse? |
26992 | Where on earth are you going? |
26992 | Where were you last night? |
26992 | Where you been? |
26992 | Where''s that baby? |
26992 | Who are they? 26992 Who put that home over your head?" |
26992 | Who''s dead? |
26992 | Who''s this plate for? |
26992 | Who? |
26992 | Why ca n''t folks belong to themselves? |
26992 | Why ca n''t you trim it when you see it runnin''up that way? |
26992 | Why did n''t you finish? |
26992 | Why do n''t she come t''see you then? |
26992 | Why do n''t you come to see me, Elizabeth? |
26992 | Why do n''t you do it? |
26992 | Why do n''t you let Hepsie finish them alone? |
26992 | Why do n''t you take them in and shut them up? |
26992 | Why in this world did you keep her so late? 26992 Why not?" |
26992 | Why not? |
26992 | Why of course-- why not? 26992 Why, oh, why do n''t you hurry?" |
26992 | Why-- what''s happened to me? |
26992 | Will it make any difference with my baby? |
26992 | Will she think-- John''s mother-- that we''re coarse and common? |
26992 | Will you ask Hansen to come over in the morning, then? |
26992 | Will you be going home by Hansen''s to- night, Doctor? |
26992 | Will you do the same? |
26992 | With that child? |
26992 | Wo n''t we have any corn at all? |
26992 | Wonder if Old Queen''s loose? |
26992 | Wonder what I done t''set that child t''lookin''at me so funny? |
26992 | Wonder what I done that set that youngster t''lookin''at me so funny? |
26992 | Yes, I know-- only it seems as if----"Well, now what''s lacking? |
26992 | You ai n''t goin''t''lay down rules t''him? |
26992 | You ai n''t gone an''tucked him into bed this time o''night, have you? 26992 You all do n''t believe in luck, do you?" |
26992 | You are n''t going to give us men all a knock, are you? |
26992 | You could n''t drive Patsie over for him this evening, could you? |
26992 | You did n''t bed them horses down did you? |
26992 | You did? 26992 You do n''t mean it? |
26992 | You do n''t mean that You''ll have to have them at your table day after day-- always? |
26992 | You do n''t mean that you are going to school again now that you are going to get married? |
26992 | You do n''t say? |
26992 | You do n''t tell me you did n''t know? |
26992 | You wo n''t be mad at me, Lizzie? 26992 You''re goin''too, then, Farnshaw?" |
26992 | You''ve bought them, you say? |
26992 | Your heart''s been pounding like that for seven years, you say? |
26992 | *****"Will you go over to-- to Mrs. Hornby''s with us to- day?" |
26992 | Ai n''t it awful?" |
26992 | Ai n''t you got enough t''do, child?" |
26992 | And when Elizabeth did not reply, said with his eyes fastened on Jack''s half- asleep face:"I wonder how Janie is?" |
26992 | And you are the Elizabeth these folk have been talkin''about? |
26992 | Are we going to have shellers?" |
26992 | Are you hurt?" |
26992 | Are you in a hurry? |
26992 | Are you preparing for the high school?" |
26992 | Are you really going away?" |
26992 | As Elizabeth turned to her hostess, the old man exclaimed,"Why, Gosh all Friday, what''s happened to your horse?" |
26992 | As to what he''s like-- it ai n''t easy t''tell what John''s like; he''s-- he''s a university feller; most folks say he''s a dude, but we like him?" |
26992 | Be you a duck t''be out on such a day as this?" |
26992 | But are you sure about Hugh?" |
26992 | But what could be keeping him so long when it was time to go? |
26992 | CHAPTER XXVI"WAS-- WAS MY PAPA HERE THEN?" |
26992 | Ca n''t you come soon?" |
26992 | Ca n''t you have a talk with him-- and get him to let you alone if you are willing to do the very best you can? |
26992 | Ca n''t you see that I''m happier than you are?" |
26992 | Can I ever repay what you''ve done for me?" |
26992 | Can you be ready by October?" |
26992 | Cheer him up,''and what am I to do?" |
26992 | Could it be that Elizabeth had been carried completely away by the storm, or was she buried in the hay somewhere? |
26992 | Could mortal man fail to appreciate the manner of the surrender? |
26992 | Could nature and fate ask for more? |
26992 | Could she attain to it? |
26992 | Could she help? |
26992 | Did n''t you see the look on her face?" |
26992 | Did you borrow this money in the firm''s name?" |
26992 | Did you ever hear of such a crazy thing as all them hoppers comin''down like bees? |
26992 | Did you ever see th''likes of them hogs? |
26992 | Did you go?" |
26992 | Did you say Silas wanted us to cut his too?" |
26992 | Do n''t you know your old Nate at all?" |
26992 | Do n''t you think so?" |
26992 | Do you suppose It''ll lay her up? |
26992 | Do you think he''s worse, Doctor?" |
26992 | Do you think my saying it made any difference?" |
26992 | Do you understand that?" |
26992 | Do you want to help milk? |
26992 | Do you-- would you like t''have''i m back? |
26992 | Doctor Morgan had known it all and still trusted her; likewise Luther; but Hepsie, and Jake, and Sadie? |
26992 | Does she come from some town near here?" |
26992 | Elizabeth asked, and then added,"What will he do for a room if I take this one?" |
26992 | Elizabeth looked through the book in her hand slowly before she asked:"Why do n''t you? |
26992 | Farnshaw?" |
26992 | From what principle was she dealing with it? |
26992 | Funny, ai n''t it? |
26992 | Give that woman some money of her own, Noland, and where''d she be? |
26992 | Goin''t''stay with th''Chamberlains long?" |
26992 | Had Chicago business men tried the methods on him that he had thought it fair to apply to his dealings with her? |
26992 | Had she known before Hugh''s death? |
26992 | Had the storm picked them up as it had done Elizabeth and carried them out of the wreckage? |
26992 | Have I made it clear to you?" |
26992 | Have you been reading to him lately? |
26992 | Have you chicken enough left or shall I bring up a ham?" |
26992 | Have you tried it?" |
26992 | He stirred the fire briskly, and remarked to Nathan:"Ai n''t that a dandy bunch of calves? |
26992 | He told me to harness Patsie, but she''s so lame I know she ca n''t work-- what will I do?" |
26992 | Honest now, why do n''t you do as a neighbour should?" |
26992 | Honest, now, do n''t you see yourself that if you''ve had things give t''you that th''rest ai n''t had that you owe somethin''t''th''rest of us?" |
26992 | Hornby?" |
26992 | How are you off for meat? |
26992 | How could I live without you?" |
26992 | How did it happen?" |
26992 | How did you buy them? |
26992 | How did you come to be out-- and without mittens too?" |
26992 | How did you happen to let it get so dull and rusty?" |
26992 | How do you happen to be taking the curtains down at this time of the week?" |
26992 | How many cows would you like for your peaceable intentions? |
26992 | How much did you say you owed now?" |
26992 | Hunter?" |
26992 | Hunter?" |
26992 | Hunter?" |
26992 | I got along pretty well at first-- I guess it was somethin''new--? |
26992 | I had a chance to get them at that Irishman''s sale-- I forget his name-- oh, yes, Tim-- Tim-- you know? |
26992 | I suppose there''ll be every kind of gossip?" |
26992 | I think it''s pretty, do n''t you?" |
26992 | I used t''think you''d have a lot t''learn after you was married, but you seem t''''a''learned it short off-- eh, John?" |
26992 | I want t''know why?" |
26992 | I wonder how he come t''be takin''''is man along t''town with''i m? |
26992 | I wonder how she learns everything? |
26992 | I wonder if he''s going for the doctor?" |
26992 | I wonder when they will be able to get back?" |
26992 | I''m going to be married to the man I love-- and I''m going to live right near you-- and-- what is the matter with us, anyway?" |
26992 | I-- I could n''t come to see her-- but, oh, Uncle Nate, may n''t I come to see you? |
26992 | I-- I do n''t know what went wrong, but-- but"--she laughed desperately--"where have our good times gone to? |
26992 | If I want to buy a load of hay or a boar pig, am I to say to a man,''Wait till I ask my wife if I can?''" |
26992 | If the interest was hard to meet now, what would it be three years hence? |
26992 | If you loved''er, what''d you act that way for?" |
26992 | Is n''t he?" |
26992 | Is n''t it a heavy snow for this late in the season?" |
26992 | Is n''t it sweet?" |
26992 | Is there still hope? |
26992 | It''s all right, is it?" |
26992 | Jake''s gone for th''doctor, you say? |
26992 | Just what do you mean by''out of here?''" |
26992 | Liza Ann had gone to the other room, and finding the way clear he asked in a half whisper:"Did you lame your horse badly?" |
26992 | Lots of folks''ll ask me questions, an''wo n''t I be innocent? |
26992 | Luther relaxed and lay looking at her for some time before he asked:"How did I get here, Lizzie?" |
26992 | Minister? |
26992 | Mrs. Farnshaw, called to the door by the barking of the dogs, exclaimed:"What in this world brings you home at this time of day?" |
26992 | Noland?" |
26992 | Now do n''t that beat you? |
26992 | Now if John Hunter gets his eyes on''er there''ll be an end of ma''s board money; an''then how''ll I finish payin''fur that sewin''machine?" |
26992 | Now look here, you''ve got a splendid place to stay; why ca n''t you be sensible and lay here and get well? |
26992 | Now? |
26992 | Oh, why do I have to be mixed up with things I ca n''t help-- and-- and have him cross, and everything?" |
26992 | Sadie Hansen met Elizabeth at the door with such evident uneasiness that Elizabeth was moved to ask:"Luther''s all right, Sadie?" |
26992 | Say, do n''t you love''i m any more, Lizzie?" |
26992 | Say, will you tell Elizabeth about the horse? |
26992 | Say, you do n''t know what he wants of Hansen do you?" |
26992 | Shall I save you the pig''s tail?" |
26992 | She earnestly desired John''s presence, and yet-- could it be done? |
26992 | She never told me she was glad she lost it, but how in God''s name could she be otherwise? |
26992 | She told a lot of things that showed it''s true, about folks we know? |
26992 | She was going away to be happy: why not do this thing her mother asked before she went? |
26992 | Should she explain the case fully? |
26992 | Silas introduced them promptly and added with a grin:"You''ve heard of folks that did n''t know enough t''come in out of th''rain? |
26992 | Started an hour an''a half ago? |
26992 | Sue Hornby put''er hand on my arm an''said, so kind like,''Sadie, ai n''t you''fraid t''talk that way an''you in that fix?'' |
26992 | Suspicion crawled through his brain, leaving her slimy trail; why had there been need of secrecy? |
26992 | Tell''i m I said so, will you?" |
26992 | Th''worst of it was that I''d told''i m how-- what a difference it made, and he was that anxious----?" |
26992 | The boy looked surprised and asked with some curiosity,"What do you want to go for? |
26992 | The storm of protest was expected, and when Mrs. Farnshaw broke out with:"Now, pa, you ai n''t never goin''t''mortgage th''farm, are you?" |
26992 | The thing she must do she knew was right; could she make the manner of the doing of it right also? |
26992 | The wagon was in painful evidence, but Elizabeth? |
26992 | To fill out the term?" |
26992 | To how large a degree did these warnings apply to all? |
26992 | Was he the old John, who would fly out impulsively and cover them all with disgrace if she told him? |
26992 | Was it orderly now that its guardian angel was gone? |
26992 | Was it right to permit a child to come when joy had gone out of relations between its parents? |
26992 | Was it the weariness of the struggle to live, or was it sex, or was it the evil domination of men? |
26992 | Was it worth the price? |
26992 | We go along day after day hating our work, scolding and fretting at each other, and never really happy, any of us, and I''ve been wondering why?" |
26992 | What am I to do?" |
26992 | What business had that woman studying him or his moods? |
26992 | What could the girl do? |
26992 | What did I do it for? |
26992 | What did you do it for?" |
26992 | What do you expect me to do? |
26992 | What do you know about a man''s business?" |
26992 | What do you think?" |
26992 | What do you want of that Swede?" |
26992 | What had she done? |
26992 | What has become of you?" |
26992 | What has happened?" |
26992 | What have I done to offend you?" |
26992 | What have you been doing of late?" |
26992 | What have you done?" |
26992 | What hurts?" |
26992 | What made you let it get s''ripe for? |
26992 | What must he think of me as a woman? |
26992 | What should she do? |
26992 | What th''devil''s a man to do?" |
26992 | What time shall I come back for you?" |
26992 | What was happening? |
26992 | What was he embarrassed about? |
26992 | What was she to do? |
26992 | What was to be done? |
26992 | What was to be her fate? |
26992 | What was your idea, anyhow?" |
26992 | What would become of them if the interest were not paid? |
26992 | What''d y''you do with th''coat you had?" |
26992 | What''d you do with th''horses?" |
26992 | What''ll you do with all your stock?" |
26992 | What''ll you take for it?" |
26992 | What''s become of th''buggy, Hunter?" |
26992 | What''s happened to the hogs?" |
26992 | What''s on his nerves, anyhow?" |
26992 | What''s th''price of your friendship, anyhow? |
26992 | What''s that?" |
26992 | What_ could_ she do? |
26992 | When did John go to see the men about it? |
26992 | When for sheer want of breath Elizabeth stopped and looked at Hugh Noland inquiringly, he asked eagerly:"Could we?" |
26992 | When his mother did not answer, he crept closer and, laying his head against her arm, said wistfully:"Mamma, will my papa ever come back to us?" |
26992 | When was you called-- an hour an''a half ago? |
26992 | When will I be well enough to go to Mitchell County?" |
26992 | Where in the world did you come from?" |
26992 | Where was Elizabeth? |
26992 | Who is it?" |
26992 | Who''s got it?" |
26992 | Why be unpleasant about it? |
26992 | Why could he not have stopped on the way to town as well as now on the way home? |
26992 | Why do n''t you ever take Mrs. Hunter and th''baby and go t''meetin''?" |
26992 | Why do n''t you invest in land and have your own home right from the start? |
26992 | Why do n''t you say preacher, like the rest of your folks? |
26992 | Why do n''t you strike out on a new tack and say you wo n''t do it when he makes unreasonable demands? |
26992 | Why had all these people been told, and he, John Hunter alone, left out? |
26992 | Why must people have money? |
26992 | Why must she have this undesired child? |
26992 | Why not ask her own family, the Chamberlains, Aunt Susan''s, and Luther Hansen''s to a Thanksgiving dinner? |
26992 | Why should John explain his plans to her? |
26992 | Why was she vexed with such unheard of temptations? |
26992 | Why wo n''t you let me help you? |
26992 | Why, indeed? |
26992 | Why-- what? |
26992 | Why?" |
26992 | Will it be white and have green shutters?" |
26992 | Will it have to be appraised and sold?" |
26992 | Will we ever be like they are?" |
26992 | Will you go along mother, or will you stay at home after climbing these drifts all day? |
26992 | Will you let me? |
26992 | Wo n''t you be friends with me?" |
26992 | Worse yet, what must he think of me as a wife?" |
26992 | Would you''a''come if you''d''a''known, Lizzie?" |
26992 | You could n''t git Hornby, could you?" |
26992 | You do n''t know of a place where a man could work for his board for a month till the spring seeding and things come on do you?" |
26992 | You get her the school; but how does she come to have that air away out here? |
26992 | You nursed him immediately on getting home?" |
26992 | You told me-- you told me that-- oh dear, what''s the use to tell you what you said?" |
26992 | You wo n''t mind making the change, will you?" |
26992 | You would n''t have me leave grandma to do all the work alone, would you?" |
26992 | You''re not letting him run you into debt, are you?" |
26992 | _ I won!_ Last Saturday I sold all I had, and now while I can come to you right, I want to ask if you will take me? |
26992 | and yet----""And yet, what?" |
26992 | do you love me, really?" |
26992 | do you realize what you are doing? |
26992 | how can I do right if you take it this way?" |
26992 | secondly, why had Luther Hansen been told? |
26992 | she exclaimed in new distress,"wo n''t I ever see you again?" |
26992 | she replied, backing her horse around so that the rain would come from behind,"Tell me, does the school board meet to- night?" |
26992 | the farmer replied,"that''s th''way th''wind blows, is it? |
26992 | thirdly, why had Elizabeth declined just now to discuss it with him after knowing about it for some time? |
26992 | what did you bring it up for to- day? |
26992 | wo n''t it make th''Cranes jealous?" |
30629 | A party? 30629 Alice,"said Marian, caressing some of the dainty lingerie,"who is going to iron all these puffs and ruffles? |
30629 | And do n''t you think you deserve to be laughed at, for doing anything so foolish? |
30629 | And if she does n''t? |
30629 | And now? |
30629 | And that wooden building over yonder? |
30629 | And the boy? |
30629 | And write something, too, wo n''t you? 30629 And your father is n''t your father, Sherm?--or your mother or Sue or Grace?" |
30629 | Are n''t they lovely, Jilly? |
30629 | Are n''t you afraid you will hurt somebody''s feelings with all these pranks? 30629 Are they wearing hoops pretty generally?" |
30629 | Are what, Katy? |
30629 | Are you quite sure they are safe with the guns? 30629 Are you thinking of sending her next year?" |
30629 | Bet you do-- honest, do n''t you? |
30629 | Bread? 30629 But I thought he was just going to the Naval Academy-- why does he have to be sworn in as if he were enlisting?" |
30629 | But what did your Mother say, dear? |
30629 | But your school begins soon, does n''t it? |
30629 | Ca n''t a fellow laugh without having to give an account of himself? |
30629 | Ca n''t you think of something, Sherm? |
30629 | Can I be of any service, Miss? |
30629 | Can I go by the pasture, Father? 30629 Can we all go?" |
30629 | Can you be content to be our boy this winter, Sherm? |
30629 | Can you see the time? |
30629 | Can you stick it out a few minutes longer, Marian? |
30629 | Can you tell where we are? |
30629 | Captain Clarke,said Jane rather timidly after they had gone,"would you mind showing me that picture of your baby again?" |
30629 | Captain-- Captain Clarke, what is it? |
30629 | Carol? |
30629 | Carol?--writing to me? 30629 Centerville? |
30629 | Chicken Little Jane Morton, have n''t you had any raising? 30629 Chicken Little, I hate to mention it, but is there anything left on the ranch to eat? |
30629 | Chicken Little, do I look hungry enough to steal your bread? 30629 Chicken Little,"he called,"do you mind getting out and seeing if you can tell us where we are?" |
30629 | Chicken Little-- O Chicken Little, are you very mad? 30629 Dear me, I wonder what we can do next?" |
30629 | Dear me, Jane, do you get all that out of this poor little comic opera? 30629 Dear me, are n''t they in the closet?" |
30629 | Dear me,said Katy,"how big do little pigs have to be before they can be turned into the corral with the others?" |
30629 | Did Mother give you a new bible? |
30629 | Did it make them really sorry? 30629 Did n''t you truly mind my coming? |
30629 | Did you have a good time at Mamie''s last night? |
30629 | Did you really? |
30629 | Did you ride him? |
30629 | Did you take the bread? |
30629 | Did you take the whole baking? |
30629 | Do n''t want to? 30629 Do n''t you remember that letter I got from Carol? |
30629 | Do n''t you want me to tell you? |
30629 | Do n''t you wish you knew? |
30629 | Do they really think somebody got burned? |
30629 | Do you like that sort of stuff, Chicken Little? |
30629 | Do you really, truly, mean it, Father? |
30629 | Do you suppose we could ride backwards? |
30629 | Do you suppose we''ll get as much as five dollars apiece from those pigs? |
30629 | Do you suppose you could take Calico and catch him? |
30629 | Do you think he is sufficiently qualified to row the_ Chicken Little_, Captain Clarke? |
30629 | Do you think you ought to go, Sherm? |
30629 | Do you want them all here at the house or shall we put part of them down at the spring? |
30629 | Do you want to be an artist, Sherm? |
30629 | Does Mother know? |
30629 | Does your mother know they have this sort of games? |
30629 | Dressing up, Chicken Little? 30629 Ernest, tell me-- what''s the matter?" |
30629 | Ernest,said his father the Saturday before his departure,"will you take one farewell turn at herding to- morrow? |
30629 | Father? |
30629 | Frank? 30629 From Alice? |
30629 | Glad to have her out of the way, are n''t you, Mother? 30629 Golly, I did, did n''t I? |
30629 | Grant Stowe? |
30629 | Habit? |
30629 | Have n''t you any idea where we are, Dart? |
30629 | Have they all written something-- specially for you, Chicken Little? 30629 Have you a gun with you?" |
30629 | Hello, Little Neighbor, is the piebald behaving himself? |
30629 | Here, Mother, where did you get this teetotum? 30629 Here, where do I come in?" |
30629 | Hermit''s cave? 30629 Hm- n, are n''t you going to put any medicine on it?" |
30629 | Hold still there, ca n''t you? 30629 Home?" |
30629 | How did you keep them fresh so long? |
30629 | How do you know? |
30629 | How far now? |
30629 | How is it different? |
30629 | How long have you been eating green cherries, Jane? |
30629 | How long will he be gone? |
30629 | How many times have I told you, little daughter, that there is to be no novel- reading until your work and your practising are both done? 30629 How would you like to work here on the ranch if you do n''t go to college, Sherm?" |
30629 | How''d you get so wise, Chicken Little? |
30629 | Humph, what about Calico? |
30629 | Huz, Huz, why ca n''t you be still? |
30629 | I am glad you realize you did very wrong, little daughter, is that all you have to say to me? |
30629 | I shall be charmed, Chicken Little, will you finish these dishes or sweep the sitting room or sew on that dress of Jilly''s? 30629 I was thrown three times last week, would you like to try my pony, Katy?" |
30629 | If it snows? |
30629 | If my program does n''t suit you, wo n''t you tell me what is wrong? 30629 In the bread box, of course, child, where did you suppose?" |
30629 | In the closet? 30629 Indians?" |
30629 | Is it the train, or merely your love of adventure? |
30629 | Is n''t it dainty? 30629 Is n''t it glorious?" |
30629 | Is n''t that little white one with the pink ears and curly tail cunning? 30629 Is n''t the middle of May a little early to close school?" |
30629 | Is n''t there a house somewhere near where we can inquire? |
30629 | Is that all right? |
30629 | Is the hunting still good around here? |
30629 | Is the teacher any good? |
30629 | Is this the way you treat your correspondence, Sis? |
30629 | Is tony the very latest, Ernest? |
30629 | It is n''t the name of any ship or famous naval hero? |
30629 | It''s no such thing, Ernest Morton, I killed a quail once, did n''t I, Father? |
30629 | It''s the way you take my books and----"Yes? |
30629 | Jane, what are you talking about? 30629 Jane, where did you pick up such a coarse expression? |
30629 | Jilly does n''t seem any the worse for her bump this morning, does she? |
30629 | Just for the young folks? |
30629 | Like burning grass or leaves? |
30629 | Like it? 30629 Make fun of you? |
30629 | Making fun, what about? |
30629 | Mamie''s? 30629 May I go, too, Frank? |
30629 | May I play on your side, Jane? |
30629 | Me? 30629 Medicine?" |
30629 | Mind? 30629 Monks? |
30629 | Most? |
30629 | Mother, have n''t the girls got to take out that stitching? |
30629 | My dear daughter, can I never make you understand that little ladies may not do everything their brothers do? |
30629 | My son, whom are you addressing? |
30629 | My, we had a good race, did n''t we, Jilly Dilly? 30629 My, would n''t that be grand to study in Paris? |
30629 | N- o- o, but----"Yes? |
30629 | New teacher start in by giving you a lecture on deportment? |
30629 | No, who''s going? |
30629 | No? 30629 Nonsense, who''s afraid of a little snow? |
30629 | Now what? |
30629 | Now will you be good? |
30629 | Now, do you see why she did n''t answer? 30629 Now, will you?" |
30629 | O Ernest, and be an officer? 30629 O Ernest, what if you should go clear round the world?" |
30629 | O Mother, would n''t that be glorious? 30629 Oh, Gertie, wo n''t you be afraid?" |
30629 | Oh, Mother, do you think I could? 30629 Oh, Sherm, did you ever wear them? |
30629 | Oh, are n''t they dear? 30629 Oh, ca n''t Ernest go to college if we do n''t have rain?" |
30629 | Oh, do you''spose she was on the nest? 30629 Oh, is Ernest going?" |
30629 | Oh, is n''t it nice? 30629 Oh, there''s the biggest snake I ever saw-- over there near that rock-- don''t you see?" |
30629 | Ought n''t you to go right home and change? |
30629 | Out with it, little woman, what''s troubling you? |
30629 | P. S. Do you still read Mary Jane Holmes? |
30629 | Penance? 30629 Pooh, naval officers do n''t carry cutlasses, do they, Captain Clarke?" |
30629 | Pretty well done for, yourself, are n''t you, lad? |
30629 | Provoking-- who?--Chicken Little? 30629 Pshaw, you''re making that up, but what''s the idea? |
30629 | Quail? |
30629 | Really, Chicken Little? |
30629 | Save the pieces, Chicken Little, what''s your hurry? |
30629 | Say, Frank, how soon will these pigs be big enough to go in the corral with the others? |
30629 | Say, Sherm,Katy prodded,"why do n''t you borrow Jane''s riding skirt too?" |
30629 | Say, Sis, do n''t you want to stay home and help me herd to- morrow? 30629 Say, the Japs know a thing or two, do n''t they? |
30629 | Shall I bring some bread, Ma''am? 30629 Sherm, Frank left the water barrels and the mops and everything on the wagon, did n''t he?" |
30629 | Sherm, Sherm, what is it? |
30629 | Sherm, do n''t you just adore to skate? |
30629 | Sherm, if I slapped you some day would you be surprised? |
30629 | Sherm, truly? |
30629 | Sherm, what does she mean? |
30629 | Sis, I''m mighty fond of you-- do you know it? |
30629 | Stay all night? 30629 Sure, was n''t that what you wanted?" |
30629 | Take a hand to a wooster? 30629 Thank you, it''s fine exercise, is n''t it?" |
30629 | That means that he----? |
30629 | That''s a whole hour-- we can get back easy in an hour-- can''t we, Jilly- Dilly? |
30629 | That''s so, too, but I guess I can change my mind, ca n''t I? |
30629 | The Dickens, have you any idea where she''s gone? |
30629 | Then why are you making such a row? |
30629 | There is n''t any train before to- morrow, is there? |
30629 | They certainly look all right,said Marian,"what''s the matter with them-- salt?" |
30629 | They love it, do n''t they? |
30629 | Think it over? 30629 This boy, he was n''t an orphan, was he?" |
30629 | Three? 30629 To Benton''s? |
30629 | Too stubborn to own up, Lady Jane? |
30629 | Ugh, are there really snakes there, Jane? |
30629 | Was it some boy? |
30629 | Was n''t it? 30629 We do n''t have to ride to the ranch on horseback, do we?" |
30629 | We must be nearly half way there, are n''t we? |
30629 | We must divide the honors, will you break the bottle over the bow while Sherm pushes off? 30629 Well, April Fool''s Day is next Wednesday-- why not get up a frolic for that evening?" |
30629 | Well, I declare, why did n''t she answer me when I called? |
30629 | Well, we found something, did n''t we? |
30629 | Well, what in the demnition bow wows have you been doing now, Chicken Little Jane Morton? |
30629 | Well, what is it? |
30629 | Well, what''s so funny about that? |
30629 | Well,he demanded gruffly,"what''s the matter? |
30629 | What about the ponies? 30629 What about you?" |
30629 | What are you sighing for, Jane? 30629 What can we do?" |
30629 | What could I put them in, Father? |
30629 | What could we have, Frank? |
30629 | What did you fellows go to sleep for when you were driving, anyhow? |
30629 | What did you want to tell for? |
30629 | What do you mean? |
30629 | What do you suppose is the matter? |
30629 | What do you think? 30629 What do you want?" |
30629 | What if he is n''t at home? |
30629 | What if the boys do see us? 30629 What in Sam Hill are you people doing over there?" |
30629 | What in the dickens did you want to go and eat green cherries for, when there were pounds and pounds of ripe ones going to waste on the trees? |
30629 | What in thunder are those children up to now? |
30629 | What is it she''s reading? |
30629 | What is it, Ernest? |
30629 | What is it, Sherm? 30629 What is it,"queried Ernest as they started homeward,"about a railroad train that makes one so crazy to go along?" |
30629 | What is it? 30629 What luck?" |
30629 | What now? |
30629 | What on earth are you eating those green things for, child? |
30629 | What on earth are you going to do now, Jane Morton? |
30629 | What secrets are you talking? |
30629 | What was in it? |
30629 | What was the Santa Fe trail? 30629 What you trying to do, anyhow? |
30629 | What''ll you bet the snow catches us before we get home to- night? |
30629 | What''ll you bet? |
30629 | What''s Jilly getting there? 30629 What''s Miss Flirtie been saying to make you so ruffled? |
30629 | What''s good for whom? |
30629 | What''s that? |
30629 | What''s the cunning little stone house for? |
30629 | What''s the use of talking? 30629 What''s up?" |
30629 | What, did you have an upset? |
30629 | When did you say those youngsters were coming? 30629 Where are you going, Chicken Little?" |
30629 | Where did you put our Sunday clothes? |
30629 | Where did you put the bread, Mother? |
30629 | Where ever can we put the clothes where they ca n''t find them? 30629 Where is your loaf, Chicken Little?" |
30629 | Which rooster, Jilly? |
30629 | Which way did the sound come from? |
30629 | Who is ready for the climb? |
30629 | Who put that idea into your head?--Mamie? |
30629 | Who said anything about backing out? |
30629 | Why Chicken Little, crying? 30629 Why are you smiling? |
30629 | Why do n''t you tear yourself from the scenery and come under cover? |
30629 | Why is that old tree all by itself that way? |
30629 | Why, Chicken Little, I did n''t know you were in town? 30629 Why, Grant? |
30629 | Why,she said disgustedly after they were started,"wo n''t mothers ever let you grow up? |
30629 | Will you boys take the oars together or one at a time? 30629 Will you cross your heart never to tell, Sherm? |
30629 | Will you go to college next year? |
30629 | Will you leave the matter to me for a few days? 30629 Wo n''t you ever learn not to be fooled?" |
30629 | Wo n''t you please pass the water, Sherm? |
30629 | Would Ernest let us take Caliph? |
30629 | Would you rather have chocolate or cocoanut cake for your lunch, girls? 30629 Yes, Jane, what do you think? |
30629 | Yes, Sherm''s just told me,he called back,"would n''t it be scrumptious if we both got to go?" |
30629 | Yes, Sherm, but if you get thorns in your hand, it''s better to try to pull them out than to go on pushing them in deeper, is n''t it? 30629 Yes, and Chicken Little, did you girls feed the porkers last evening? |
30629 | Yes, as if what? |
30629 | Yes, to be sure, but what would you suggest that I offer him? 30629 Yes-- what----""Are the barrels filled?" |
30629 | Yes? |
30629 | You are going to ask Katy and Gertie, are n''t you, Mother? |
30629 | You did n''t suppose she would, did you? |
30629 | You did? 30629 You do n''t suppose I was going to wear that clumsy thing? |
30629 | You do n''t suppose the boys could have meddled with it, do you? |
30629 | You do n''t suppose we could have passed them, do you? |
30629 | You do n''t think they''ve got lost, do you, Frank? |
30629 | You do n''t think----? |
30629 | Your brother? 30629 ''Am I my brother''s keeper?'' 30629 After a little he inquired rather sheepishly:Say, Chicken Little, you do n''t like Carol best now, do you?" |
30629 | After which he held up his hands and exclaimed:"Say, Doctor Morton, what do you feed these infants on to make them grow so fast? |
30629 | And do you know what I have done?" |
30629 | And when it is n''t a child or one or two grown men or women who try to be cruel or unjust, but a whole nation, what then? |
30629 | And, Marian,"Chicken Little thought it was time to change the subject,"how do you make yourself be sorry, when you ought to be and are n''t?" |
30629 | Any commissions, Mother? |
30629 | Are n''t you glad I insisted on more geometry?" |
30629 | Are you sure your ears are clean?" |
30629 | As they passed the cottage, Marian exclaimed:"Did you get matches either of you?" |
30629 | Be frank with me, Jane, is there anything left?" |
30629 | Before the doctor could reassure them, Frank replied gravely:"Of course, what did you expect in Kansas? |
30629 | Boys, will you draw up chairs for the girls?" |
30629 | Brown?" |
30629 | But have you any idea where she is? |
30629 | But what has his rooster- ship done, and how can I make him keep still long enough to lay hands on him, Jilly Dilly?" |
30629 | But your school begins about the middle of September, does n''t it? |
30629 | By the way, Frank, are you and Marian going hunting with us?" |
30629 | CHAPTER VII PIGS"Take a hand to a wooster? |
30629 | CHAPTER XIX SHERM HEARS BAD NEWS"Sherm, do n''t you just love this room?" |
30629 | Can you see, Chicken Little?" |
30629 | Chicken Little Jane, was n''t it?" |
30629 | Chicken Little laughed, but retorted:"Humph, how many times have you sat on her front porch this summer?" |
30629 | Chicken Little was feeling disturbingly sober; no Ernest, no Katy, no Gertie-- how could she ever stand it? |
30629 | Chicken Little, would you mind telling Wing to serve Sherm''s breakfast?" |
30629 | Chicken Little?" |
30629 | Did Mr. Clay stand you in a corner the first day or did the handsome Grant neglect you for Mamie?" |
30629 | Did he, too, feel as if there were another presence haunting these relics of his childhood? |
30629 | Did n''t I see one of those sleeveless jacket affairs in there?" |
30629 | Did you get lost?" |
30629 | Did you think your pride would keep you warm, Chicken Little?" |
30629 | Do n''t you hear it? |
30629 | Do n''t you like it?" |
30629 | Do n''t you remember that red- headed boy?" |
30629 | Do n''t you s''pose they''re glad or sorry about things when night comes, just as we are?" |
30629 | Do n''t you think I''m nice to tell you?" |
30629 | Do n''t you want to hear about Alice''s wedding?" |
30629 | Do n''t you wish everything was like that-- pretty and gay, with all the lovers getting things straightened out right?" |
30629 | Do you class them with the unpleasant things?" |
30629 | Do you know his smile is very much like Sherm''s? |
30629 | Do you mind if I read you a bit?" |
30629 | Do you remember the picture of the Captain''s little boy that looked like Sherm? |
30629 | Do you suppose Ernest will know him? |
30629 | Do you suppose Father would take me over some time?" |
30629 | Do you suppose I''d call you home if they were in the closet? |
30629 | Do you suppose he bought them for his wife and she was dead when he got home with them?" |
30629 | Do you suppose he wants us to go through it?" |
30629 | Do you think you can keep awake? |
30629 | Do you think?" |
30629 | Do you want anything from town, Mother?" |
30629 | Do you wonder this ugly thing looks beautiful to me?" |
30629 | Dr. Morton relieved the situation by remarking mischievously:"Ask Ernest who''s surprised now, Chicken Little?" |
30629 | Dr. Morton, coming in just then, replied:"Your mother is not here, what do you want?" |
30629 | Ernest, would you mind stepping up to the house and asking Wing for a bottle of ginger ale?" |
30629 | Gee, what can we put them in?" |
30629 | Guess, maybe, I''m not democratic enough-- you remember that party at Jenkins''? |
30629 | Have I ever told you about the hermit''s cave?" |
30629 | Have another?" |
30629 | Have n''t you a piece in your pocket, Frank?" |
30629 | Have n''t you, Katy?" |
30629 | Have you ever taken drawing lessons?" |
30629 | Have you got the high overshoes? |
30629 | Have your pets been getting out?" |
30629 | He had the grace to color when Chicken Little remarked carelessly:"It was n''t so bad as you thought it would be, was it, Sherm?" |
30629 | How am I to teach my daughter to be a gentle woman, when she is constantly hearing vulgar language?" |
30629 | How did you ever dare, Chicken Little, to tackle it? |
30629 | How will that do?" |
30629 | How would that suit you, Chicken Little?" |
30629 | How''d you know enough to face them that way instead of running? |
30629 | I can hear you say:''What in the dickens?'' |
30629 | I do have lots of fun with her-- she can be awfully nice when she wants to be, but----""But?" |
30629 | I do n''t see the connection, do you? |
30629 | I suppose I need not expect to be asked to any doll parties, but, Jane, would n''t you-- couldn''t you, take me fishing when we come? |
30629 | If our courts did n''t punish people for being cruel to other people? |
30629 | Is he in already?" |
30629 | Is n''t it a beauty? |
30629 | Is n''t that Sherm''s best tie you''ve got on?" |
30629 | Is she too popular or too affected or too dressy?" |
30629 | It was a bargain, was n''t it?" |
30629 | It''s Spanish, is n''t it?" |
30629 | It''s worth while to have that sort of a father, Ernest, but it makes the Morton name somewhat of a responsibility to live up to, does n''t it?" |
30629 | Jump in, Ernest; you know how to handle an oar in fresh water, do n''t you?" |
30629 | Just make the bow a little more perky, ca n''t you, Marian? |
30629 | Just what did he mean? |
30629 | Katy wavered and unbent enough to ask:"What is it?" |
30629 | Let me see, that''s less than a quarter of a mile, is n''t it? |
30629 | Marian, do n''t you want to ride over with me?" |
30629 | May I hold them, Jane, when we get back to the wagon?" |
30629 | May I look at the lace?" |
30629 | Morton?" |
30629 | Mrs. Morton has been feeding me on good things ever since I came, why should I want to make away with four loaves of bread?" |
30629 | My, does n''t the air taste good?" |
30629 | No, where is it?" |
30629 | Oh, would n''t it be just too wonderful? |
30629 | Penance for what?" |
30629 | Say, Sherm, why could n''t you arrange to take one or two special studies under the new teacher? |
30629 | Say, did you know a crowd of us are going out to his house to- night to an oyster supper?" |
30629 | Say, what did you girls do to yourselves that you are so used up to- day? |
30629 | See, they all lie down close to the mamma stem-- isn''t that funny?. |
30629 | Shall I get it out to- night, Mrs. Morton, or wait till morning?" |
30629 | She ended a little meaningly:"Do you know, I believe girls can be sillier from thirteen to sixteen than at any other age? |
30629 | Sherm helped her out, saying:"Will you please tell them, Chicken Little? |
30629 | Sherm swearing? |
30629 | Sherm, do you mind if I take these things over and show them to Captain Clarke? |
30629 | Sherm, have you both buffalo robes?" |
30629 | Should she dare to ask him? |
30629 | Still, I think it looks like Captain Clarke, too, do n''t you?" |
30629 | Sure you have plenty to eat?" |
30629 | That is in Illinois, is it not?" |
30629 | The one who was here the other evening?" |
30629 | Was n''t it dreadful? |
30629 | Was there to be a repetition of the bread episode? |
30629 | We were tickled to death to have an excuse, eh, Chicken Little?" |
30629 | What are you going to do this summer?" |
30629 | What bread?" |
30629 | What can we do? |
30629 | What can we do? |
30629 | What do you mean?" |
30629 | What do you say, Marian?" |
30629 | What if it should fascinate her so she could n''t move? |
30629 | What''s in it?" |
30629 | What''s the matter now?" |
30629 | What''s the matter with the rest of us?" |
30629 | What''s the matter, Katie?" |
30629 | What''s the matter?" |
30629 | When they had finally got the atmosphere cleared a bit, he inquired, still smiling:"Well, are you sorry now you went to the Captain''s?" |
30629 | Where are my spectacles? |
30629 | Where''d you get it?" |
30629 | Where, Mother, where?" |
30629 | Who do you suppose?" |
30629 | Who hung mine?" |
30629 | Who says a man ca n''t pick out a hat?" |
30629 | Whoever from?" |
30629 | Why Mother, it''s by slang that a language is enriched, did n''t you know that?" |
30629 | Why ca n''t they be content with a good square meal at home?" |
30629 | Why did n''t you tell us? |
30629 | Why do n''t you call him gingham apron or something really choice?" |
30629 | Why do n''t you drop things and come along? |
30629 | Why return to prosaic errands and eggs when you can revel in a world of romance so easily?" |
30629 | Why, Mother, you''re going to ask them to come, are n''t you?" |
30629 | Will we, Mother Morton?" |
30629 | Will you cut the lemon cake?" |
30629 | Will you go with me, Sherm?" |
30629 | Will you help me, Katie?" |
30629 | Wo n''t you accept it as a present to keep that autograph album company?" |
30629 | Wo n''t you be as generous?" |
30629 | Wo n''t you please call Mother?" |
30629 | Would n''t it be romantic?" |
30629 | Would n''t that be nice after Father had put up a lot of money to send me on? |
30629 | Would you mind if we children all went with you because nobody''s going to be willing to be left out?" |
30629 | Would you think me very rude and unappreciative if I declined, dear? |
30629 | You are n''t feeling worse, are you?" |
30629 | You are n''t in a great hurry for the eggs, are you, Mother?" |
30629 | You are n''t just being polite?" |
30629 | You did n''t take a five- mile walk or anything after we left, did you?" |
30629 | You do n''t mean she has lost the other twelve? |
30629 | You do n''t remember a single thing about it, do you? |
30629 | You do n''t suppose anybody could resist this crowd, do you?" |
30629 | You expect Ernest to be a gentleman, do n''t you, just as much as you do me to be a lady?" |
30629 | You have n''t seen any tramps about, have you, Sherm? |
30629 | You would n''t hurt me, would you, Calico?" |
30629 | You would n''t let a big dog kill a little one without trying to save it, would you, Gertie?" |
30629 | You''re not calculatin''to take up your residence permanent like in them cherry trees, are you? |
30629 | exclaimed Frank,"you did n''t get over to black Charlie''s? |
30629 | exclaimed Sherm,"how did it ever creep up on us this way?" |
30629 | he exclaimed vengefully,"what do they make these things so pesky slippery for?" |
30629 | she exclaimed, smiling through the trickling tears,"was that what you stopped down town for? |
31524 | Ai n''t it awful about the Saline country? |
31524 | All about me? 31524 Am I, Marjie? |
31524 | And after that? |
31524 | And by the way, did you settle it with the widow, too? 31524 And do you mean to say that because Amos Judson turned you off and cut you out of his will, you had to come out to this forsaken land? |
31524 | And if he really wants to do better, what have we all been told in the Sunday- school? 31524 And take some girl along? |
31524 | And what''s below you? |
31524 | And when the campaign''s over,queried O''mie,"will you stay in the army?" |
31524 | And you told him good- bye at your own door? |
31524 | And you would let that other girl take care of herself, would n''t you, while I was there? 31524 And you''ll be sure to keep still about my dad, too, wo n''t you?" |
31524 | Are n''t you willing to right the wrongs you''ve done, and save yourself, too? |
31524 | Are you afraid of Indians? |
31524 | Are you afraid of them, Candace? |
31524 | Are you going out West to stay? |
31524 | Are you leaving us? |
31524 | Are you mine once more? |
31524 | Are you tired after your journey? |
31524 | Are you waiting for me here? |
31524 | Better now? 31524 Bud, you tow- headed infant, how the dickens and tomhill did you manage to break into good society out here?" |
31524 | But had n''t ye heard? 31524 But whose flower wreath could it have been?" |
31524 | But why did n''t you stay there? |
31524 | But why leave here? |
31524 | But,Tell persisted,"how do the Injuns themselves feel?" |
31524 | Ca n''t you, ca n''t you put us to work? |
31524 | Can they do better than that, Grover? |
31524 | Can we have a room downstairs? 31524 Can ye picture what would be down there now? |
31524 | Could anything have happened to him? |
31524 | Could it be an Indian camp- fire? |
31524 | Could you, Phil? 31524 Did Amos Judson tell you all this, Mother?" |
31524 | Did I know Judson? 31524 Did he tell you about his girl here?" |
31524 | Did n''t find any dead dogs nor children next mornin'', did ye, O''mie? |
31524 | Did n''t ye hear,''four A. M. sharp''? 31524 Did she have on a red blanket too, Saturday afternoon?" |
31524 | Did you follow it? |
31524 | Did you go near the cabin? |
31524 | Did you know her or her husband? |
31524 | Did you see any one, or is it just a wayside camp for movers going out on the trail? |
31524 | Did you see him again that night? |
31524 | Did you see him first? |
31524 | Do n''t you really care for Lettie, Phil? 31524 Do n''t you think he will be good now, Phil?" |
31524 | Do you know how Jean Pahusca came to carry a knife for years with the name,''Jean Le Claire,''cut in the blade? 31524 Do you mean to say, Thomas O''Meara--?" |
31524 | Do you really think he will be good now? |
31524 | Do you remember the day Judge Baronet took his squad out av Springvale, Phil? 31524 Father Le Claire, can you tell me anything about Jean Pahusca, and where he is now?" |
31524 | Father Le Claire, how do the Injuns feel about this fracas now? |
31524 | Father, am I a fool, or is it in the Baronet blood to love deeply and constantly even unto death? |
31524 | Father, must that trip be made to- day? 31524 Father, you remember when you were twenty- one?" |
31524 | Father,I began hesitatingly,"Father, do you still love my mother? |
31524 | For goodness''sake, who goes there? |
31524 | Had n''t we better turn back now? 31524 Had n''t you heard?" |
31524 | Has anybody seen him this morning? |
31524 | Has he been flirting with some one, Mr. Tillhurst? 31524 Has he given you cause?" |
31524 | Has n''t that Indian massacre been avenged yet? |
31524 | Have ye talked wid Father Le Claire? |
31524 | Have you come to the cross- roads, Phil? |
31524 | Have you heard the news? |
31524 | Have you talked to O''mie of this? |
31524 | He did? 31524 He took you home from the Andersons''party the night Dave Mead was at Red Range?" |
31524 | His will? 31524 How about Brother Dodd?" |
31524 | How about that island, Grover? |
31524 | How can anybody help lovin''her? |
31524 | How can you get some, Bud? 31524 How come the rid flowers stuck with the little burrs on your dress? |
31524 | How did you get here, O''mie? |
31524 | How do you do? |
31524 | How does this concern you, Phil? |
31524 | How much cause have you given her? 31524 How much time will it require to get your counsel and come here again?" |
31524 | I will see you again; may I? |
31524 | I''ll guess that''s petticoats going up there,I said mentally,"but who''s hunting wild flowers out here alone this time of night? |
31524 | I, strolling? 31524 I? |
31524 | I? 31524 I? |
31524 | In no way, then, has Philip ever done you any wrong? 31524 Is it whiskey?" |
31524 | Is n''t that all? |
31524 | Is that the biggest hostler you''ve got? |
31524 | Is that the lilac that is so fragrant? |
31524 | Is the town safe? |
31524 | Is this your story? |
31524 | It must be movers, and as to that red flash of color, are you real sure it was not just a part of the rose- hued world out there? |
31524 | Look at the ould man, now, would ye? 31524 Marjie, can it be you? |
31524 | Marjie,I said gently,"will you kiss me and tell me that you love me?" |
31524 | May I ask you one favor? |
31524 | May I see you just a minute? 31524 May I take something else to Aunt Candace, too, Marjie?" |
31524 | May I take you home, Marjie, and tell you how sweet that letter was? |
31524 | Mr. Mapleson, will you repeat to Le Claire what you have just told me and show him your affidavits and records? |
31524 | Mrs. Gentry,Le Claire asked abruptly,"where did you find O''mie?" |
31524 | Now what the deuce can you do in the army, O''mie? |
31524 | Now''d ye ever see a finer- lookin''couple? |
31524 | Now, Cam, has anybody ever heard her say she was engaged? 31524 Now, Phil, where did you get that knife?" |
31524 | Now, as to this half- breed, why the devil did n''t you kill him when you had the chance? 31524 Now, how did he ever get to that place, O''mie?" |
31524 | Now, will you tell us what you know of this case? |
31524 | Nowhere, is she? 31524 O''mie, we know, and Father Le Claire knows, but how can we make those foolish girls understand? |
31524 | O''mie, you heard Dr. Hemingway''s prayer last night? |
31524 | Of his own choice? |
31524 | Oh, Marjie, my Marjie, what is wrong? |
31524 | Oh, O''mie, what are you forever tagging me for? |
31524 | Oh, Phil, Phil, are you here again? 31524 Oh, Phil, what shall we do? |
31524 | Or you? |
31524 | Phil Baronet, you thon of a horthe- thief, where have you been keeping yourthelf? 31524 Phil, did Le Claire suggest any property?" |
31524 | Phil, do ye remimber that May mornin''when ye broke through the vines av the Hermit''s Cave? 31524 Phil, when did you see Jean Pahusca last?" |
31524 | Phil, why do you hate me? |
31524 | Phil,Aunt Candace was at the door now,"have you thought of the Hermit''s Cave?" |
31524 | Philip, why do you consider the cave possible? |
31524 | Phwat can I do? 31524 Really, is there?" |
31524 | Say, Clate, where''s Bud going? |
31524 | Settle it? 31524 Shall I do it, little sister? |
31524 | Shall we tell Le Claire? |
31524 | Something else now? |
31524 | Spakin''of bein''paupers and bein''kept by Judson, Lettie-- who is payin''the wages of sin, in money and fine clothes, right now? 31524 Stands to reason a boy who can live in Kansas would go back to Massachusetts, does n''t it?" |
31524 | Tell me, O''mie, what''s he done? |
31524 | Tell me, O''mie,I said at last,"how you happened to find me up there two hours ago?" |
31524 | That means we''ll never get across either, does n''t it? |
31524 | Them horses dangerous? |
31524 | There is no stain somewhere, no folly of idle flirtation, no weakness? 31524 They call that being''locoed''out on the Plains, do n''t they?" |
31524 | Tobacco? |
31524 | Uncle Cam, where is O''mie? 31524 Until when?" |
31524 | Was she never heard of again? |
31524 | Well, an''phwat did somethin''do to you? |
31524 | Well, little sweetheart, honest now, and I wo n''t tell, and it''s none of my doggoned business neither; but be you goin''to marry Amos Judson? |
31524 | Well, what ever did become of that Jean, anyhow? 31524 Well, what is it you want?" |
31524 | Well, what is it? |
31524 | Well, what took her to the-- to the old cabin out there? |
31524 | Well, what was it, O''mie? |
31524 | Well, who be thaid lady? |
31524 | Well, why not set your cap fur the widder? 31524 Well,"I said,"will I do?" |
31524 | Well? |
31524 | Were you waiting for me, dearie? 31524 What are you doing, Pete?" |
31524 | What are you going to do, Phil? |
31524 | What are you going to do? 31524 What brought you out here, Bud?" |
31524 | What can I do for you, Lettie? |
31524 | What do you mean? |
31524 | What does he come here so much for, anyhow? |
31524 | What else? |
31524 | What for? |
31524 | What has happened, Philip? |
31524 | What is it, Marjie? |
31524 | What is it, Phil? 31524 What is it, Phil?" |
31524 | What is it? |
31524 | What is your name, and what do you want? |
31524 | What makes you call me''Star- face''? 31524 What makes you lonesome, O''mie?" |
31524 | What makes you think so, John? |
31524 | What news? |
31524 | What part of town did he have, Philip? |
31524 | What was it your business? |
31524 | What was it, Marjie? |
31524 | What was it, a rattlesnake? |
31524 | What were you doing there? |
31524 | What will you do with him? |
31524 | What''s Tell Mapleson after this year, d''ye reckon? 31524 What''s that?" |
31524 | What''s the matter down there? |
31524 | What''s the matter with these critters, Phil? |
31524 | What''s the matter, Baronet? 31524 What''s the matter, Baronet?" |
31524 | What''s the matter, O''mie? 31524 What''s the matter, Phil?" |
31524 | What''s these Kansas men with their capital letters got to do with it? |
31524 | What''s your name? |
31524 | What''th going to be done? |
31524 | When are you going to leave? |
31524 | When do you go home? |
31524 | When shall I call? |
31524 | When was that one night? |
31524 | Where are you going, Marjie? |
31524 | Where does he live? |
31524 | Where has he been? 31524 Where is your home, your tepee?" |
31524 | Where was he at that time? |
31524 | Where was he? |
31524 | Where will you go now? |
31524 | Where will you go, my boy? |
31524 | Where''s Aunt Candace? |
31524 | Where''s O''mie? |
31524 | Where''s my evidence? |
31524 | Where? 31524 Who is he, daughter?" |
31524 | Who taketh your plathe, O''mie? |
31524 | Who told you he was there, father? |
31524 | Who took you home the second time? |
31524 | Whose business? |
31524 | Whose business? |
31524 | Why ca n''t he stay Injun? 31524 Why did n''t I get a letter, dearie?" |
31524 | Why did n''t you come home with the crowd, handsome giant? |
31524 | Why did n''t you say so? |
31524 | Why did you leave Massachusetts? |
31524 | Why do you ask? |
31524 | Why not tell me now what father knows? |
31524 | Why should it be small? |
31524 | Why should you care? |
31524 | Why, O''mie? |
31524 | Why, boys, what''s all this delegation mean? |
31524 | Why, what did he fear? |
31524 | Why, where was Uncle Cam? |
31524 | Why? |
31524 | Will you and Judson kill time down here? |
31524 | Will you help us out of this, Le Claire? |
31524 | Will you sign a relinquishment to your claim, and trust to me that it is the best for us to do? |
31524 | Will you stay with me, Bud, till I get up there? |
31524 | Will you take this young lady home for me? 31524 Will you wear it again for me, dearie?" |
31524 | With Phil? |
31524 | Would n''t a Injun look funny with my thcalp? |
31524 | Would you know it, Marjie, if you thaw it again? |
31524 | Would you really do that, O''mie? |
31524 | Yes, you narrow, grasping robber of orphans, why? |
31524 | You Judge Baronet''s son? |
31524 | You are safe still? |
31524 | You care so much for another man''s wife? 31524 You did n''t see who was on the horse, did you?" |
31524 | You go at sunrise? |
31524 | You know that rich Melrose girl''s gone back to Topeka? |
31524 | You know the purpose of Amos Judson''s visit with your mother yesterday? |
31524 | You say you wo n''t? |
31524 | You sleep well? |
31524 | You two gettin''ready to elope? 31524 You wanted to see me, Phil?" |
31524 | You wanted to see me? |
31524 | You will look after them, John? 31524 You''ll go to prayer meeting, Phil?" |
31524 | You''ll never let the Indians get you, will you, Phil? |
31524 | Ai n''t you sometimes?" |
31524 | An''what more could a man do? |
31524 | And a voice, Marjie''s sweet voice, called anxiously:"Is that you, Phil? |
31524 | And his pleading voice,"Phil, ye''ll come soon, wo n''t ye?" |
31524 | And now, what else?" |
31524 | And phwat''s to be nixt?" |
31524 | And second, is the young man we call O''mie heir to the same? |
31524 | And when King Lear asked,"What''s that?" |
31524 | And who is his beneficiary?" |
31524 | Any old waterproof cloak to lend me, girlie?" |
31524 | Anybody here seen him for five years?" |
31524 | Anything except a pretty girl?" |
31524 | Are n''t we pretty near the edge? |
31524 | Are n''t you proud of the name, John?" |
31524 | Are they?" |
31524 | Are you afraid of ghosts?" |
31524 | Are you goin''to quit it? |
31524 | Are you scared or sick?" |
31524 | Are you the man to get it?" |
31524 | At the supper table my host went directly to my case by asking,"Have you come out here to prospect or to take hold?" |
31524 | Besides, who wants to back out? |
31524 | But how about her?" |
31524 | But tell me, Father,"I had dropped down beside him again,"do you still love my mother? |
31524 | But the query,"Where''s Phil, now?" |
31524 | But what is the matter, Phil?" |
31524 | But what took you to the top of the cliff at midnight? |
31524 | But where is Philip?" |
31524 | But where was he after that? |
31524 | But who has spoken out for these-- the women and the young? |
31524 | But who is this shadow of Jean Pahusca''s-- a priest in civilization, a renegade on the Plains? |
31524 | But you''ll promise, wo n''t you, for the sake of my husband? |
31524 | CHAPTER X O''MIE''S CHOICE And how can man die better Than facing fearful odds For the ashes of his fathers And the temples of his gods? |
31524 | Cam groaned,"can anything have happened to him?" |
31524 | Can a career like this be atoned for with a bank check and interest at eight per cent?" |
31524 | Can you imagine what his mother felt when she found her boy was stolen? |
31524 | Can you picture the joy of that reunion? |
31524 | Could I be deceiving her by putting Rachel off in her presence? |
31524 | Could I be the same boy that watched that line of blue- coats file out of Springvale and across the rocky ford of the Neosho that summer day? |
31524 | Could I? |
31524 | Could it be that her mother was trying to influence my father in her favor? |
31524 | Could she be in league against me? |
31524 | Could twenty- four hours of distrust and misunderstanding displace these fourteen years of happy thinking? |
31524 | Could you care for anybody else? |
31524 | Could you go out again to- morrow?" |
31524 | D''ye just notice Phil''s hair, layin''in soft thick waves? |
31524 | D''ye see?" |
31524 | D''ye''s lief come into town that way?" |
31524 | Did I know her?" |
31524 | Did I remember? |
31524 | Did a merciful God forget the Plains in those days of prairie conquest? |
31524 | Did he iver decaive? |
31524 | Did he iver do a cruelty to a helpless thing, or fight a smaller boy? |
31524 | Did he iver turn coward in a place where courage was needed? |
31524 | Did his manner please Marjie? |
31524 | Did my love for her spring into being at that instant? |
31524 | Did n''t they have their full swing at you?" |
31524 | Did n''t we settle that in those days together at dear old Rockport? |
31524 | Did you ever feel as if you were near somebody you could n''t see?" |
31524 | Do I love the woman who gave you birth? |
31524 | Do you know the writing?" |
31524 | Do you prefer any witness or counsel, or shall we settle this alone?" |
31524 | Do you remember how I would always get on your side of the game when Jean Pahusca played with us?" |
31524 | Do you remember when we played hide- and- seek in there?" |
31524 | Do you see now?" |
31524 | Do you see?" |
31524 | Do you think he is safe?" |
31524 | Do you want it?" |
31524 | Does a man love the same woman always?" |
31524 | Ever thee a tow- headed flying thquirrel?" |
31524 | Faintly, just beside me, came the reply:"Phil, you''ve come? |
31524 | First, did O''Meara give up the land he entered? |
31524 | For suddenly came the query"How can I best take care of her? |
31524 | For why? |
31524 | Fur why? |
31524 | Goin''northwest? |
31524 | Had I not seen the unselfish, kindly, generous spirit that had marked all his business career? |
31524 | Had he told me that to give me courage in my hour of shrinking? |
31524 | Had we not lived on this Kansas border in all those plastic years when the mind takes deepest impressions? |
31524 | Had we not sworn our fealty to the flag, and protection to our town in our boyish patriotism the Summer before? |
31524 | Has he been a young man of double dealing, coarse and rude with some company and refined with others? |
31524 | Have you and Marjie quarrelled? |
31524 | Have you any answer to my claim?" |
31524 | Have you ever known him to deceive anybody? |
31524 | He was no coward, nor laggard; but where could he have kept himself? |
31524 | He''s an Osage, is n''t he?" |
31524 | Honest, now, what''s what?" |
31524 | Honestly, now, was there iver anything in all the years we run together that was n''t square and clane and fearless and lovin''?" |
31524 | How can a man as good and holy as I am manage the obstreperous girls? |
31524 | How can a man live who has lost his wife, or his sweetheart, in that way?" |
31524 | How can the Good Bein''permit it?" |
31524 | How could God permit it? |
31524 | How could I ever care for a girl so mean- spirited and cruel as she had been to me? |
31524 | How could I meet this woman now? |
31524 | How could he be so good to me and then deceive me so? |
31524 | How did you ever get back?" |
31524 | How is your mother to- day?" |
31524 | How long will you care for her?" |
31524 | How much is it going to take to settle it? |
31524 | I did not notice him until he said slowly:"Baronet?" |
31524 | I know now it was only a boy''s patriotic foolishness, but who shall say it was ignoble in its influence? |
31524 | I s''pose you''ve heard the news?" |
31524 | I shall see you again-- to- morrow?" |
31524 | If by blood ties, why does the priest not own, or entirely disown him? |
31524 | If not, why does the priest protect him? |
31524 | Is Jean hidin''out round here again? |
31524 | Is Uncle Cam being imposed on? |
31524 | Is n''t it Longfellow who speaks of"the lovely stars, the forget- me- nots of the angels,"blossoming"in the infinite meadows of heaven"? |
31524 | Is n''t that true, Brother Dodd?" |
31524 | Is that fair to Marjie?" |
31524 | Is that the kind of a priest you are?" |
31524 | Is there any?" |
31524 | It was a lovely stroll though, was n''t it, Philip?" |
31524 | It was just Marjie''s imagination, was n''t it?" |
31524 | Le Claire, you are just back from the Osage Mission?" |
31524 | Let''em go? |
31524 | Mapleson, will you renounce your retainer''s fees in your interest in the orphaned?" |
31524 | Marjie, I''m goin''to kape these flowers till-- well, now, Marjie, shall I tell you whin?" |
31524 | Marjie, do you remember the time Jean Pahusca nearly got you? |
31524 | Marjory Whately, did anybody iver catch him in a lie? |
31524 | May I go to him? |
31524 | May I? |
31524 | Maybe the hole had something in it, one of Phil''s letters to Marjie, who knows? |
31524 | Mr. Baronet and I have recollections of two delightful years when he was in Harvard, have n''t we?" |
31524 | Mr. Dodd who married you to the Kiowa squaw? |
31524 | Now ai n''t that right? |
31524 | Now what had he to leave? |
31524 | Now, Lettie, what else?" |
31524 | Now, Marjie, why''d you run off? |
31524 | Now, why do I have to bear all of it?" |
31524 | O say, does that star- spangled banner yet wave O''er the land of the free and the home of the brave? |
31524 | O''mie? |
31524 | Of course, I would go to Topeka, but might she not come to Springvale? |
31524 | Oh, Phil, I''m so-- what? |
31524 | Oh, what can it all mean? |
31524 | Or did you think His Excellency, the Reverend Dodd was right, an''I''d cut for cover till the fuss was over? |
31524 | Phil, d''ye reckon this will iver be a dacent civilized country? |
31524 | Phil, whin does your padre and his Company start to subdue the rebillious South?" |
31524 | Presently she said,"May I come up to your office pretty soon? |
31524 | Satisfy me? |
31524 | See the name?" |
31524 | Settle this in court or out of it?" |
31524 | Shall I believe Lettie, or O''mie?" |
31524 | Shall I stay with her in the light, or go into the dark and strike the danger out of it?" |
31524 | Shall I tell you why?" |
31524 | Shall we clinch the bargain now, or do you want to think about it a little while? |
31524 | Shall we take this money at her father''s death?" |
31524 | She may be scared o''him, an''he knows it; but bedad, I''d not want to be the border ruffian that went prowlin''in there uninvited; would you?" |
31524 | So Marjie concluded mentally and then she asked innocently:"How can Amos Judson''s visit make this call here necessary?" |
31524 | Suddenly O''mie gave a start and in a voice low and even but intense he exclaimed:"For the Lord''s sake, wud ye look at that? |
31524 | Tell me the truth now, as you must answer for yourself sometime before the almighty and ever- living God, has Philip Baronet ever wronged you?" |
31524 | Tell me truly, have you done wrong? |
31524 | Tell me, do you care for her still? |
31524 | That''s fair, is n''t it?" |
31524 | That''s what you lawyers want, ai n''t it?" |
31524 | The Judge has asked two questions:''Did Patrick O''Meara ever give up his title to the land?'' |
31524 | The first time I saw Marjie she asked,"Are you afraid of Indians?" |
31524 | The old tree is shapely, is n''t it?" |
31524 | Thee that thaplin''on the bank? |
31524 | Then it was that I heard O''mie''s low words:"Bedad, Phil, an''that''s how it is wid ye, is it? |
31524 | They had gone-- but whither? |
31524 | To the others it was a wasted bit of heroism, for if none of us had yet found the way to this retreat, why should we look for O''mie there? |
31524 | Was Le Claire a villain in holy guise? |
31524 | Was it inherited courage, or was it the spirit of power in that letter, Marjie''s message of love to me, that gave me grace there? |
31524 | Was it the will of Providence made O''mie appeal to them at the right moment? |
31524 | Was that a trick of Lettie''s to put Marjie out of my thought, I wondered, or did she really know my heart? |
31524 | Was the foolish girl attracted by this picturesque creature? |
31524 | We might as well get this matter between us settled here as over in the court- room, eh?" |
31524 | What a careless set av young idiots we were then?" |
31524 | What boy after that would not have braved any danger to explore the depths of this hiding- place? |
31524 | What business had she robbin''folks of letters, stealin''''em out, and givin''''em into wicked hands? |
31524 | What could I do but leave town? |
31524 | What could have happened to bring all this about? |
31524 | What did it ever grow for?" |
31524 | What did it mean? |
31524 | What did you see? |
31524 | What do I think? |
31524 | What do they know of the old Puritan blood, and the strength of the grip of a Massachusetts man? |
31524 | What does it mean, Phil? |
31524 | What else could it be? |
31524 | What else could that look on her face last night have meant? |
31524 | What else could this terrified horse with its flying harness ends mean? |
31524 | What else?" |
31524 | What else?" |
31524 | What had I done to be so lovingly and reverently welcomed home? |
31524 | What have I to fear?" |
31524 | What have you done with Marjie''s letter that you stole before it got to Phil?" |
31524 | What is that long, narrow, red light down by the creek?" |
31524 | What makes some folks so precious, I wonder? |
31524 | What word may I take to Phil for you?" |
31524 | What''ll he do wid the greatest common divisor an''the indicative mood an''the Sea of Azov, an''the Zambezi River, when he''s learned''em, anyhow? |
31524 | What''s been the matter?" |
31524 | What''s in gray hair and baldness, anyhow? |
31524 | What''s the least will satisfy you?" |
31524 | What''s the matter?" |
31524 | What''s the tariff due on this junk?" |
31524 | What''s yours?" |
31524 | When shall I call?" |
31524 | When shall I lave off?'' |
31524 | Where did he come from?" |
31524 | Where have you been?" |
31524 | Where is it you are going, Phil?" |
31524 | Where were Custer, and Moore, and Forsyth, and Pliley, and Stillwell, and Morton, if such as I be called a hero? |
31524 | Where were you, Lettie, whin I was spyin''and what were you doin''at the time yoursilf?" |
31524 | Where''s Bud going?" |
31524 | Where''s O''mie?" |
31524 | Whin? |
31524 | Who are you, anyhow? |
31524 | Who begun it? |
31524 | Who do you reckon come to Springvale last month?" |
31524 | Who knows how soon we may need strong men in this town, men who can do the short- range work? |
31524 | Who says I''ve been talking about you?" |
31524 | Who''d want to have hair like a girl''s? |
31524 | Whose business was it?" |
31524 | Whose escort were you?" |
31524 | Why do n''t you go too, Phil? |
31524 | Why not tell me now what you know?" |
31524 | Why should he hesitate so now? |
31524 | Why should she be forever haunting my way, though?" |
31524 | Why should she go out there?" |
31524 | Why? |
31524 | Why?" |
31524 | Wid them Missouri raiders on the east and the Injuns in the southwest where''ll anybody down there be, begorra, betwixt two sich grindin''millstones? |
31524 | Will ye be av us, boys? |
31524 | Will ye stay wid us?" |
31524 | Will ye take''em?" |
31524 | Will you come up to Topeka?" |
31524 | Will you go over and see how Mary Gentry''s arm is, and come up to the courthouse in about half an hour?" |
31524 | Will you go too?" |
31524 | Will you go with us, Baronet? |
31524 | Will you help me?" |
31524 | Will you ride the pony?" |
31524 | Will you sign the papers now?" |
31524 | Wo n''t you?" |
31524 | Would I? |
31524 | Would this man lie now to please Judge Baronet? |
31524 | You are pretty tired, are n''t you?" |
31524 | You could like somebody else just as well, could n''t you, Phil?" |
31524 | You know that woman you and Bud found in Satanta''s tepee on the Washita? |
31524 | You said, in conclusion, that I was trackin''you, and you ask, am I goin''to quit it? |
31524 | You see it, do n''t you? |
31524 | You who have had a wife to love, a son to cherish?" |
31524 | You will let me feel when I am far away that you are shielding my little girl from evil, wo n''t you, Phil?" |
31524 | You''ll come of course?" |
31524 | You''re sure you know just which crevice of the rock it is?'' |
31524 | and where was he going?" |
31524 | and''Is O''mie his heir, and therefore the rightful owner?'' |
31524 | but I wish we could have been in that fight; do n''t you?" |
31524 | or tend to somethin''else besides your own business? |
31524 | or what''s to be gained by it? |
31524 | so that''s how it is wid ye, is it? |
27505 | ''Does n''t she look like a drudge?'' 27505 A doctor, do n''t you ricolleck? |
27505 | A horse of iron might, too, but who''s got a critter in Grass River Valley right now that could make a trip like that? 27505 A sunflower letter like I used to send to Quippi?" |
27505 | About what? |
27505 | About what? |
27505 | Alice Leigh Shirley, are you crazy? |
27505 | All right, but what was the second reason for the one doorway? 27505 Am I wrong, mother? |
27505 | And duty? |
27505 | And his family? |
27505 | And if I do n''t go? |
27505 | And if papa''s defeated we stay home all winter, eh? |
27505 | And leave your papa and mamma? |
27505 | And that is--? |
27505 | And that niece, Tank''s girl, he was to protect for Alice Leigh? |
27505 | And what''s to hinder your getting the pretty girl you want if she understands and you are swift enough to cut off the enemy from a flank movement? |
27505 | And why do you do it? 27505 And you can not promise that any more will be coming soon?" |
27505 | And you paid how much? |
27505 | And you saw so many fine things? |
27505 | And you, Carey? |
27505 | And you, Thaine? 27505 Any calls while I was gone?" |
27505 | Any of these claims ever been entered? |
27505 | Are n''t you jealous of Todd? |
27505 | Are you afraid, like Jo Bennington? 27505 Are you so afraid of women? |
27505 | Are you still looking for a letter that will bring Prince Quippi back? |
27505 | Are you tired, Virgie? |
27505 | As for instance? |
27505 | Asher, if you had your choice this minute of all the things you might be, what would you choose to be? |
27505 | But how can I send? |
27505 | But it was so like-- what? |
27505 | But the little girl, what''s her name? 27505 But what do you call my life work, father?" |
27505 | But why must we fight at all, Thaine? 27505 But why must you go? |
27505 | But why not take the cool road? 27505 But you do n''t object, Father?" |
27505 | But, Bo Peep, why do you not believe we''ll have Horace here again? |
27505 | But, Jo, ca n''t a fellow have half a chance, anyhow? 27505 Ca n''t there be no more little children where there''s grasshoppers and Darley Champerses?" |
27505 | Ca n''t we go down to the grove and see the lilies this afternoon, too? |
27505 | Can you go? |
27505 | Can your men take those walls? |
27505 | Clear from China? |
27505 | Could a sectional war ever have begun out here on these broad prairies, where men need each other so? |
27505 | Could n''t we slip into the cabin? |
27505 | Could you never be satisfied on a farm? |
27505 | Did Leigh write anything else? |
27505 | Did n''t you hear? |
27505 | Did n''t you see? 27505 Did you ever give up to him?" |
27505 | Did you really miss me? |
27505 | Do n''t I look all right? 27505 Do n''t you care to come to our house any more?" |
27505 | Do n''t you know who''s on the other side of that partition? |
27505 | Do n''t you know whose birthday this is? |
27505 | Do n''t you love Miss Jane, Horace? |
27505 | Do you always tell it good- by? |
27505 | Do you know who Mrs. Aydelot is, Bo Peep? |
27505 | Do you mean to follow a military life? |
27505 | Do you mean to say you have n''t your soldier uniform yet? |
27505 | Do you remember the big sunflower we found to send to Prince Quippi, once? |
27505 | Do you remember your Prince Quippi off in China, and your love letters, with old Grass River for postal service? 27505 Do you suppose father will ever change?" |
27505 | Do you want me to? |
27505 | Do you want to go back to Ohio? |
27505 | Doctor Carey, what brought you to the Philippines? |
27505 | Does anybody else keep sheep around here? |
27505 | Does he come here often? |
27505 | Does it make any difference? 27505 Does n''t your mother know you are here?" |
27505 | Even with a son as old now as I was that night? 27505 Father, do you think a man who fights for his country is to be accounted below the man who stays at home and makes money?" |
27505 | For wy you stare so at dat door yet? 27505 Friend of yours the Emperor sent out to keep you company?" |
27505 | Had you heard of Miss Jane Aydelot''s demise? 27505 Has He forgotten the earth which is His also?" |
27505 | Has some influence here? |
27505 | Has war really been declared? 27505 Has your alfalfa struck root deep enough to begin to pull up that mortgage yet?" |
27505 | Have you made such a sale lately? |
27505 | Hello, Champers, how''s business? |
27505 | Horace Carey? |
27505 | How about Gaines? |
27505 | How about you? |
27505 | How can I answer it? |
27505 | How can I do a parent''s part by her? 27505 How can our boy know as well as his father does what is best for him? |
27505 | How could I have missed her if she started to meet me? 27505 How did this happen?" |
27505 | How did you decide? |
27505 | How did you know? |
27505 | How do you do? |
27505 | How do you know it was a salt can? |
27505 | How do you know that? |
27505 | How do you know? |
27505 | How is this, Leigh? |
27505 | How long have you known him, Carey? |
27505 | How many men in this settlement now? |
27505 | How many rounds have you left? |
27505 | How much do you like me? |
27505 | How much do you own now? |
27505 | How much land have you here, Jacobs? |
27505 | How much, pray? |
27505 | How should I know? 27505 How soon does this involuntary servitude end?" |
27505 | How soon will you be platting your Sunflower Ranch into town lots for the new town that I hear is to be started down your way? |
27505 | How was that? |
27505 | How would you like to keep a store in a place like this, Jacobs? |
27505 | How''d I round up the neighborhood? 27505 How''s your alfalfa doin''?" |
27505 | How? |
27505 | I mean, why call it Carey? 27505 I say, Shirley, did you ever know a man back East named Thomas Smith?" |
27505 | I wish you''d tell me what ails you? |
27505 | I wonder how I missed that mail? |
27505 | Is it another trail, or are you lost and beginning to see things? |
27505 | Is it late? 27505 Is it occupied?" |
27505 | Is n''t it for sale? 27505 Is n''t there pink, or creamy, or something softer in those lilies right by the bank? |
27505 | Is n''t this a wonderful night? |
27505 | Is that a river, really? |
27505 | Is that all? 27505 Is this beautiful to you, Virgie?" |
27505 | Jim''s sick, then? |
27505 | John Jacobs? |
27505 | Just getting in from town? 27505 Kin I please have this huh envelope?" |
27505 | Leigh, do n''t you ever feel jealous of Jo? |
27505 | Leigh, may I bring you home tomorrow night? 27505 Leigh, will you do two things for me?" |
27505 | Leigh, will you let me take you home? 27505 Leigh,"he said at last,"if you did n''t have Uncle Jim what would you do?" |
27505 | Lord, Doc, is that you? |
27505 | May I have the honor? |
27505 | May I see your stuff, or is it not for the profane eyes of a thresher of alfalfa to look upon? |
27505 | Miss Shirley, I ai n''t wantin''to meddle none, but I come down here to ask you if you know anything about your father? |
27505 | Mother, may I go? 27505 Mr. Champers, will you be sure to tell me all you know as soon as possible? |
27505 | No? |
27505 | Not even my mother? 27505 Not if you had a home there?" |
27505 | Not your style of a man then? |
27505 | Of Leigh? 27505 Oh, Dr. Carey, are you really going?" |
27505 | Oh, Jo, do you really want to be a city girl? |
27505 | Oh, Mrs. Aydelot, will you go? 27505 Oh, Thaine, will you want to leave us some day?" |
27505 | Oh, are you soft that way? |
27505 | Oh, did I? 27505 Ought I be? |
27505 | Ought I? |
27505 | Out of love for me alone? |
27505 | Please, kaint I go with you all? 27505 Say, Aydelot, do you remember the day I come down this valley and tried my danged best to get you to sell out for a song? |
27505 | Say, little Sketcher of Things, will you be missing me when I go to school next month? 27505 Say, would you mind tellin''me if you find out anything about your father''s whereabouts or anything?" |
27505 | See yonder, away, way off? |
27505 | See, Bo Peep, are n''t they pretty? 27505 Seriously, Aydelot, what''s Thaine to do?" |
27505 | Shall I help you too, or shall Rosie and I look after the refreshments? |
27505 | Shall I stay here and spoil your landscape or come around and shake hands? |
27505 | Shirley, where is Pryor tonight? |
27505 | Since when did you join the Young Men''s Christian Association? |
27505 | Somebody dying or a highwayman chasing after you for your pocketbook, that you drive so furiously? |
27505 | Suppose I was helpless and poor now, what could you do for me? |
27505 | Tell me, Bo Peep, why Dr. Carey should enter the army again and go to the Philippines? |
27505 | Thaine, what do you mean to do when you grow up? |
27505 | That pup pretty nearly killed you with kindness, did n''t he? |
27505 | The one that should bring him straight from China to me, if he really cared for me? |
27505 | The river ever get low here? |
27505 | Then why did n''t you get away sooner? 27505 Then why do n''t you go home now?" |
27505 | Then why do you go? |
27505 | Then, why did n''t you put another door in the kitchen end of the house? |
27505 | Todd, do you know why he thinks so much of Leigh Shirley? |
27505 | Um, who have I the honor of addressing now? |
27505 | Vell, and vot has Shirley ever done mit you that you so down on him? |
27505 | Virginia, did you ever do a washing before the war? |
27505 | Was it the old Jim Shirley quarter, the Cloverdale Ranch? |
27505 | We? |
27505 | Well, Thaine, how goes the game? |
27505 | Well, and what if Coburn is right? |
27505 | Well, but about this bank account? |
27505 | Well, how can I send? |
27505 | Well, lady landlord, how can I advise you? 27505 Well, what of all this? |
27505 | Well, why do n''t you tighten up on him? 27505 Well, why do you go, then?" |
27505 | Well, you can see most of those things that I saw that day out yonder, ca n''t you? |
27505 | Well, you do n''t want him to go, do you, Jo? |
27505 | Well, your whole wardrobe is over here; why not stay all night? 27505 Well?" |
27505 | Well? |
27505 | Well? |
27505 | Well? |
27505 | What ails the flock? |
27505 | What are you going to do? 27505 What are you saying, Thaine Aydelot?" |
27505 | What could possibly harm her? 27505 What did he want?" |
27505 | What did you call your wife? |
27505 | What did you say Gretchen Gimpke had in that tin can? |
27505 | What do you ask for it? |
27505 | What do you mean? 27505 What do you propose to do?" |
27505 | What do you say? |
27505 | What do you think of this? |
27505 | What do you want now? |
27505 | What is Thaine going to follow, Asher? |
27505 | What is the other thing? |
27505 | What is your name? |
27505 | What kept you fellows so long, anyhow? |
27505 | What made Gimpke leave? |
27505 | What made Jim go away from Cloverdale? |
27505 | What made me take this day? 27505 What of Tank''s life?" |
27505 | What of this? |
27505 | What possessed you to happen in, anyhow? |
27505 | What''d I say back there about women? 27505 What''s around there, Aydelot?" |
27505 | What''s before you now? |
27505 | What''s going on in the dining room? |
27505 | What''s made you think of him? |
27505 | What''s on it now? |
27505 | What''s the next case on docket, Leigh? |
27505 | What''s the row here? |
27505 | What''s the trouble here? |
27505 | What''s the trouble? |
27505 | What''s them Boxers wantin''? 27505 What''s your grievance against him now?" |
27505 | What? |
27505 | When your service is done is there anything to hold you from going straight to the Grass River Valley again? |
27505 | Where are the purple notches? |
27505 | Where are you going to? |
27505 | Where did you learn to do all these things for sick people? |
27505 | Where is Tank now? |
27505 | Where were you meanwhile? |
27505 | Where''s Jim? 27505 Where''s Jim?" |
27505 | Where''s Thaine? |
27505 | Where''s that broken plow of yours? 27505 Where''s that? |
27505 | Where? |
27505 | Who is Kansas? |
27505 | Who is it, boys? |
27505 | Who is this James Shirley whose mail he seems to look after? |
27505 | Who shall preside at the meeting? |
27505 | Who was it? |
27505 | Who were_ we_ in this planting? |
27505 | Who''s likely to drop in tonight, and what''s the program for the evening: charades, music, readings, dancing, cribbage, or political speeches? |
27505 | Who''s the decorating committee? |
27505 | Who''s the man with the dark mustache up there? |
27505 | Why did n''t you go to the census report of 1890, or Radway''s Ready Relief Almanac, or the Unabridged Dictionary? |
27505 | Why did you put the well so far away, Asher? |
27505 | Why do n''t you let the horses trot down this hill slope, Asher? |
27505 | Why do n''t you say something? |
27505 | Why do they call that place Carey''s Crossing? |
27505 | Why do you dodge me? 27505 Why do you go? |
27505 | Why do you think he will never come back? 27505 Why has n''t Mr. Aydelot been notified?" |
27505 | Why have n''t we done it before? 27505 Why have n''t you ever told us this before, Asher?" |
27505 | Why have n''t you told me? |
27505 | Why mine? |
27505 | Why not answer it and be rid of it? |
27505 | Why not help a bit yourself? 27505 Why not, Leigh? |
27505 | Why not? |
27505 | Why not? |
27505 | Why not? |
27505 | Why should the first generation here weight us all down here, too? 27505 Why should you, sure enough?" |
27505 | Why two? |
27505 | Why, Josephine, my queen, my queen, where are you hiding? 27505 Why, Pilot, what''s the news?" |
27505 | Why, do n''t you see the wind is from the north? 27505 Why, do you remember him?" |
27505 | Will he be back in time, though? |
27505 | Will the Arnolds and the Archibalds be up? 27505 Will you come over to our table? |
27505 | Will you? 27505 Wim me?" |
27505 | With a boy nineteen tonight, how can it be otherwise? |
27505 | Would you be? |
27505 | Would you never be satisfied in the country, Jo? |
27505 | Would you rather stay with Miss Jane? |
27505 | Yes, I will,Leigh replied,"but will you tell me what you know about him; you must know something?" |
27505 | Yes, but in the end who really won? |
27505 | Yes? |
27505 | Yes? |
27505 | Yes? |
27505 | You are in the real estate business here? |
27505 | You can face it all for me? |
27505 | You could? |
27505 | You do n''t seem to need him? |
27505 | You do use your property well, I am sure,Doctor Carey said, replying to the last words spoken between them,"and yet, you would give it up?" |
27505 | You have relatives there? |
27505 | You like the sunflowers, do n''t you? |
27505 | You mean the Jew foreclosed on the preacher, do n''t you? |
27505 | You mean the State Agricultural Report of Secretary Coburn? 27505 You take no risk at all in leaving, so you''ll go first, I suppose?" |
27505 | You''d just like to get away from it, now, would n''t you? |
27505 | You''d like to live in Topeka where the big Kaw river is, and the big trees along its banks, and so much green grass, would n''t you, Thaine? |
27505 | You''ll be over tonight, wo n''t you? 27505 A sudden flush deepened on his ruddy cheeks and he continued:Of course you are going to the picnic? |
27505 | Am I too late?" |
27505 | An''did n''t he stay night time an''day time right by the blessed boy, till he''s pullin''him out of dangeh of death''s wing? |
27505 | An''did n''t he tak''care of Misteh Thaine? |
27505 | An''here''s-- what?" |
27505 | And a plum pudding all brown and ready?" |
27505 | And are you sure you ai n''t been misrepresenting things to me a little as agent for Tank Shirley? |
27505 | And had he given grounds for such obligation? |
27505 | And hear him order the best horse? |
27505 | And it is blowing everything south now? |
27505 | And that quarter across the river that used to be all sand, you own that now, Aydelot, do n''t you? |
27505 | And then you ask me what I have to say, what I am going to do, and, with fine gestures, what I see?" |
27505 | And what was it that made me look over all those papers in my vault box last night? |
27505 | And why mistrust a man who calls himself innocent''Thomas Smith?'' |
27505 | Any news from home?" |
27505 | Anybody here know Mr. James Shirley?" |
27505 | Are n''t you glad you do n''t just have to stay in the country?" |
27505 | Are the Aydelots big enough to bury old hates?" |
27505 | Are they a band of prize ring fellers?" |
27505 | Are you afraid to trust me?" |
27505 | Are you just getting home? |
27505 | Are you right sure you ai n''t Tank Shirley himself? |
27505 | Are you too sleepy to look at them? |
27505 | As the two men sat enjoying the hour Dr. Carey suddenly asked:"After this hospital service, what next?" |
27505 | Aydelot? |
27505 | Aydelot?" |
27505 | Bo Peep pleaded, and, clutching it as a sacred treasure, he said:"Mis''Virginia, did n''t I done tellen you Misteh Thaine would come back?" |
27505 | But Leigh, am I an unnecessary evil? |
27505 | But Smith, since you are only an agent and nobody knows it but us, why keep yourself so secret? |
27505 | But do you dare? |
27505 | But do you know what her intentions were?" |
27505 | But knowing what you do, who of you wants to face Darley Champers?" |
27505 | But say, why not tell me now what you are about, so I can be looking up references and former judicial decisions handed down in similar cases?" |
27505 | But to be fair, now, why do you want to keep yourself in hiding, and who''s the fellow you want to kill?" |
27505 | But what next? |
27505 | But where''s Pryor Gaines in this rollcall? |
27505 | But why forecast the might- have- been? |
27505 | But why? |
27505 | But, Asher, what are your plans?" |
27505 | But, Thaine, will you want to go back to Ohio to the Aydelot homestead? |
27505 | But, will it catch Asher? |
27505 | CHAPTER XVI THE HUMANENESS OF CHAMPERS What is the use of trying to make things worse? |
27505 | CHAPTER XXIII THE END OF THE WILDERNESS Have I named one single river? |
27505 | Ca n''t I help you in some way?" |
27505 | Ca n''t I_ do_ something?" |
27505 | Ca n''t a doctor enjoy life once in a while? |
27505 | Ca n''t a man look at a pretty girl if he is past forty- five? |
27505 | Ca n''t you see it?" |
27505 | Can I be of any service to you today?" |
27505 | Can I be of any service to you?" |
27505 | Can we fix it right?" |
27505 | Can you go?" |
27505 | Can you help me at all?" |
27505 | Can you leave Kansas? |
27505 | Can you tell me who owns the last claim taken up down the river, and how far it is from here?" |
27505 | Can you trust me to be the last link of the chain in doin''her business? |
27505 | Can you try it? |
27505 | Champers?" |
27505 | Champers?" |
27505 | Come, help at the killing, wo n''t you?" |
27505 | Could I have left it when I took that gallop?" |
27505 | Could n''t he have come here? |
27505 | Could n''t we come some time to the Purple Notches and build a home for just our summer days, because we have seen these headlands all our lives?" |
27505 | Could n''t you go with me to a broader life somewhere out in the real big world? |
27505 | Could n''t you learn to care, Leigh? |
27505 | Could the gates be stormed? |
27505 | Could this wall be shaken? |
27505 | Could you identify him? |
27505 | D.?" |
27505 | Did n''t old grandfather, Jean Aydelot, leave his home in France, and did n''t grandmother, Mercy Pennington, marry to suit her own choice?" |
27505 | Did that guard really keep off that thing I saw from the high bluff up yonder?" |
27505 | Did you ever investigate it?" |
27505 | Did you ever try to till a whole section of land back in Ohio before the war?" |
27505 | Did you know the man who was with him?" |
27505 | Did you take it you were all we expected?" |
27505 | Do I need it?" |
27505 | Do n''t they suit you?" |
27505 | Do n''t we both know that?" |
27505 | Do n''t you care for me? |
27505 | Do n''t you know I''m from Boston originally, which is only a State of Mind?" |
27505 | Do n''t you know that President McKinley has declared war and has called for one hundred and twenty- five thousand volunteers? |
27505 | Do n''t you love them?" |
27505 | Do n''t you remember how Jim Shirley was always out here instead of my going down town when we were boys?" |
27505 | Do n''t you remember?" |
27505 | Do we turn here?" |
27505 | Do you know where he got the money he loaned you?" |
27505 | Do you reckon we Jayhawkers will wait till one hundred and twenty thousand have enlisted and trail in on the last five thousand? |
27505 | Do you remember that first supper here and the sunflowers in the old tin can?" |
27505 | Do you remember the night in the old Thaine home in Virginia when you were our guest-- too sick to dance?" |
27505 | Do you suppose the Aydelots will be down before we go away?" |
27505 | Do you think you could do it?" |
27505 | Do you wonder Tank hates his brother? |
27505 | Does he? |
27505 | Does n''t she look like a drudge?" |
27505 | Even across the Pacific Ocean, where another kind of wilderness lies?" |
27505 | First, can you keep one door shut on days like this, even when there is no draught straight through the house?" |
27505 | Has anybody asked you specially-- to be your very particular escort?" |
27505 | Have I claimed one single acre? |
27505 | Have I kept one single nugget( barring samples)? |
27505 | Have you heard from the Spoopendykes and the Gilliwigs?" |
27505 | He''s not mery pretty, though, but you love him, too, do n''t you, Miss Jane?" |
27505 | How can I make a home for a little girl? |
27505 | How could any of us get along without Uncle Jim?" |
27505 | How could there be such a romantic place out on these level plains?" |
27505 | How did you get away on a day like this?" |
27505 | How did you scent chicken pie so far? |
27505 | How do you do it?" |
27505 | How do you spell it?" |
27505 | How long have you had it?" |
27505 | How long have you known him?" |
27505 | How much stock do you want, Aydelot, and how will you sell?" |
27505 | How would you like to keep a tavern in such a place?" |
27505 | How''ll I be by the time I get out to that ranch?" |
27505 | How''ll Shirley know you from the Mayor of Wilmington, Delaware, anyhow?" |
27505 | How''s the country look to you?" |
27505 | I can see such big things to be done here, but, oh, Leigh, are you sure you want me here?" |
27505 | I guess you ai n''t forgot it, neither?" |
27505 | I mean, you say he does?" |
27505 | I meant to do a washing this morning, but how could any garment stay on the line out there and not be whipped to shreds?" |
27505 | Is it because you know I can throw you? |
27505 | Is it bolt or weld? |
27505 | Is it possible your frontier is further westward still? |
27505 | Is n''t it wonderful how Thaine ever lived through that dreadful bullet wound and fever?" |
27505 | Is n''t it wonderful to be a real pioneer? |
27505 | Is n''t that a sheep?" |
27505 | Is n''t that enough about Jo?" |
27505 | Is n''t that the promise?" |
27505 | Is n''t there any way to punish Spain except by sending more Americans to be killed by her fuses and her guns?" |
27505 | Is n''t there ground enough if the wind will be merciful, not to use up our lawn?" |
27505 | Is that what you call it? |
27505 | Leigh gave a quick glance and answered:"Too heavy everywhere? |
27505 | Leigh, who had been pleased with all of them, turned to her guardian, saying gravely:"Uncle Jim, can I go to school wif Thaine?" |
27505 | Leigh? |
27505 | Let a single man offer you a word of advice, will you?" |
27505 | Make a minute of it when you get it, wo n''t you?" |
27505 | May I ask a favor of you?" |
27505 | May I ask how you propose to put in the fall after wheat harvest?" |
27505 | May I tell you that there is still one more lesson to learn?" |
27505 | Not yet, do we, Juno, even if it rains trouble instead of rain? |
27505 | Notice how everybody give him right of way to get his mail first? |
27505 | Now, who?" |
27505 | Oh, Leigh, Leigh, may I tell you once more how dear you are to me? |
27505 | Oh, Leigh, will you?" |
27505 | Or do you want to shove prosperity away when it comes right to your door?" |
27505 | Or is it because I got full here once and beat you up a bit over in Wyker''s place?" |
27505 | Or why do n''t you do more of it?" |
27505 | Or will your art and your ranch take all your thoughts?" |
27505 | Remember what a fight we had with fire a year ago?" |
27505 | Remember, when we met down by the bend here, one winter day?" |
27505 | Say, Mis''Virginia, did-- did he done mention my name anywhar in that letteh?" |
27505 | Shall I show you on to the Crossing?" |
27505 | Shall we go over and settle it when we finish the Filipino fuss?" |
27505 | Strange what a woman will do for love, is n''t it? |
27505 | Tell me, mother, what does all this fit me for? |
27505 | The forum teacher? |
27505 | The learned recluse? |
27505 | The place has n''t changed much, has it?" |
27505 | The poet- singer? |
27505 | The soldier, voyager, Or ruler? |
27505 | Then Champers said with a frown:"What do you want now? |
27505 | Think of the daughter of one of those old Virginia homes up to a trick like that?" |
27505 | This Smith is the same man who came to old Carey''s Crossing years ago, of course?" |
27505 | Unless what?" |
27505 | WINNING THE WILDERNESS In all the story of the world of man, Who blazed the way to greater, better things? |
27505 | Want to see him?" |
27505 | Was she good looking? |
27505 | Was there an obligation demanded here today? |
27505 | Were you near here then? |
27505 | What are you goin''to do?" |
27505 | What are you thinking about, T. Aydelot? |
27505 | What are you trying to say?" |
27505 | What can I tell him of you?" |
27505 | What did you think of doin''with it now?" |
27505 | What do you mean by breaking up my party?" |
27505 | What do you mean?" |
27505 | What do you say? |
27505 | What do you say?" |
27505 | What do you suppose put him against the Boxers?" |
27505 | What does distance count, against that?" |
27505 | What else?" |
27505 | What has become of the old prairie?" |
27505 | What have you been doing for him?" |
27505 | What is it, and who depends on it? |
27505 | What is there here on these Kansas prairies to hold me here and make me want to bring you here, too? |
27505 | What is there to be afraid of, anyhow?" |
27505 | What kind of an answer-- information or just my opinion?" |
27505 | What made him come out here anyhow?" |
27505 | What made you run away?" |
27505 | What made you so bitter?" |
27505 | What makes you do so many things just for me? |
27505 | What now?" |
27505 | What shall I do?" |
27505 | What should make me sight danger in a man I never saw before, and who will probably go out on the stage tomorrow morning? |
27505 | What the devil do you want with me? |
27505 | What was it?" |
27505 | What we care? |
27505 | What''s that now?" |
27505 | What''s the matter with Jim, Pilot? |
27505 | What''s the matter with him?" |
27505 | What''s the use in a man as big as I am, with no lung power, keeping at it?" |
27505 | What''s the value of that, d''you reckon? |
27505 | What''s to prevent a metropolis risin''right here where a decade and a half ago there was n''t nothing but bare prairie?" |
27505 | What''s yours?" |
27505 | When Asher had asked,"What do you call my life work, Father?" |
27505 | When Pryor is gone, may I ask you sometimes what to do? |
27505 | Where are Pryor and Leigh? |
27505 | Where have you been so long? |
27505 | Where is your man today? |
27505 | Where''d you run onto it? |
27505 | Where''s Champers?" |
27505 | Where''s Uncle Jim?" |
27505 | Where''s the harm in letting Shirley lay eyes on you? |
27505 | Where''s your uniform?" |
27505 | Who do you s''pose will take his place? |
27505 | Who ever heard of the United States being a naval power? |
27505 | Who got his excuse?" |
27505 | Who is it?" |
27505 | Who shall say that the hope and belief with which his few drugs were ministered carried not equal power with them toward health and wholeness? |
27505 | Who stopped the long migration of wild men, And set the noble task of building human homes? |
27505 | Who was it?" |
27505 | Who will volunteer? |
27505 | Who would n''t miss you?" |
27505 | Who''d a''thought it back in the seventies when Jim Shirley an''Asher Aydelot squatted here? |
27505 | Who''s your partner, Jo?" |
27505 | Why are n''t you satisfied to make the other boys all envy you?" |
27505 | Why did Horace go so far away?" |
27505 | Why do n''t you get married or take a trip to India, Doctor? |
27505 | Why do n''t you get your plowing done?" |
27505 | Why do n''t you revert to the soil, too, Bennington?" |
27505 | Why do the other fellows out of their goods, as we Jews are always accused of doing, if it leaves me no customer to buy? |
27505 | Why do you want to hear in the dark what you wo n''t listen to in the daylight?" |
27505 | Why go on the heels of a snowstorm? |
27505 | Why him? |
27505 | Why let a scoundrel like that run free?" |
27505 | Why not come out into the open? |
27505 | Why not here? |
27505 | Why not keep Jim''s letter a day or two? |
27505 | Why not the whole thing?" |
27505 | Why should he be taken? |
27505 | Why should prosperity not come to this valley as well? |
27505 | Why you take oop precious time peekin''trough der crack in der kitchen door? |
27505 | Why? |
27505 | Why?" |
27505 | Will I do for an answer, Leighlie? |
27505 | Will it be given to you to see bigger things?" |
27505 | Will you let me be your lover for one minute up here on the Purple Notches, where the whole world lies around us and nobody knows our secret? |
27505 | Will you promise again to send me the same message you sent to Prince Quippi when you want me to come back?" |
27505 | Will you send me a letter down the old Kaw River when I go to the Kansas University this fall?" |
27505 | Will you tell me how you expect to support a Cloverdale girl when you marry one?" |
27505 | Wo n''t Fred Funston do things when he hits the Orient? |
27505 | Wo n''t you come and sit with me?" |
27505 | Wo n''t you come with me to get flowers for supper?" |
27505 | Wo n''t you give me that chrome- yellow tube by your elbow there?" |
27505 | Wo n''t you keep telling me your plans, and if I can help you, will you let me do it?" |
27505 | Would the Aydelots feel the same if they knew it?" |
27505 | Would you like me to show you where to go to dig, so''s you can be sure your plan with Tank Shirley worked and you did n''t drown, after all? |
27505 | Would you listen to that?" |
27505 | Yet, where can she be now?" |
27505 | You always were an artist, but when did you learn all the technique? |
27505 | You and me both? |
27505 | You could use it, I reckon?" |
27505 | You said you had two?" |
27505 | You think Thaine will come home again, do n''t you?" |
27505 | You understand that? |
27505 | You, an only child?" |
27505 | Your plans just fall together and fit in, do n''t they?" |
27505 | he said grimly]"Why scary?" |
27505 | where''s the trail, anyhow?" |