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 |
---|---|
41347 | Oh how sits the city solitary which was full of people? 41347 For do they think that those upon whom the Tower fell and slew them, were sinners above the rest of the Army? |
41347 | How is she become a widow? |
41347 | Marlet,"Charlotte de la Tremoille,"p. 186:"Signé Derby; mais faut- il dire: écrit par lord Derby? |
40584 | Are we then to murmur?--to feel as if robbed? |
40584 | But is the tide everything? |
40584 | Nowhere do we see a better illustration than is supplied in Liverpool of the primitive Judean market- places,"Why stand ye here all the day idle?" |
40584 | The first phrase heard in a Lancashire crowd is,"Where are you thrutching?" |
43910 | What like shall I work it? |
43910 | Whatever may a scrapple be? |
43910 | Dependent on the world for nearly every crumb, Is this a time when patriots should be dumb? |
43910 | For whom yon glittering board is spread, Dress''d for whom yon golden bed? |
43910 | From what models or pattern did these early sculptors copy their designs? |
43910 | Has the oldest industry of the county had a share in this attainment of wealth, or its rural population derived advancement? |
43910 | He shouted to Bishop Cutheard and his congregation,"What can your dead man, Cuthbert, do to me? |
43910 | How many of the thousands who annually visit the Isle of Man are aware that the island contains a veritable museum of Runic historical remains? |
43910 | May we not suppose this to be from"rost,"a torrent or whirlpool, and"dale,"the Danish for valley? |
43910 | Now what is to be said about the subjects carved on these crosses and about the date of the work? |
43910 | Our own Wednesday, is it not still Odin''s day? |
43910 | The Danish"buinn"is"prepared,"or"addressed to,"or"bound for,"as"Weere ar''t beawn furt''goo?" |
43910 | The first question is, would home produced wheat pay? |
43910 | The question is, where was the"tun"or village on the Brun? |
43910 | The rough words he articulated, are they not the rudimental roots of those English words we still use? |
43910 | To a tourist who made the somewhat stupid inquiry,"Does it ever rain here?" |
43910 | WAS IT FOUGHT IN LANCASHIRE? |
43910 | What are the facts disclosed by the figures for the past 25 or 50 years? |
43910 | What call unknown, what charms presume To break the quiet of the tomb? |
43910 | What has been the course of our agriculture for the past sixty years? |
43910 | What is the use of threatening me with his anger? |
43910 | What then was the Sochman? |
43910 | Who is he with voice unbless''d That calls me from the bed of rest? |
43910 | Who thus afflicts my troubled sprite And drags me from the realms of night? |
43910 | Would not a system on similar lines have far- reaching results in this country? |
43910 | [ Illustration] THIS ENGLISH(?) |
43910 | an acre be worth cultivating? |
43910 | arise and say What dangers Odin''s child await, Who the author of his fate? |
43910 | my spell obey; Once again arise and say Who th''avenger of his guilt, By whom shall Hoder''s blood be spilt? |
15986 | Well, Nanny,said I;"where''s th''owd chap?" |
15986 | Well, well,said th''owd woman;"they geet''em reet at the end of o'', then?" |
15986 | Well,replied she,"how did they go on at after that?" |
15986 | What''s up now, Nanny? |
15986 | What, were''n they noan gradely sorted, then, at after o''? |
15986 | ''Didto ever yer ov onybody layin''the devil wi''meighl- porritch?'' |
15986 | ''Hello?'' |
15986 | ''It''s what?'' |
15986 | ''Mun I make tho a saup o''gruel?'' |
15986 | ''Reet?'' |
15986 | ''Whatever''s to do witho, James?'' |
15986 | ''Where''s thi fiddle?'' |
15986 | ''Why, arto takin''thame summat?'' |
15986 | An''off he ran, an''laft owd Pudge sit upo''th''organ, grinnin''at him.... That''s a nice do, is n''t it, Nanny?" |
15986 | An''then he looked round th''singin''-pew, as helpless as a kittlin''; an''he said to th''singers,''Whatever mun aw do, folk?'' |
15986 | But how wenten they on at after?" |
15986 | But, aw say, Pudge; th''next time at there''s aught o''this sort agate again, aw wish thae''d be as good as keep that pow o''thine to thysel'', wilto? |
15986 | Con yo lend me a lantron?" |
15986 | Did onybody ever yer"Th''Owd Hundred,"played upov a triangle?'' |
15986 | Does he get ony wage?" |
15986 | Does he go to schoo yet?" |
15986 | Doesto think it''ll be reet?'' |
15986 | Dun yo co''that nought?" |
15986 | Hasto no news? |
15986 | Heaw''s that?'' |
15986 | How would yo like me to slap tho o''th''chops wi''a stockin''-full o''slutch, some Sunday, when thae''rt swaggerin''at front o''th''parson?'' |
15986 | Thae never sees me weshin'', doesto? |
15986 | Thae surely does n''t want to ha''thi shirt set to music, doesto? |
15986 | Then Mary turned to Robin, an''hoo said,''Whatever sort of a machine''s this, Robin?'' |
15986 | Then th''owd woman coom in, and hoo said,''Isaac, whatever i''the name o''fortin''hasto bin blunderin''and doin''again? |
15986 | What; han yo getten thus far? |
15986 | Where win yo ha''t put, Betty?'' |
15986 | Where''s th''maunderin''foo gone to?'' |
15986 | Where''s that pitch- pipe? |
15986 | Where''s yo''r Jone? |
15986 | Who''s brought it?'' |
15986 | said Robin, swipin''his ale off? |
45153 | But, mamma, do you think there are any wild dogs in the cavern? |
45153 | What should I have felt if you had been in her situation? |
45153 | Would you like to see the chapel? |
45153 | ( Bold?) |
45153 | A.?) |
45153 | And I asked Margaret,"whether she had done anything in lieu of it, which might answer it to the children?" |
45153 | And does the kingly purple, and governing refractory worlds instead of stitching coarse shoes, make it any merrier? |
45153 | And say we not all,"Our Father which art in heaven, hallowed,& c."? |
45153 | And we asked him who should do it, then? |
45153 | But why are they unfortunate? |
45153 | Cuckoo, shall I call thee bird, Or but a wandering voice? |
45153 | Did he find a resting- place there? |
45153 | Do we not all come of Adam, our earthly father? |
45153 | For this your glorious progress next ordain, With chariots, horsemen, and a numerous train? |
45153 | Friends we have had-- the years flew by, How many have they borne away? |
45153 | He went on to say, that many years previously( I forget the exact date)[ 1828] he was in attendance upon one Miss Hale( Miss Frances Hall?) |
45153 | How can we crack then of our ancient stock, seeing we came all both of one earthly and heavenly Father? |
45153 | How many churches have had the full measure of services prescribed, in which from time immemorial the most scanty administration had sufficed? |
45153 | How many parishes have been supplied with resident clergy, in which no pastoral care had been for years manifested? |
45153 | I asked them why then did they did not appease the people, and keep them sober? |
45153 | If ye mark the common saying, how gentle blood came up, ye shall see how true it is:-- When Adam delved, and Eve span, Who was then a gentleman? |
45153 | Is God asleep on those days? |
45153 | Is He weary, that He must rest Him in those days? |
45153 | It''m, for a suet of coopes( suit of copes) claymed by ye inhabitants of Cartmell to belong to ye Church thereof, the gift of oon Brigg? |
45153 | Man like the hours is born to die, The last year''s hours, oh, where are they? |
45153 | Or doth He give the ruling of those days to some evil spirit or planet? |
45153 | Or in favour of him, George? |
45153 | Or the difference between Lord Hugh and Hugh Lord? |
45153 | So the truth came over them, that when one of the rude fellows cried"he would swear,"one of the justices checked him, saying,"What will you swear? |
45153 | Was thy own life merry, for example, in the hollow of the tree, clad permanently in leather? |
45153 | What shall I do?" |
45153 | When did Dissenters know anything of heraldry? |
45153 | Wherefore I asked, where were the magistrates that they did not keep the people civil? |
45153 | Whereupon I asked them,"whether, if their mother married, they should not lose by it?" |
45153 | Why do n''t those acred sirs Throw up their parks some dozen times a year, And let the people breathe? |
45153 | Will not the exploding gunpowder drive the firewood where they sit? |
45153 | or doth He not rule the world and all things those days as well as on other days? |
46090 | ''Is it deep neet?'' 46090 ''Mine is breet enough,''said Chirrup, showing a pewter platter, and continued,''What hast thou?'' |
46090 | ''Well, Georgy, and so yo''re leaving th''owd house at last?'' 46090 Am aw lyin''thinks ta?" |
46090 | And dun you really think, then,said I,"that this place has been haunted by a boggart?" |
46090 | And is this your grandson? |
46090 | Aye,replied old Alice,"is n''t it a varra fine cat? |
46090 | Co'', ah,replied Sam;"does he eves miss, thinks ta? |
46090 | Go?--ah; what elze? |
46090 | Han yo sin aught ov a felley wi breeches on, an''rayther forrud, upo''th''gate, between an''th''Fir Grove? |
46090 | Have you never seen it before? |
46090 | How are my trousers? |
46090 | How long is that since? |
46090 | How''s that? |
46090 | How''s your clock? |
46090 | How''s your clock? |
46090 | Is n''t Grislehurst cold and lonely in winter time? |
46090 | It''s nought else, aw believe,said Mary;"does ta think he''ll co''?" |
46090 | Mary,said he, rising, and calling to his wife, who was in another room;"Mary, wheer''s that old watch?" |
46090 | Nay, I do n''t know as I hev, Billy; what is it? 46090 Papa, are angels poorly sometimes, like we are here? |
46090 | Papa, are people lame in heaven? |
46090 | Plant said,--''Good St John, this seed we crave, We have dared; shall we have?'' 46090 Reader,"says he,"did''st thou ever go from Wigan to Preston? |
46090 | Was you ever on Chapel Island? |
46090 | Well, an''heaw han yo getten on? |
46090 | Well, an''what''s te felly code? |
46090 | Well,replied the other, with cool indifference,"Get foughten, an''let''s go whoam?" |
46090 | Well,said I,"and what sort of a place was Grislehurst Hall itself?" |
46090 | Well,said he;"an''are yo i''th buildin''line-- at aw mun be so bowd?" |
46090 | Well,said he;"it''s nought to me, at aw know on-- nobbut aw''re thinkin''like.... Did''n yo ever see Baemforth Ho'', afore it''re poo''d deawn?" |
46090 | Well; what is it, pet? |
46090 | Well; what is it? |
46090 | What are ye for wi''this? |
46090 | What, Gerzlehus''Ho''? |
46090 | Where shall we go this afternoon? |
46090 | Will ta, for sure? |
46090 | Will you enter it, sir? |
46090 | [ 40][ 40]_ Yers to mo, neaw?_--hearest thou me, now? 46090 [ 8] After we had finished, he said,"Neaw, win yd have a reech o''bacco? |
46090 | ''Could aw see him?'' |
46090 | ''Did n''t I buy this midden, Jem?'' |
46090 | ''Han yo foughten?'' |
46090 | ''Han yo lickt''n?'' |
46090 | ''Well, an''did n''t I pay tho for''t at th''same time?'' |
46090 | ''Well, but,''says tother,''did n''t I buy it on tho?'' |
46090 | ''What hast thou?'' |
46090 | --"Well, Dennis,"said the traveller,"I''ll have a score if you''ll tell us about the Irishman in the cook''s shop.--Ye will? |
46090 | An did''n th''awvish shap, an th''peckl''t jump pan, said''n they? |
46090 | An sed,"Wheer arto beawn?" |
46090 | An''wheer dun yo come fro, sen yo?" |
46090 | And must my trembling spirit fly Into a world unknown? |
46090 | And what is death, after all; but the stopping of life''s watch; to be wound up again by the Maker? |
46090 | And who was he, that jovial fellow, With his strong ale so old and mellow? |
46090 | Any man, with an unsophisticated mind, looking upon the two, might be allowed to say,"Why not do enough of_ this_ to cure_ that_?" |
46090 | Are there any remains of the old chantry left?" |
46090 | Arto findin''things eawt? |
46090 | Arto leet gi''n? |
46090 | As to the pride of"ancient descent,"what does it mean, apart from the renown of noble deeds? |
46090 | Come back to eawr heawse; an''Martha''ll go forrud to Stopput( Stockport)--winnot tho, Martha?... |
46090 | D''ye see yon white line? |
46090 | Do n''t you think you would, now?" |
46090 | Do yees want any oysters, gentlemen? |
46090 | Dun yo know Ned o''Andrew''s?" |
46090 | Dun yo like it bhoylt? |
46090 | Dun yo like pickle, measther? |
46090 | Eh, lasses; han_ yo_ bin a- beggin'', too?" |
46090 | Eh; heawivver han yo getten ower?" |
46090 | Has to foryeat''n th''tayliur findin''th''urchon; an th''rimes? |
46090 | He did just stop abeawt hauve a minute-- when he feld hur hit his legs-- to co''eawt,"Hoo''s that at''s hittin''mo?" |
46090 | He replied,"Well; aw have yerd it said so, aw think-- but my memory houds nought neaw.... Tim Bobbin, say''n yo? |
46090 | He waited long, and then shouted,"Are thoose eggs noan ready yet?" |
46090 | He wortches up at th''col- pit yon, does n''t he? |
46090 | He''s a breet- lookin''brid, is n''t he? |
46090 | Hoo stare''t a bit afore hoo could may it eawt what it wur at''re creepin up th''chimney- hole, an''hoo said,"What mak o''lumber ha''n yo afoot neaw? |
46090 | I could not but lift my eyes now and then towards that solemn face, inwardly moved by a feeling which reverently said,"Will it do?" |
46090 | I had no sooner sat down, than he looked at my waistcoat pocket again, and said,"I say, old boy, why do n''t you carry a watch? |
46090 | I well remember that the following were among their favourites:--"O, Nanny, wilt thou gang wi''me?" |
46090 | In a minute or so, a voice from the cottage called out,"Does he belung to th''owd body, thinken yo?" |
46090 | Is he to become a kind of nomadic outcast? |
46090 | Is he to take up his works and walk, from one locality to another, every time an inconsiderate complaint happens to be made against him? |
46090 | Is n''t it, Sarah?" |
46090 | It runs thus:--_ Thrum._ Maister, dun yo want a nice bull- an- tarrier? |
46090 | It troubled me so much, indeed, that, even at church, when I heard the words,"Which of you, by taking thought, can add one cubit unto his stature?" |
46090 | It''s nearly th''heighest point i''t country; is n''t it, uncle?" |
46090 | Knocking the ashes out of my pipe, I rose up and said,"Have you got a time- table?" |
46090 | Let''s see, who''s lad are yo, sen yo? |
46090 | Let''s see, wi''n yo have hard brade? |
46090 | Let''s see; did''n yo gi''mo th''hawp''ny?... |
46090 | Oh thou who dost these pointers see, That show the passing hour; Say,--do I tell the time to thee, And tell thee nothing more? |
46090 | Scratching his head, and looking thoughtfully round among the houses, he said,"Scwofil? |
46090 | She stopt me and said,"Meastur, hea fur han yo com''d?" |
46090 | She was a good while in returning; so he shouted up the stairs,"Have n''t you found it yet, Mary?" |
46090 | Sing heigho,"cried he;"Does my wife''s first husband remember me?" |
46090 | Soon after this, Mary said to Jone,"Hasto gan thy horse aught, Jone?" |
46090 | Th''new un hardly comes up to''t, i''my e''en-- as fine as it is.... An''are yo beawn back this gate, then?" |
46090 | The first word spoken was--''What hast thou?'' |
46090 | The old woman, who had been listening behind us, with her hands clasped under her apron, now stepped up, and said,"Heaw lung sin? |
46090 | Then divul recave the toe I''ll stir till ye get both.... Will you take another score, sir,--till I tell the tale? |
46090 | There''s a lot o''nice, level lads i''this cote, is n''t there?... |
46090 | They were singing one of Leech''s finest minor tunes, to Wesley''s hymn:-- And am I born to die, To lay this body down? |
46090 | To whom, then, in this difficulty, can we appeal, but to you, oh Mr. Editor? |
46090 | We hannot had a battle i''this heawse as-- let''s see-- as three year an''moor; ha''n wi, Sam? |
46090 | What breed arto? |
46090 | What browt yo through t''channel at sich an ill time as this? |
46090 | What do you say?" |
46090 | What dun yo think o''him? |
46090 | What is to be the upshot of it all? |
46090 | What mak''o''trash wi''n yo stick up i''th place on''t, when it''s gwon? |
46090 | What the devil is''t, think ye? |
46090 | What think''n yo, measther? |
46090 | What thinken yo, owd brid? |
46090 | What will their eighteen- pence a- head weekly do for them in that hard time? |
46090 | What''s this abaat th''midden, Billy?" |
46090 | What''s to do wi''thee? |
46090 | What''s up wi''them rich gentlefolk an lords as wasna there? |
46090 | What''s your hurry? |
46090 | What, are yo after property, or summat?" |
46090 | What, are yo takkin th''pickter on mo, or summat?... |
46090 | What, ye''ll ha''mothers livin'', likely; happen wives and childer?... |
46090 | What? |
46090 | Whatever arto''doin''i''th chimbley?" |
46090 | Whativver are ye stonnin''theer for? |
46090 | Whativver''s to do? |
46090 | Whau owd Neddy at th''Hoo''senam-- yo known owd Neddy, aw reckon, dunnot yo, Sam? |
46090 | Wheer are you for,--to- day?" |
46090 | Where are the hat- touchers gone? |
46090 | Whereivver han yo cum fra? |
46090 | Whether wilto have a pipe o''bacco or a bat o''th''ribs? |
46090 | Which side dun yo come fro? |
46090 | Who art thou, O man, that writeth thus? |
46090 | Who''s that chap at sits hutchin i''the nook theer, wi''his meawth oppen? |
46090 | Who, that loved music, could go by such a spot without noticing it? |
46090 | Whooaslad art to?" |
46090 | Why do n''t the police look after these things? |
46090 | Wi''n yo come up o''seein''us?" |
46090 | Will ye go daan wi''me?" |
46090 | Ye''ll hev heeard o''that, Alice?" |
46090 | Yor noan beawn to flyte mo, owd crayter, are yo? |
46090 | [ 9] An''han yo some relations i''th''Mildro, then?" |
46090 | _ Book._ Good lorjus o''me; a body conna do moor thin they con, con they? |
46090 | _ Farmer._ A bull- an- tarrier, saysto? |
46090 | _ Farmer._ A what? |
46090 | _ Farmer._ Ay; is it one o''that family? |
46090 | _ Farmer._ Has it a meawth? |
46090 | _ Farmer._ Has it a nick under its nose? |
46090 | _ Jone._ Aw guess yo known Bodle, too, dunnot yo, owd Sam? |
46090 | _ Jone._ Dun yo think so? |
46090 | _ Jone._ Han yo yerd aught abeawt Lord Stanley puttin''th''Corn Laws on again? |
46090 | _ Mary._ Does hoo get nought for it? |
46090 | _ Mary._ Let''s see, is n''t that him''at skens a bit? |
46090 | _ Meary._ Well, an''hea did''n he go on with him? |
46090 | _ Sam._ A bit, saysto, lass? |
46090 | _ Sam._ An''he con write noan mich, aw think, con he? |
46090 | _ Sam._ Aw guess thea con write noan, nor read noather, con ta, Jone? |
46090 | _ Sam._ Do I know Rachda''Church steps, thinksto? |
46090 | _ Sam._ Well; thae''ll co''a lookin''at us, when tho comes this gate on, winnut to, Jone? |
46090 | _ Thrum._ A nick,--naw it has n''t.... Houd; what mak ov a nick dun yo meeon? |
46090 | _ Tim._ Then theaw towd um th''tale, an said th''rimes an aw, did to? |
46090 | _ Tim._''Od rottle the; what says to? |
46090 | _ Tummus._ Heawe''er, aw resolv''t mayth best on''t, an up speek aw.--"Woooas tat?" |
46090 | dun yo pretend to know aught abeawt Gerzlehus''Ho''?... |
46090 | said one of the company,"how is it you are n''t in Fleetwood?" |
46090 | what denotes, or what bespeaks Love more than such sweet apple- cheeks? |
14414 | Is it one o''those lilies mi faither geet fro''th''hall? |
14414 | What is it, lass? |
14414 | ''"Doesto remember th''seventh verse o''th''last chapter?" |
14414 | ''"Haa doesto mean?" |
14414 | ''"Well, if thaa''ll tell me which it is, thaa shall hev it; where abaats is it?" |
14414 | ''"Well,"aw sez,"what abaat that?" |
14414 | ''"What arto doin''up here, Malachi?" |
14414 | ''"What arto starin''at?" |
14414 | ''"Which is it?" |
14414 | ''An''are yo''baan to baptize him?'' |
14414 | ''An''do yo''co this babby one o''th''things o''th''earth?'' |
14414 | ''An''dun yo''know what he sez abaat parsons, Mr. Penrose? |
14414 | ''An''durnd yo''think my missis is hevin''a bad time up at th''cottage yonder? |
14414 | ''An''haa long does He keep''em in when He gets''em theer? |
14414 | ''An''haa long''s that, gronny? |
14414 | ''An''is th''Almeety baan to mak''me climb as mony steps as thaa''s climbed afore I ged into th''same raam as He''s takken little Job too, thinksto?'' |
14414 | ''An''thaa means to say thaa''d save my lass, and th''Almeety would n''t save me?'' |
14414 | ''An''what did he say to that, Milly?'' |
14414 | ''An''what dun yo''think hoo co''s th''dew as it lies fresh on th''moors in a mornin''?'' |
14414 | ''And did she strike you as she struck the tackler?'' |
14414 | ''And dun yo''mean to say that yo''love me as mich naa, mother, as when aw wor a little un?'' |
14414 | ''And haa is owd Moses sin yo''dipped him o''er agen? |
14414 | ''And hesn''t thaa getten a word for th''child, Matt?'' |
14414 | ''And how would you be done by?'' |
14414 | ''And if He coome, what kind o''a welcome would He ged, thinksto? |
14414 | ''And if it keeps on falling for another hour, why will it cease to disappear? |
14414 | ''And more than a child''s?'' |
14414 | ''And them hills-- they''re awlus slumberin'', am''t they? |
14414 | ''And what abaat his spots, Abram?'' |
14414 | ''And what do you call them?'' |
14414 | ''And what governs choice-- or, if you like, will?'' |
14414 | ''And what was that?'' |
14414 | ''And why do they put it in a hoile, gronny? |
14414 | ''And you kissed Milly, did n''t you, Lucy?'' |
14414 | ''Are yo''two reet i''yor yeds( heads)?'' |
14414 | ''Aw dare say as yo''re reet, Gronny; aw''s cry and fret a deal over little Job, but then aw''s hev summat to think abaat, shornd I? |
14414 | ''Aw say, Gronny, Jesus made deead fo''k yer Him when He spok'', did n''t He?'' |
14414 | ''Because repentance is to come home; and you''ve come home, have you not?'' |
14414 | ''But are not the men who have refused admission to Amanda the spiritual children of Mr. Morell? |
14414 | ''But do you really think the angels weep? |
14414 | ''But durnd yo''think, doctor, that if we do as yo''want us we''s be turnin''th''Church into a shoddy hoile?'' |
14414 | ''But he never does-- does he, lad?'' |
14414 | ''But he willn''t ged crushed in a coile seam i''heaven; naa, lass, will he?'' |
14414 | ''But he''s noan here naa, so we''s be like to bide by it, ey, dear? |
14414 | ''But if God puts fo''k i''th''hoile, why shuldn''t mi faither put me i''th''hoile? |
14414 | ''But is getting a living more essential than doing right? |
14414 | ''But is n''t th''Almeety His own Measter?'' |
14414 | ''But is not_ this_ God''s vengeance?'' |
14414 | ''But it''s Oliver o''Deaf Martha''s child, is it not?'' |
14414 | ''But supposing they can not pay, Mr. Fletcher-- what then?'' |
14414 | ''But surely,''pleaded Mr. Penrose,''if the angels welcome a returning sinner, might we not venture to do the same?'' |
14414 | ''But then hoo''ll hev her husband, wernd hoo?'' |
14414 | ''But there''s no law forbidding a funeral at any hour that I know of-- is there?'' |
14414 | ''But when you can not see your way, what then?'' |
14414 | ''But who did He keep out?'' |
14414 | ''But why do you call the snow"angels''down,"Milly?'' |
14414 | ''But why need he go to work so young?'' |
14414 | ''Ca n''t you? |
14414 | ''Ca n''t you?'' |
14414 | ''Can I bring the candles to you?'' |
14414 | ''Can hoo dust one?'' |
14414 | ''Can hoo play th''pianer, thinksto?'' |
14414 | ''Can not you conceive of Will winning Will?'' |
14414 | ''Canst thou minister to a mind diseased?'' |
14414 | ''Come wom''to dee? |
14414 | ''Cornd ta guess?'' |
14414 | ''Did hoo strike me--? |
14414 | ''Did ta''ever see a child dee o''fayver, lass?'' |
14414 | ''Do ged on wi''yor tale, Malachi; what does Mr. Penrose want to know abaat lasses o''forty year sin''? |
14414 | ''Does she seem to fear the operation?'' |
14414 | ''Does she talk much?'' |
14414 | ''Doesto mean i''His judgments?'' |
14414 | ''Doesto say thaa willn''t?'' |
14414 | ''Doesto think''at onybody''s axed Him?'' |
14414 | ''Doesto, Matt? |
14414 | ''Dun yo''think hoo can mak''porritch?'' |
14414 | ''Dun you think yor too owd to be a gronmother?'' |
14414 | ''Ey, Mr. Penrose, whatever''s brought yo aat a neet like this?'' |
14414 | ''Fun who?'' |
14414 | ''Gronny, doesto yer? |
14414 | ''Haa do yo''know I''ve repented?'' |
14414 | ''Haa long does He keep''em i''th''hoile?'' |
14414 | ''Haa mony, thinksto, did He leet in, doctor? |
14414 | ''Has th''missus towd thee ought abaat aar Milly?'' |
14414 | ''Have any of you a light?'' |
14414 | ''How''s that, Moses?'' |
14414 | ''I durnd think as God ud send me where yo''an''mi dad would n''t let me go-- would He, gronny?'' |
14414 | ''I mean is forever as long as thaa''rt owd? |
14414 | ''I suppose the reason is because of my choice, is it not?'' |
14414 | ''If God forgets the past, Amanda, why should you recall it? |
14414 | ''If there were no rain in the heavens there would be no springs in the valleys, would there? |
14414 | ''Is th''dog alive, missis?'' |
14414 | ''Is that thee, Matt?'' |
14414 | ''Is that yo'', mother?'' |
14414 | ''Is that yo''?'' |
14414 | ''It wur that dog as welly killed Moses Fletcher, wurnd it?'' |
14414 | ''It''s grand, lass, is n''t it?'' |
14414 | ''Longer nor Kesmas?'' |
14414 | ''Looking at them, or looking for them?'' |
14414 | ''Might I ask what it was, doctor?'' |
14414 | ''Mother, will yo''draw that blind?'' |
14414 | ''Mun I tell him, Enoch?'' |
14414 | ''Naa, lad, who arto pushin''agen, and where arto baan i''that hurry? |
14414 | ''Plenty, Enoch; hasto yerd naught?'' |
14414 | ''Repentance is to come wom'', sen yo''?'' |
14414 | ''Repentance is to come wom''?'' |
14414 | ''So that is how Malachi won you, is it, Betty? |
14414 | ''So yo''want to know haa aw geet hand o''my missus, dun yo'', Mr. Penrose? |
14414 | ''So you call the snow"angels''down,"do you?'' |
14414 | ''So you call the stars"parish candles,"do you?'' |
14414 | ''So you were baptized for the love of Betty, were you, Malachi?'' |
14414 | ''Sometimes, Matt''''And when is those times, doctor? |
14414 | ''Suppose what you call Will defies God''s love, what then?'' |
14414 | ''Surely he''s noan poachin''a neet like this? |
14414 | ''Tha means th''rich mon''s lass, doesndto?'' |
14414 | ''Thaa''s sin''it mony a time afore, lad, hesn''t ta? |
14414 | ''That''s no reason why yo''should want to turn th''gate into a steele- hoile( stile), is it?'' |
14414 | ''The Almighty?'' |
14414 | ''Then a man is lost because he can not be saved, and punished for things over which he had no control?'' |
14414 | ''Then haa is it yo''re so mich better nor Him, as yo''co th''Almeety, for yo''reckon He''ll noan save some o''us?'' |
14414 | ''Then he''ll noan give us another chonce, lad? |
14414 | ''Then thaa''ll not come across the gulf and help us, Amos?'' |
14414 | ''Then what arto lookin''at? |
14414 | ''Then yo''ve yerd naught abaat Moses Fletcher?'' |
14414 | ''Then, Mr. Penrose, I ask you-- why do n''t we make our wills God''s?'' |
14414 | ''Ther''s noabry kept Him aat o''aar haas, as I know on, he s ther, Sally?'' |
14414 | ''There, now,''said Dr. Hale,''the snow is beginning to stay, is it not?'' |
14414 | ''Think o''yon lad as has getten killed, and o''his mother?'' |
14414 | ''Think of what, Malachi?'' |
14414 | ''Throw_ me_ off th''track, an''on these moors and o''? |
14414 | ''Till Kesmas?'' |
14414 | ''We feshioned''em, as the Psalmist sez, did n''t we?'' |
14414 | ''Well, I shall happen be one afore so long, shornd I, Miriam?'' |
14414 | ''Well, I''m noan to blame if a''cornd help miself, am I?'' |
14414 | ''Well, cornd yo''see as God he s finished aar wark for us, and what we made lads, He''s made angels on?'' |
14414 | ''Well, does He keep''em i''the hoile sixty- five years?'' |
14414 | ''Well, if we durnd tell yo'', yo''ll know soon enough, for it''s one o''them secrets as willn''t keep-- will it, Miriam?'' |
14414 | ''Well, mi lad, what is''t?'' |
14414 | ''What doesto mean?'' |
14414 | ''What doesto want th''blind drawin''for, Amanda?'' |
14414 | ''What han yo''bin thinkin'', Gronny?'' |
14414 | ''What is the matter with old Rogers?'' |
14414 | ''What mut th''child ged up theer for?'' |
14414 | ''What saysto, lass?'' |
14414 | ''What saysto?'' |
14414 | ''What then? |
14414 | ''What voice?'' |
14414 | ''What were that, lad?'' |
14414 | ''What''s that, gronny?'' |
14414 | ''What''s them, gronny?'' |
14414 | ''Whatever for, lass?'' |
14414 | ''Whatever will hoo say next?'' |
14414 | ''Whatever wilto ax me next, lad?'' |
14414 | ''Whatever wilto say next, lad? |
14414 | ''Whatever''s come o''er thee, Moses? |
14414 | ''When does Penrose bring his wife to Rehoboth, missis?'' |
14414 | ''Where he s hoo bin, missus, thinksto?'' |
14414 | ''Where''s th''lad?'' |
14414 | ''Who are you, and what part of you governs it? |
14414 | ''Who dug it? |
14414 | ''Who knew yo''were lookin''for aught but--''''Which child have you lost?'' |
14414 | ''Who sez as onnythin''ails me?'' |
14414 | ''Who sez as onnything ails thee?'' |
14414 | ''Who wur it said th''gate were strait and th''road narro''?'' |
14414 | ''Who wur that lass He spok''to when He turned''em all aat o''th''room, wi''their noise and shaatin''?'' |
14414 | ''Why does he want dippin''o''er agen?'' |
14414 | ''Why keep all your kindness for your dog, Mr. Fletcher? |
14414 | ''Why not? |
14414 | ''Why should he pay for his ticket,''asked an impudent- looking youth,''when th''Almeety''s gan it him? |
14414 | ''Why should n''t I? |
14414 | ''Why, Joseph, is it you? |
14414 | ''Why, it''s i''this way, lass; my Jimmy and yor little Job wur aar own, wurnd they?'' |
14414 | ''Wilto play thi music o''er sich as Amanda, thinksto?'' |
14414 | ''Yi; and he said summat else abaat a good woman, did n''t he, Miriam?'' |
14414 | *****''An''arto baan to keep it a secret, lass?'' |
14414 | *****''Here''s Mr. Penrose to see thee, Moses; mun I ax him up?'' |
14414 | *****''Mother, dun yo''think they''d put my name on th''Church register agen at Rehoboth?'' |
14414 | *****''Thaa''rt lat''to- neet, Moses; where hasto bin?'' |
14414 | All strange places were Nazareths, and all strangers were Nazarenes, and the cry was,''Can any good thing come out therefrom?'' |
14414 | Am I a man, and not God?'' |
14414 | Amanda turned and looked at him clearly and unflinchingly, and cried:''How dare yo''say that?'' |
14414 | An''dun yo''remember, Betty, haa th''young gaffer laffed at me, an''said as aw could noan play wi''th''likes o''yo''?'' |
14414 | An''haa''n yo''laft''em all daan at Rehoboth? |
14414 | An''him as said that had a bad lad an''o''--an''did n''t he say he''d raither ha''deed than th''lad? |
14414 | And as for Matt''s mother-- fierce Calvinist that she was, and whom in the past she had so much feared-- what cared she for her now? |
14414 | And can you divorce will from personality?'' |
14414 | And haa doesto feel?'' |
14414 | And is not the song of the happy always sacred-- and sacred even on the most sacred of days? |
14414 | And looking through the open doorway at the great expanse of snow- covered moor, he said,''What a beautiful world God''s world is-- is it not?'' |
14414 | And now that her child was restored, with a possibility of redeeming the past, was it a blessed thing of God to take her? |
14414 | And th''hills and moors? |
14414 | And then came the reply:''Would God punish Oliver through his child as Oliver punished you through your dog? |
14414 | And then, after a pause, he continued,''But, gronny, if God sez He''ll put''em in He''ll do as He sez-- willn''t He?'' |
14414 | And then, looking down at the reposeful little face, she kissed it, and continued,''Did he co thee an idol, my darlin''? |
14414 | And then, looking round at the old woman, she said,''Doesto think he yers( hears) me, Gronny?'' |
14414 | And then, seizing Mr. Penrose''s hand, she cried:''Yo''durnd think hoo''s damned, dun yo''?'' |
14414 | And what may bring yo''in this direction?'' |
14414 | And who shall say that the last was not the kindliest and most welcome? |
14414 | And why should n''t th''angels do th''same for us? |
14414 | And yet, wherein was this man to blame? |
14414 | And yo'', Malachi-- yo''took him daan th''shaft wi''yo''; what ban yo''done wi''him?'' |
14414 | At last a woman, whose threescore years and ten was the only warrant for her rude interruption, exclaimed:''Wheer''s th''parson? |
14414 | At last, however, his patience failed him, and he said:''Do yo''never hurry, doctor?'' |
14414 | Aw thought haa it bed helped mi when I lost o''mi brass, and when Joe deed, and aw tuk it up and said,"Can ta help me naa, thinksto?" |
14414 | Bud if they''d no more sense nor to spend their brass in th''summer, what can they expect? |
14414 | But a woman''s voice!--what is there it can not shatter and dispel? |
14414 | But did n''t he say that a good man were like a tree planted by th''brookside?'' |
14414 | But had she not forfeited her right to that chair? |
14414 | But he dared not, for was it not a contradictory voice? |
14414 | But if He mak''s us work here, why does He kill us o''er th''job, as he''s killed mi little lad?'' |
14414 | But mi mother''s noan God, is hoo?'' |
14414 | But thi faither never puts thee i''th''cellar hoile when thaa''s naughty, does he?'' |
14414 | But was God''s voice for ever hushed? |
14414 | But what''s that noise in th''yard? |
14414 | But why doesto ax me?'' |
14414 | By the way, do you think the child knows the limb has to be amputated?'' |
14414 | By what right did the women-- good and kind though they were-- step in between himself and her whom he loved dearer than life? |
14414 | Could they not tell him how Miriam was? |
14414 | Did He ever do ought for a poor mon''s lass?'' |
14414 | Did he come in a yerst, or were he carried?'' |
14414 | Did it not traverse the letter which he had sworn to uphold and declare? |
14414 | Did n''t he say as when he geet we d he''d bring his missis to thee to larn haa to mak''bread?'' |
14414 | Did n''t him as played on th''harp say,"Like as a faither pitieth his childer, so th''Lord pitieth them that fear Him"? |
14414 | Did n''t owd David say,"As th''mountens are raand abaat Jerusalem, so th''Lord is raand abaat His people"?'' |
14414 | Did not his mother once reverse the old Hebrew proverb, and warn him that a night of weeping would follow a morning of joy? |
14414 | Did owd Joseph, gronny?'' |
14414 | Did she love the child overmuch, and would her over- love be punished by the child''s death? |
14414 | Did the boy think of home-- of fire-- of bed? |
14414 | Did they say he wur deead?'' |
14414 | Did they tell yo''?'' |
14414 | Did yo''ever read what her faither put o''er th''top o''th''stone?'' |
14414 | Did you not feel God''s kiss in that which your mother gave you?'' |
14414 | Do n''t you think we need Him in the home as well?'' |
14414 | Do they expect me, doctor, to carry their decision to Mrs. Stott and her daughter?'' |
14414 | Do yo''?'' |
14414 | Do you always sing at your work?'' |
14414 | Do you see it? |
14414 | Do you think it will be successful?'' |
14414 | Doesto remember what thaa said, Betty, when aw tell''d thee aw should never be a Calvin?'' |
14414 | Doesto see th''parson?'' |
14414 | Doesto think thaa can ston this?'' |
14414 | Dun yo''remember that sarmon yo''once preached fro''"Jacob have I luved, but Esau have I hated"? |
14414 | Dun yo''see? |
14414 | Dun yo''think yo''could lift th''claads a bit?'' |
14414 | Durnd yo''?'' |
14414 | Durnd yo''think as th''Almeety cares as mich abaat us as we care for aar childer? |
14414 | Fletcher?'' |
14414 | Fletcher?'' |
14414 | Good- morning, Mr. Fletcher; busy as usual?'' |
14414 | Haa long does God keep bad fo''k in it?'' |
14414 | Haa owd arto, gronny?'' |
14414 | Had He had no message since the seal was fixed to the Canon of Scripture? |
14414 | Had it been a blessed thing on the part of God to give to her a child who brought disgrace on her family name? |
14414 | Had not an unmanly selfishness led him to play the coward? |
14414 | Had not the seven years of their past life been too happy to last? |
14414 | Had the_ now_ in his life passed? |
14414 | Had the_ then_ come when a fuller revelation was about to be vouchsafed? |
14414 | Han yo''never yerd that childer''s angels awlus behold th''face o''their Faither aboon?'' |
14414 | Has th''hens getten in th''garden agen?'' |
14414 | Hasto forgetten, Malachi?'' |
14414 | Hasto lost thi yed?'' |
14414 | Hasto ought fresh daan i''th''village?'' |
14414 | Have yo''seen yon rose- tree that grows under the winder-- that tree that is welly full durin''th''season?'' |
14414 | He gay''five to th''chap as bed five, and him as bed nobbud one, and did naught wi''it-- why, He tuk it fro''him, did n''t He? |
14414 | He s he forgetten, thinksto?'' |
14414 | He went after the sinner, did He not?'' |
14414 | He''s happen restin'', poor little lad; or happen he''s telling them as is up aboon all abaat thee-- who knows?'' |
14414 | His turn had come, but was he the last in the room? |
14414 | How could he tell him? |
14414 | How could she meet Matt, and how could she tell him? |
14414 | How should she meet him, and greet him, and confess to him the joy that overwhelmed her? |
14414 | I carried thee and suckled thee and taught thee thi prayers in that cheer, and doesn''d ta think as Him we co''d"Aar Faither"is aar Faither still?'' |
14414 | I did n''t do wrong, did I?'' |
14414 | I durnd mean as God''s changed; it''s me as has changed, durnd yo''see? |
14414 | If his preaching has brought about what we have seen and heard to- night, what guidance or help can I get from him?'' |
14414 | If it came to a choice between the two, which would you select?'' |
14414 | Intent? |
14414 | Is Miriam bad, or summat?'' |
14414 | Is it a flaar as aw con get for thee?" |
14414 | Is it as long as thee?'' |
14414 | Is it to mak''it better?'' |
14414 | Is th''haase o''fire, or has th''missus taan her bed?'' |
14414 | Is there aught fresh abaat it?'' |
14414 | It is, is n''t it?'' |
14414 | It was from Oliver himself, in a loud, importuning voice:''Han yo''fun him?'' |
14414 | It''s queer, is n''t it?'' |
14414 | It''s reet to do as God does-- isn''t it, gronny?'' |
14414 | Just as they traversed the edge of the Red Moss, old Malachi broke the silence by saying:''Well, Mr. Penrose, what do yo''think o''yon?'' |
14414 | Let''s see, lass, it''s five years sin thaa left us, is n''t it?'' |
14414 | Might he not be needed at the cottage? |
14414 | Mun I ged thee a sooap o''summat hot, thinksto? |
14414 | Naa come, is n''t there?'' |
14414 | Naa, then, what dun yo''mak''o''that?'' |
14414 | Nay, did she not love the Giver all the more, because she loved the gift so much? |
14414 | No mistake could be made by the Almighty-- nor could any mistake be made by himself, for was he not under Divine guidance? |
14414 | Nor was Matt unconscious of this change, for as soon as the greeting was over he said, with tones of anxiety in his voice:''What ails thee, my lass?'' |
14414 | Oaths didsto say? |
14414 | On his yed?'' |
14414 | One day th''lass come to me wi''tears in her een, and said:''"Malachi, didsto ever read Solomon''s Song?" |
14414 | Or is he deead? |
14414 | Penrose, did yo''ever try an''shap''your mouth to tell a lass as yo''luved hir?'' |
14414 | Penrose, dun yo''think there''ll be yethbobs( tufts of heather) i''heaven?'' |
14414 | Penrose?'' |
14414 | Penrose?'' |
14414 | Penrose?'' |
14414 | Penrose?'' |
14414 | Penrose?'' |
14414 | Penrose?'' |
14414 | Penrose?'' |
14414 | Poor little felley, where''s he getten hurt? |
14414 | Rising from her chair, and turning the sheet once more from off the boy''s face, the mother said:''Where hasto goan, lad? |
14414 | Running away from ignorance, eh? |
14414 | Seizing his arm with eager grip, she continued:''Dun yo''think he''s livin'', doctor? |
14414 | Should he address her as Merry, the pet name which he only addressed to her? |
14414 | Should he call her by her name? |
14414 | Sitting in the dark?'' |
14414 | Tell thi mother, willn''t taa?'' |
14414 | Th''elect awlus travels for naught, durnd they, Amos?'' |
14414 | Th''owd Book yo''quote fro''says summat abaat a man stonnin''and falling to his own Judge-- doesn''d it?'' |
14414 | Thaa wants more luv''naa nor then-- doesn''t ta? |
14414 | The minister had not searched long before he was startled by a cry-- a faint and childish cry:''Arto Jenny Greenteeth?'' |
14414 | Then, taking her mother''s hand, she said:''Dun yo''see that rim o''gowd( gold) on the hills yonder?'' |
14414 | Then, turning towards her companion, she cried:''Where wur he hurt, doctor? |
14414 | Till to- morn t''neet?'' |
14414 | Was he not her husband, and had he not a right to know of her who was his own? |
14414 | Was he not soaring far above theologies and domesticities, over continents traversed only by memory, amid ideals seen only with the eye of hope? |
14414 | Was he not what commerce and Calvinism had made him? |
14414 | Was it not better to trust what we knew to be best in us, and follow the larger rather than the lesser hope? |
14414 | Was it not cowardice-- the cowardice and selfishness of his grief? |
14414 | Was it the house of life, or the house of death?--or was it the house where death and life alike were victorious? |
14414 | Was it the shadow of an angry God-- a God insulted by a divided love? |
14414 | Was not Dr. Hale right after all? |
14414 | Was not his dying wife''s prayer for his presence and succour? |
14414 | Was she not happy? |
14414 | Was the love of father towards mother a greater and stronger and holier love than that of husband towards wife? |
14414 | We shall happen stop yet, who knows?'' |
14414 | What abaat it?'' |
14414 | What about the Edge End"Messiah"?'' |
14414 | What arto doin''at th''winder? |
14414 | What con they be doin''aat o''th''pit at this time? |
14414 | What did he say about th''mortgage?'' |
14414 | What does hoo want amang dacent Christian fo''k?'' |
14414 | What doesto want botherin''thi little yed wi''such like talk?'' |
14414 | What else mut it be?'' |
14414 | What if the voice were the voice of God? |
14414 | What is it?" |
14414 | What mak''o''a gospel dun yo''co it when there''s no law, no thunerins( thunderings), Mr. Morell, no leetnins? |
14414 | What sort o''a wife dun yo''co that? |
14414 | What was going on in those fearful pauses? |
14414 | What was parson, what was wife to him? |
14414 | What would he say? |
14414 | What would you say if I ran away from disease?'' |
14414 | What''s brought owd Amos aat wi''Moses-- to say naught o''th''dog?'' |
14414 | What''s come o''er yo''?'' |
14414 | What''s he doin''aat a neet like this, wi''Oliver''s dog? |
14414 | What''s th''use o''a gospel wi''out law? |
14414 | Whatever doesto mean?'' |
14414 | Where else did you think I wanted to go at this time of night?'' |
14414 | Where mun I go next?'' |
14414 | Where was the saintly Mr. Morell? |
14414 | Where''s my lad? |
14414 | Who bothers their yeds abaat theirsels when them as they care more for are i''need? |
14414 | Who didsto think we wur lookin''for?'' |
14414 | Who else should it be, thinksto?'' |
14414 | Why did the rain hiss, and dash its cold and stinging showers in her face? |
14414 | Why does it disappear as soon as it touches earth?'' |
14414 | Why doesto ax me that question?" |
14414 | Why had God given her something to love if He did not mean her to love it?--and could she love too much what God had given? |
14414 | Why had he forsaken her? |
14414 | Why not extend the same acts of mercy to those who are of more value than many dogs? |
14414 | Why should he, then, try to pry into the clouds and darkness that were round about the awful throne? |
14414 | Why that hush? |
14414 | Why these? |
14414 | Why will it remain?'' |
14414 | Will can not govern Will, can it? |
14414 | Will yo'', mi bonnie un?'' |
14414 | Would Heaven be avenged on his occasional fits of discontent, and grant him his wish for a child at the cost of the life of his wife? |
14414 | Would Miriam die? |
14414 | Would he love her more, or would the advent of the little life divide the love hitherto her undisputed own? |
14414 | Would it not destroy the joy of that place where sorrow and sighing are no more?'' |
14414 | Yo''remember that, Betty, durnd yo''? |
14414 | and does not happiness voice itself in song? |
14414 | cried Matt;''how''s Miriam?'' |
14414 | doesto mak''aat He''s as selfish as thisel, Amos? |
14414 | dun yo''see th''parson?'' |
14414 | dun yo''yer? |
14414 | have the curses o''God getten how d o''me?'' |
14414 | now it_ is_ gone-- gone where? |
14414 | or did the birth of children draw off from each what was before a mutual interchange? |
14414 | or mun I run for th''doctor?'' |
14414 | they''n welly done for us both this time, hevn''t they, Captain?'' |
40874 | ''An[23] they been sellin''a mill? |
40874 | Am I drunk? |
40874 | And did you get safe to Wenderholme? |
40874 | And if there was any thing I could send from the great''ouse-- any jellies or blomonge? |
40874 | And is that all you''ve come to beg pardon for? |
40874 | And may I ask,said Philip, very loudly and resolutely from the other end of the table,"what Catholics believe in?" |
40874 | And may I drive the horses? |
40874 | And shall you be going to live at Wendrum''All, Jacob? 40874 And so you''re here, too, are you, young man? |
40874 | And the other fellows who are removing the furniture? |
40874 | And were you going fast? |
40874 | And what do you think Mr. Anison will do? |
40874 | And what for? |
40874 | And what have you done with the Irishman who nearly killed him? |
40874 | And what''an ye gin for''t? |
40874 | And what''as ta been doin''? |
40874 | And what_''an_ they been sellin''? |
40874 | And when will you come back to us again? |
40874 | And where do you think of buildin''it? |
40874 | And who bought them? |
40874 | And who wants it? |
40874 | And who''s bout it? |
40874 | And who''s she? |
40874 | Answer me my question, ca n''t you? 40874 Are we going to leave immediately, then?" |
40874 | Are you Colonel Stanburne''s brother, may I ask? |
40874 | Are you really going away to- day, Charley? |
40874 | Are you seriously afraid, sir? |
40874 | Are you speaking seriously, Miss Anison, I wonder? |
40874 | Are you sure of the young woman herself? 40874 Bring me hot water, and, stop-- put these things in their places, will you?" |
40874 | But are they safe? |
40874 | But this is all white,said little Jacob,"and old oak ought to be brown, ought n''t it?" |
40874 | But what did he do keeping a young boy like little Jacob at the Red Lion? 40874 But what on earth''s the matter with the Doctor?" |
40874 | But why did he do so? 40874 But_ was_ it such a mistake after all, darling? |
40874 | But_ why_, I say--_why_? |
40874 | But_ why_? |
40874 | Can not ta see th''felly wi''th''red jacket? |
40874 | Can she darn like that? |
40874 | Cayridge, mother? 40874 D''ye think I want to rob you? |
40874 | Dear,she said at last,"what was that great mistake you talked about?" |
40874 | Do militia officers keep their titles when not on duty? |
40874 | Do you fancy, brother Isaac, that any consideration for your feelin''s was to hinder us from doin''our duty by that little lad? 40874 Do you mean about money?" |
40874 | Do you mean to compare my furniture with a set of Republicans? |
40874 | Do you mean to say I did n''t tell him right what happened? 40874 Do you mean to say as you''re teetotal?" |
40874 | Do you mean to tell me,said Isaac,"that you knew the child was found, and hid him from his own father?" |
40874 | Do you recollect, Helena,he went on, after a little while,"the time when I first began to drive four horses? |
40874 | Do you return to Wenderholme to- night? 40874 Do you think I''ve any chance at your house?" |
40874 | Do you yer that, young un? 40874 Does your Grace allude to Varolby Priory?" |
40874 | Edith,Mrs. Stanburne said at last,"do you hear what Jacob says? |
40874 | Fyser,he said,"what are the water supplies here?" |
40874 | Grandmother,he said,"father is so-- so"--"So_ what_, my lad?" |
40874 | Had n''t you better go to bed? |
40874 | Han you seen her do? |
40874 | Have you any news of Captain Stanburne? |
40874 | Have you any particular reason for wishing so? 40874 Have you brought my whip?" |
40874 | Have you had any conversation with Mr. Ogden on the subject of this letter? |
40874 | How long will he be, mother? |
40874 | I mean,said Lady Helena,"do you like him as a preacher?" |
40874 | I say, Doctor, why do n''t you drive a tandem? 40874 I say,"said the Colonel,"tell me now, Doctor, has she got any tin?" |
40874 | I wonder if one could do any good there? |
40874 | Indeed they''re not, Doctor-- indeed they''re not; but, I say, have you any idea about who the girl is in this business of Philip''s? 40874 Is there any change in your feelings towards me, sir?" |
40874 | Is there any positive necessity for you to leave us now? 40874 Is there room inside for me and this''ere little lad?" |
40874 | Is there though, really? |
40874 | Is this Whittlecup coach? |
40874 | Is this my whip? |
40874 | Is this your glove, Miss-- Miss Stedman? |
40874 | Jacob,she said,"how much do you reckon to put into th''new mill?" |
40874 | Jacob,she said,"you ought to be in bed; why are you up like that? |
40874 | John Stedman? 40874 Mamma,"she said boldly,"why did you leave papa when he was ruined?" |
40874 | May I not speak to Miss Stanburne? |
40874 | Miss Stanburne,he said,"dear Miss Stanburne, what does he say?" |
40874 | Mother,he said,"when bailiffs comes you willn''t tell''em where I have hid my brass; see, I''ve hidden it here, but you willn''t tell''em, mother?" |
40874 | Mother,said Isaac, when he came in,"give me a cup of tea, will you?" |
40874 | Mrs. Ogden,he said,"will you allow me to transfer your eighteenpence to this young gentleman''s pocket?" |
40874 | Mrs. Prigley''s a relation of yours, Lady Helena,--rather a near relation,--perhaps you are not aware of it? |
40874 | Must I read in that book Mr. Prigley gave me when he came? |
40874 | My dear boy,she said,"it''s a pity about the house, you know; but our little Edith"--"What?" |
40874 | My dear,said Lady Helena,"as the regiment is disbanded now, I suppose we have no longer any reason to remain at Wenderholme? |
40874 | Nay,said Mrs. Ogden,"you willn''t be going away so soon, will you? |
40874 | No pipes of any sort in the upper rooms? |
40874 | Nonsense,he said;"you do n''t talk about resigning? |
40874 | Not much certainly; but why does he never come here? |
40874 | Now what is''t? |
40874 | Now, if you''d like me to sit up with Mrs. Stanburne, if you and Mrs. Prigley was tired, you know? 40874 Now, what''s to be done?" |
40874 | Oh, she says I was poorly, does she? 40874 Oh, you''believe,''do you, young un? |
40874 | Oh,_ I_ was mistaken, was I? 40874 Philip,"she said,"do you ever think much about what_ might have been_, if just one circumstance had been otherwise? |
40874 | Please, sir,he said,"would you be so kind as to take me on again?" |
40874 | Railway, sir? 40874 Safe? |
40874 | So you were listening, were you? |
40874 | Stronger? 40874 Swear at you!--who swears at you? |
40874 | The Anisons are old friends of yours, are they not, Miss Stedman? |
40874 | The childt''ll be half- price? |
40874 | Then why the devil do you read so incorrectly? 40874 There''s no near relation or friend of Captain Stanburne in the regiment, is there, Colonel?" |
40874 | This is hot work,he said to one of the volunteers;"have none of the men had any thing to drink?" |
40874 | Useful? 40874 Very well, is it? |
40874 | We were coming to see Mrs. Ogden,said Lady Helena;"do you know if she is at home?" |
40874 | We''ve found nothing in the pond, Mr. Isaac, except--"Except what? |
40874 | Well, Colonel, have n''t I a right to offer you some assistance? 40874 Well, an''how is he? |
40874 | Well, an''what can he read? 40874 Well, and why did n''t you come here, my lad? |
40874 | Well, but what on earth would you have me do with my furniture? |
40874 | Well, but why would n''t you? |
40874 | Well, but you know, Colonel Stanburne, I''ve resigned my commission, and so how can I come in a red jacket? |
40874 | Well, but, Doctor, what would you advise me to do? |
40874 | Well, mother, and what if they do say so? 40874 Well, now,_ are_ you, Helena? |
40874 | Well, we wo n''t pass any more votes of censure, mamma, will we? 40874 Well, who would have thought,"she said to herself, as she ate a piece of cake--"who would have thought that I should go and stop at Whittlecup? |
40874 | Well, yes; but is it quite necessary to a man to be a gentleman at all? 40874 Well,"said old Sarah,"what d''ye think master''s done? |
40874 | Well,thought young Jacob to himself,"as I can not have Edith, why not please my uncle and my grandmother? |
40874 | What has become of my whip with I. O. upon it? |
40874 | What is the last news about our poor friend Anison? |
40874 | What name shall I say, sir? |
40874 | What sort of a man is he in other respects? |
40874 | What the devil,said Jacob, thinking aloud and_ very_ loudly,--"what the devil is th''ould woman drivin''at?" |
40874 | What would you have me say to you? 40874 What''s this that we are meeting?" |
40874 | What, has n''t th''child sense enough to be frightened in the dark? 40874 What, mother?" |
40874 | What, papa? |
40874 | What_ are_ you doing with that picture, John? |
40874 | What_ is_ the matter with her? 40874 What_ will_ he think of us?" |
40874 | Where are we to sleep to- night, do you think? |
40874 | Where are you staying, Colonel Stanburne? |
40874 | Where is Edith-- your daughter-- little Edith? |
40874 | Where is he? 40874 Where''s Edith''s room? |
40874 | Where''s their guns? |
40874 | Wherestabeen? 40874 Why am I a horrible man? |
40874 | Why can not I see her? 40874 Why not? |
40874 | Why should a man desire in any way To vary from the kindly race of men? |
40874 | Why, Doctor, you do n''t believe that young fellows make themselves ill about such little matters as that, do you? 40874 Why, Eureton, what''s the matter now? |
40874 | Why, and what if it is? 40874 Why, and whose cayridge is this''ere, Jacob?" |
40874 | Why, and willn''t ye stop Sunday with us and Miss Smethurst, and go to Shayton Church? |
40874 | Would it, indeed? 40874 Would they really, now? |
40874 | Would you accept a bed at Chesnut Hill, Colonel Stanburne? 40874 Would you have gone to him? |
40874 | Would you renounce your religion for love? |
40874 | Yes, Prigley; is n''t it curious, John? 40874 You do n''t imagine that_ I_ have laid out any money on epaulettes and such gear? |
40874 | You do n''t know any further details, do you, Eureton? |
40874 | You made a fine pond there, did n''t you? |
40874 | You''ve got a pen and ink? |
40874 | [ 22]What''as there been at Sootythorn?" |
40874 | _ Que voulez- vous que je vous dise?_CHAPTER III. |
40874 | Alice looked round, and seeing nobody, said,"Had n''t we better wait, or go back a little? |
40874 | Alice looked up at her companion rather archly, and said,"You mean in the bookseller''s shop?" |
40874 | Am I painting the portrait of a man of pre- eminent virtues? |
40874 | And if you do n''t happen to have such a thing as an uncle, what then? |
40874 | And in this sense could Dr. Bardly say that he liked the reverend incumbent of his parish? |
40874 | And is n''t it something, my love, to be together as we are now for the last few weeks and days? |
40874 | And we shall forgive him his trespasses, shall we not?" |
40874 | And what was this horrible story of an eviction? |
40874 | And what will become o''the mill when you''re over at Wendrum?" |
40874 | And what''s the consequence? |
40874 | And yet hitherto he had continued to live like a gentleman, therefore, what will it be, I wonder, when he is reduced a good deal lower in the world? |
40874 | Are we not relations?" |
40874 | Are you aware that papa will be here to- morrow?" |
40874 | At last he started suddenly, and, looking sharply round him, said,"Where is he, where is he, mother? |
40874 | At length Colonel Stanburne said,"Let us go out and look about a little-- that was a human cry, was n''t it?" |
40874 | Been burning three hours? |
40874 | But in which direction-- to the right hand or the left? |
40874 | But what perhaps you''d rather go and sit a bit i''th''''ouse?" |
40874 | But what would Mrs. Prigley say? |
40874 | But what''s the matter? |
40874 | But what_ was_ he doing in the drawing- room? |
40874 | But you like to be called Charley, do n''t you? |
40874 | Can it be the early morning air that so exhilarates her ladyship? |
40874 | Can not you tell me for certain?" |
40874 | Come, who says fifty?--we must round the number, you know, gentlemen-- who says fifty? |
40874 | Could he not read all English books at sight, or the newspaper, or any thing? |
40874 | Could it be possible that his uncle had gone to such a length as that? |
40874 | Could it be possible that there were officers in the regiment who spoke no better than that? |
40874 | D''ye expect me to sing songs at supper, and drink rum- punch?" |
40874 | D''ye think I ca n''t smell rum? |
40874 | D''ye think she would have you if you had just a decent little income from a profession such as doctorin''? |
40874 | D''ye think you''re to have all the rum in the world to yourself, you drunken old witch?" |
40874 | Did Mr. Blunting know if her papa had changed his intentions? |
40874 | Did ever anybody hear the like?" |
40874 | Did he come down by himself, or did you come with him, Jacob?" |
40874 | Did you never hear the history of the Stanburnes of Stanithburn? |
40874 | Did you not tell me the truth?" |
40874 | Do corpses care to have their shrouds warmed, or to have hot- water bottles at their icy feet? |
40874 | Do n''t you perceive it, Colonel Stanburne?" |
40874 | Do n''t you think so? |
40874 | Do you ever fancy us a quiet respectable old couple, living at the Tower, and coming sometimes to Sootythorn together? |
40874 | Do you hear? |
40874 | Do you know Varolby?" |
40874 | Do you know who you are speaking to? |
40874 | Do you know, in my opinion, it is a subject of regret that the furniture was saved that night?" |
40874 | Do you mean to say that I am deaf?" |
40874 | Do you suspect any thing in Madge herself? |
40874 | Do you think she cares for him?" |
40874 | Do you think that your father is to buy good trowsers for you to spill ink upon them the very first time you put them on? |
40874 | Do you wish to take the men under your own orders?" |
40874 | Doctor, come into my study, will you, and let''s have a weed?" |
40874 | Does n''t it, mother? |
40874 | For instance, last time we drove back from Sootythorn it was pitch dark,--wasn''t it, Fyser?" |
40874 | Had he been dreaming? |
40874 | Had he forgotten those dear friends who had been so good to him in the time of their prosperity? |
40874 | Had he not likewise been a sower of dragon''s teeth, and were not the armed men rising, terrible, around him? |
40874 | Had he not perfect leisure? |
40874 | Had not the time been when Stanburne of the Peel and Stanburne of Wenderholme were brothers? |
40874 | Has Mrs. Stanburne removed her furniture?" |
40874 | Has he any chilther?" |
40874 | Have n''t you another name?" |
40874 | Have we not been very happy all these years? |
40874 | Have we not been very happy, my love, all these years together?" |
40874 | Have you got a watch?" |
40874 | His eyes dilated, the room swam round him, his heart suspended its action, and in a low hissing whisper, he said,"Mother, have they found him?" |
40874 | His face flushed at once, and he asked, in a tone which was any thing but conciliatory,--"Do you keep spies in your regiment, Colonel Stanburne?" |
40874 | How ascertain it? |
40874 | How can they know, if I never told''em?" |
40874 | How is a man to care about tea and cakes when he''s murdered his own son? |
40874 | How long will the dear child remain to him? |
40874 | How long would it take to get accustomed to Blenheim, or Castle Howard, or Compiègne? |
40874 | How she did toil and bustle about? |
40874 | How will ta get five pussent out o''Wendrum''All for the fifty thousand?" |
40874 | How will you manage on field days, and how will you go to church on Sundays?" |
40874 | How would Mrs. Prig-- Prigley and her husband receive me if I were to go and call upon them?" |
40874 | I am a liar, am I?" |
40874 | I believe he''s always sober up at Twistle; is n''t he, little''un?" |
40874 | I can do no more than that, can I?" |
40874 | I do n''t look like a doctor, do I? |
40874 | I know he was, I was told so by those that saw him; and if he was in the town, what was to hinder him from coming to Milend to his tea? |
40874 | I say, put your shawl on and take a little walk with me, will you?" |
40874 | If I said all you deserve, would you listen to it? |
40874 | If he does n''t care about her, what''s the use of being married to her? |
40874 | In one of the out- houses? |
40874 | Indeed, who ever heard of a Catholic cotton- spinner? |
40874 | Is he taking a day''s holiday with those pretty girls at Arkwright Lodge?" |
40874 | Is n''t he an eccentric fellow, to lay claim to a poor relation?" |
40874 | Is n''t he nice, now? |
40874 | Is she not at home?" |
40874 | Is there a place in the house where he can be lodged out of the way of the servants?" |
40874 | Is there any particular stone here likely to give a ground for the theory, or is it only a tradition?" |
40874 | Is there anybody in the house now?" |
40874 | It is late, is it not?" |
40874 | It is n''t that pretty Miss Anison, is it?" |
40874 | It is n''t wrong, is it? |
40874 | It''s a very curious country, is n''t it, papa? |
40874 | John Stanburne''s offers of assistance were very sincere, but what, in a practical way, could he do? |
40874 | John Stedman? |
40874 | Let me tell him all about it, will you? |
40874 | Little Jacob was staying at Milend during his father''s military career, and so Mrs. Ogden objected--"But what''s to become o''th''childt?" |
40874 | Make up my camp- bed, will you, in that corner?" |
40874 | May I ask what your own plans are?" |
40874 | Mrs. Ogden laid her hand upon his shoulder, and said,"Isaac, willn''t ye come to your tea? |
40874 | Mrs. Stanburne kindly answered by inquiring"whether there was much old oak at Twistle Farm?" |
40874 | Need I say that this friend was the worthy doctor, Mr. Bardly? |
40874 | Ogden, you''ll dine with me too, wo n''t you? |
40874 | Ogden?" |
40874 | Ogden?" |
40874 | One manufacturer asks his neighbor a question:"Where is John Stedman of Sootythorn? |
40874 | Philip Stanburne said,"Why did you refuse to come and live at the Peel? |
40874 | Philip resumed,--"Do you live_ in_ Sootythorn, Miss Stedman?" |
40874 | Prigley?" |
40874 | Prigley?" |
40874 | Prigley?" |
40874 | Prigley?" |
40874 | Shall I tell you what book you ordered? |
40874 | She ai n''t got an uncle that''s a baronet-- eh, Doctor?" |
40874 | She seemed precisely as she had always been:--sulky? |
40874 | So she was neither astonished nor indignant, and asked, merely by way of continuing the conversation,--"And when did he beat thee, child?" |
40874 | Stedman?" |
40874 | Stop your dinner, will you? |
40874 | Suddenly recalling himself to the things about him, he saw the decanters before any thing else, and said,--"Have you had a glass of wine? |
40874 | Suppose we went up to town again for the end of the season? |
40874 | Surely female ignorance does not go so far as to leave you uninformed about such a distinguished family as ours?" |
40874 | The Adjutant came to the hearth- rug where John Stanburne was standing, and said,"Is not Captain Stanburne a relation of yours, Colonel?" |
40874 | The Doctor_ thought_,"Would the woman have me offer premiums on hypocrisy as she does?" |
40874 | The doctor may go there, I suppose?" |
40874 | The sort of courage wanted on the present occasion, my dear Helena, is moral courage and not physical courage, do n''t you see? |
40874 | Then addressing her son:"Isaac, I put two glasses with the decanter-- why do n''t you fill your glass?" |
40874 | Then he began:--"I''ll tell you what it is, little Jacob; you''re not independent, because you have n''t got a profession, do n''t you see? |
40874 | Then the Colonel drew little Jacob towards him, and began to ask him questions--"What would he like to be?" |
40874 | Then to her grandson,--"What time was it when you both went home to Twistle Farm?" |
40874 | Then, laying his hand very gently on her shoulder, said with strange tenderness,"You wo n''t be hurt, will you? |
40874 | There are intellectual policemen who are always telling us to"keep moving;"but what if I find a serener satisfaction in standing still? |
40874 | They had not the necessary implements; and what would be the use of digging in that flowing, and yielding, and unfathomable black mud? |
40874 | Was he not evidently a goat? |
40874 | Was it not a positive duty to interest himself in the matter, and to give the best advice he could? |
40874 | Was it the little dog? |
40874 | Was n''t your father in the town on Tuesday? |
40874 | Was such a fellow as Parson Prigley any compensation for Jerry Smethurst? |
40874 | Was the smoke produced separately, and then lighted from below, or was it really luminous smoke? |
40874 | We are writing to London to- day; shall we order the book for you, Miss Stedman?" |
40874 | Well, but is not that very imprudent? |
40874 | Well, willn''t ye now? |
40874 | Wenderholme was sold-- it belonged to Mr. Jacob Ogden; why think of Wenderholme any more? |
40874 | What are a few thousand pounds more or less in a matter of such importance? |
40874 | What can cheer the hopelessness of your miserable position?" |
40874 | What can you do with forty- five thousand?" |
40874 | What could the child mean? |
40874 | What did he know about little Jacob? |
40874 | What did you send him by himself to Whittlecup for? |
40874 | What do I want with a red coat, and dangling silver fringes over my shoulders? |
40874 | What do you say, Doctor? |
40874 | What do you think of the fire?" |
40874 | What had Mr. Prigley done to them that they should never be able to speak of him without a shade of very perceptible aversion or contempt? |
40874 | What had been done with the modern furniture that had been saved on the night of the fire? |
40874 | What have I to do goin''courtin''? |
40874 | What if I_ do_ take an interest in your affairs? |
40874 | What if this man were relenting? |
40874 | What is th''folk sayin'', thinken ye? |
40874 | What made him run away from Twistle Farm, Isaac Ogden? |
40874 | What means it?" |
40874 | What right had he to usurp the especial prerogative of great ladies? |
40874 | What right had one of those"nasty Ogdens"to come and nurse Mrs. Stanburne? |
40874 | What signifies havin''begotten a child, if fatherin''it is to stop there?" |
40874 | What signifies?" |
40874 | What sort of a father is it as drives away a child like that with a horsewhip? |
40874 | What sort of a fellow is Mr. Ogden? |
40874 | What was he thinking? |
40874 | What were all the treasures of Wenderholme to its master, who had lost the one treasure of his heart? |
40874 | What will you take to breakfast, Captain Stanburne? |
40874 | What wonder, then, if he drifted? |
40874 | What would your festival have been without her? |
40874 | What''s the fare as far as Whittlecup?" |
40874 | When I have married my four wives, you will come and visit me, wo n''t you, in my palace on the Bosphorus? |
40874 | Where could he put it? |
40874 | Where do you mean to go-- what do you mean to do?" |
40874 | Where is John Stedman? |
40874 | Where shall we go to? |
40874 | Where was it resting now? |
40874 | Where''s water?" |
40874 | Whilst her ladyship went to take her things off, Fyser said,"Would you like to step this way, sir?" |
40874 | Who will help him as Medea helped Jason? |
40874 | Who will pass him through all his dangers in a day? |
40874 | Who would have thought that there was any thing so nice in Sootythorn?" |
40874 | Why are you so ungracious to me? |
40874 | Why could n''t he send him here? |
40874 | Why could n''t you tell me that sooner? |
40874 | Why did n''t he come to the parade- ground to join the grenadier company again? |
40874 | Why do n''t you have a house in London? |
40874 | Why does he never come here?" |
40874 | Why have n''t you got a prettier name for me to call you by? |
40874 | Why not furnish some other house with it? |
40874 | Why not remain a little longer?" |
40874 | Why should you not be gracious to me in the same way? |
40874 | Why, you''ve''appen never got your breakfast?" |
40874 | Will you show me the way? |
40874 | Would it have done him any harm to teach little Jacob cricket, and play at ball with him, or at nine- pins? |
40874 | Would it not be better to write to Mr. Philip Stanburne? |
40874 | Would it take a fortnight? |
40874 | Would she have lasted as she has done without it? |
40874 | Would you have gone to live with him there, in his lodgings, and cheer him after his day''s work?" |
40874 | Would you like a sandwich and a glass of wine? |
40874 | You do n''t remember seein''him with it, do you, sir?" |
40874 | You do n''t want to dance with_ her_, a small child like her?" |
40874 | You know that I am a Catholic, Miss Stedman?" |
40874 | You mun either just make up your mind to submit to them at Milend"--"And desert Edith?" |
40874 | You really think so, do you? |
40874 | You wonder how I guessed it, perhaps? |
40874 | You''ll be an inside passenger yourself-- won''t you, now, Helena?" |
40874 | You''re not a relation of his, I presume; you do n''t belong to his family, do you?" |
40874 | You_ will_ be kind to him, wo n''t you, my love, when he has no longer his poor little Lissy to take care of him? |
40874 | _ Et après?_ Suppose we_ are_ getting the blue- mould, what then? |
40874 | _ Et après?_ Suppose we_ are_ getting the blue- mould, what then? |
40874 | are you boun''to we d somebody at Whittlecup?" |
40874 | at last the Colonel broke out,"I say, Helena, I wonder what the devil we are to do?" |
40874 | can he read i''th''Bible?" |
40874 | can you give some orders?" |
40874 | could he not study six hours a day, if he were so minded? |
40874 | cried the auctioneer;"going at forty- eight thousand-- forty- nine? |
40874 | did you know about them?" |
40874 | exclaimed Miss Edith;"and are n''t you very sorry?" |
40874 | has little Jacob run away?" |
40874 | is n''t it nice?" |
40874 | it can not be t''same as was foreman to my father toward thirty year sin''?" |
40874 | not a drop? |
40874 | pray what_ is_ a gentleman?" |
40874 | said Jacob,"will you give me a word of explanation? |
40874 | said Mr. Isaac;"but how are we to manage it?" |
40874 | said she, pouting;"why do you call me Miss? |
40874 | she asked, emphatically;"_ why_ has he disinherited you? |
40874 | so frightened already? |
40874 | was there any need of these comforts now? |
40874 | what if the icy barrier were gradually thawing away? |
40874 | what is the use of having health and riches, and all sorts of fine prospects and advantages? |
40874 | what''s Ogden doing? |
40874 | where is little Jacob, my little lad, my lad, my lad?" |
58183 | ''Her''is Miss Ffrench? |
58183 | ''How long?'' 58183 ''Merica?" |
58183 | ''Merikin, art tha? |
58183 | ''Mesters,''he sez, hoarse an''shaky,''ha''ony on yo''getten a bit o''bread?'' 58183 ''What''s up?'' |
58183 | ''Wheer are yo''fro''?'' 58183 Am I going mad?" |
58183 | Am I sure I am not hurt? |
58183 | Am I? |
58183 | An''tha-- tha does na believe what Mester Hixon says? |
58183 | An''that theer was what tha wur up to, was it? |
58183 | An''wheer did he get th''money to set up a bank wi''? 58183 An''wheer''s th''buryin''money to coom fro''?" |
58183 | And he stepped out of the way? |
58183 | And it never came to aught? |
58183 | And you think,he said,"that it has fallen upon me?" |
58183 | Are there to be two of us? |
58183 | Are you coming back? |
58183 | Are you going in? |
58183 | Are you going to bed? |
58183 | Are you here yet? |
58183 | Are you hurt? |
58183 | Are you-- any nearer? |
58183 | Are you-- are you sure you are not hurt? |
58183 | Are-- are you going to murder me? |
58183 | Art dazed, or hast tha takken a turn an''been on a spree? |
58183 | Art tha a Papist? |
58183 | Art tha coom to see''em? |
58183 | Art tha coomin''in? |
58183 | Art tha dazeder than common? |
58183 | Art tha goin''to gi''it me? |
58183 | Art tha loike him? |
58183 | Art tha,Janey asked, breathlessly,--"art tha goin''to be?" |
58183 | Better? |
58183 | Blast you? |
58183 | But what about th''Union? |
58183 | But what of that? |
58183 | By the bye,her father asked with a new interest,"what kind of a young fellow was he? |
58183 | Can not you see that the poor fellow is a gentleman? 58183 Can tha guess what I want?" |
58183 | Canna tha? |
58183 | Canna thee, Sararann? 58183 Con anybody hear?" |
58183 | Con th''chap_ carry_ thee whoam if tha does na want to go? |
58183 | Did any''o yo''chaps see that felly as coom to look at th''machinery? |
58183 | Did na tha know,with some impatience,"as he went crazy over summat he wur makkin'', an''deed''cause he could na mak''out to finish it? |
58183 | Did na tha tell me he wur a rich mon? |
58183 | Did tha hear her? |
58183 | Did tha say as he wur goin''to gi''thee money? |
58183 | Did tha think as tha did? |
58183 | Did yo''ivver think,she put it to him,"as she''d ha''yo''?" |
58183 | Did you see-- her? |
58183 | Did you send for me to tell me that? |
58183 | Did you think it was a secret? |
58183 | Did you? |
58183 | Did you? |
58183 | Did_ he_ ever feel so near as_ this_, and then fail? |
58183 | Did_ he_ tell you that? |
58183 | Do men go mad through such things? 58183 Do they speak so of_ all_ women who are handsome?" |
58183 | Do you know why she came? |
58183 | Do you mean,asked Rachel Ffrench,"that you wish her to have your money?" |
58183 | Do you mean,she demanded,"that there are signs of a strike?" |
58183 | Do you see that? |
58183 | Do you suppose I would not, if I could? 58183 Do you think I can get it here?" |
58183 | Do you think he would? |
58183 | Do you think,he said, in a hushed voice, after the pause which followed,--"do you think I expect anything? |
58183 | Do you think,she asked, in the same voice,"that I care for being''talked over?''" |
58183 | Do you want me to go home and go to bed decently and sleep? |
58183 | Do you want me? |
58183 | Do you want to go into the iron trade? |
58183 | Do you want to know,he said,"whether she treats me as she would treat another man? |
58183 | Do you,she asked her suddenly one day,"do you believe all that man says to you?" |
58183 | Do you-- always see her? |
58183 | Does Mr. Ffrench know that? |
58183 | Does either of us know what we came here for? |
58183 | Does he know you would like to be his partner? |
58183 | Does he? |
58183 | Does it all depend on that? |
58183 | Does na tha know that? |
58183 | Does she treat me as she treats other men? |
58183 | Does tha allus dress i''this road? |
58183 | Does tha think he''ll gie thee owt fur it? |
58183 | Does tha think,he asked,"as that theer''s true?" |
58183 | Does tha want to go whoam on a shutter? |
58183 | Does tha want to see mother? |
58183 | Dost na tha know him? 58183 Dunnot yo''?" |
58183 | Eh? |
58183 | Every night I''ve been at work? |
58183 | Everything is ready, Kitty? |
58183 | Ffrench? |
58183 | For what? |
58183 | Getten th''bag? |
58183 | Granny Dixon? |
58183 | Hannot yo''? 58183 Happen"--feeling the sarcasm a strong one--"happen tha''rt fond on it?" |
58183 | Has he ever said it? |
58183 | Has he never said that she treated him well, and-- was easier to please than he''d thought; has he never said nowt like that? |
58183 | Has tha been punsin Haworth o''er again? |
58183 | Has tha gone daft? 58183 Has tha seed him?" |
58183 | Has tha seen Miss Ffrench yet? |
58183 | Have I done it,he said,"or have n''t I?" |
58183 | Have I ever let you be aught but what I swore you should be at th''first-- a fellow to play second fiddle and do what he was told? |
58183 | Have I ever told you a word of what was going on? |
58183 | Have n''t you given the thing up yet? |
58183 | Have they? |
58183 | Have you a reason for asking? |
58183 | Have you? |
58183 | Haworth gives it to her? |
58183 | Haworth? |
58183 | He comes here every day or so? |
58183 | He does na say_ nowt_ about her,she exclaimed"What''s up wi''thee?" |
58183 | He goes there pretty often? |
58183 | He sent''em, did he? |
58183 | He used to sit here? |
58183 | He''s set up a bank, has he? |
58183 | Here? |
58183 | How dare you? |
58183 | How do you like the look of things? |
58183 | How does she talk to Haworth? |
58183 | How is it going on here? |
58183 | How is that? |
58183 | How old are you? |
58183 | How should you, when I lived my whole life to hide it? 58183 How,"he faltered,--"how did you come here?" |
58183 | How-- how art tha doin'', Misses? |
58183 | I a gentleman? |
58183 | I afraid? |
58183 | I--she began, in a sharp whisper,"do you not see? |
58183 | I''ve stood up agen her a long time,he said,"and what have I got? |
58183 | I? |
58183 | If I lose all I''ve made,he said, hoarsely,"shall I lose aught of yours, lad?" |
58183 | If we''d left you alone,said Haworth,"where would your wife and children be now, you scoundrel? |
58183 | Is it about th''pistols? |
58183 | Is it aught of yours? |
58183 | Is it me that''s sitting here,he cried,"or some other chap? |
58183 | Is it true that I am beginning to be very handsome? |
58183 | Is it yo''? |
58183 | Is it-- is it as bad as you expected? |
58183 | Is it-- wur it true-- as he wur na aw theer-- as he wur a bit-- a bit soft i''th''yed? |
58183 | Is it? |
58183 | Is it_ my_ fault that it is all over? |
58183 | Is the door shut? |
58183 | Is there aught you want from the house-- aught in the way o''books, I mean? |
58183 | Is there no one else she has a fancy for-- your father, for instance? |
58183 | Is this chap goin''th''same way? |
58183 | It has n''t reached you yet? |
58183 | It is not? |
58183 | It was you I heard come in? |
58183 | It was you,he said with some bitterness at last,--"_you_ who set the plot on foot?" |
58183 | It''s a bad lookout, is n''t it? |
58183 | It''s lasted a pretty long time, has n''t it? |
58183 | It''s not very cheerful, is it? |
58183 | It''s the first time for_ him_? |
58183 | Jane Ann,said Mrs. Briarley, standing at the door to watch her out of sight,--"Jane Ann, what dost tha think o''that theer?" |
58183 | Jem? |
58183 | Loike him? |
58183 | Look here,with some heat;"do you mean to say you think I was in the wrong? |
58183 | Mester Haworth''s mother? |
58183 | Murdoch? 58183 Murdoch?" |
58183 | My father is buried here,Murdoch had said, and Janey had answered with sharp curiousness,--"Wheer''s th''place? |
58183 | One of whom? |
58183 | Shall I tell you the truth? |
58183 | Shut--repeated Mr. Briarley, winking his eyes slowly,--"up?" |
58183 | Sir,were her greeting words,"where is he?" |
58183 | Some one you know? |
58183 | Stop it? |
58183 | Th''gentlemanly soart as tha con do wi''kid- gloves an''a eye- glass on? |
58183 | Tha hannot? |
58183 | Tha''rt here? |
58183 | Tha''st earnt thy shillin'', has tha, tha young nowt? |
58183 | Tha''st j''ined th''strikers, has tha? |
58183 | That what is true? |
58183 | The last? |
58183 | Then at first,she put it to him,"it made you angry?" |
58183 | Then it is a woman? |
58183 | Then,he said,"I-- we shall have the pleasure of seeing you at dinner to- morrow evening?" |
58183 | There''s another man, is there? 58183 They threw a stone, blast''em, did they?" |
58183 | They''re all your own notions, these? |
58183 | Thirty year''your father was at work on that notion of his? |
58183 | This man in London,she said,"can tell you the actual truth about it?" |
58183 | This toime? |
58183 | This? |
58183 | Those-- those are not all yours? |
58183 | To- day there have been black tales told you? |
58183 | WHY DO YOU CRY FOR ME? |
58183 | Was na theer nowt else? 58183 Was not one enough?" |
58183 | We tak? 58183 Well, then, what does she dress i''that road fur? |
58183 | Well,restlessly,"have you naught to say about her?" |
58183 | Were you devil enough to mean to have my blood? |
58183 | What ails you? |
58183 | What am I saying? |
58183 | What am I saying? |
58183 | What are they shouting for? |
58183 | What are you doing here, in Heaven''s name? |
58183 | What are you doing here? |
58183 | What are you doing here? |
58183 | What are you doing here? |
58183 | What are you doing here? |
58183 | What are you thinkin''on? |
58183 | What art at, tha foo''? |
58183 | What art tha doin''wi''my cap? 58183 What art tha drivin''at?" |
58183 | What art tha goin''to do wi''_ them_ while tha bring th''mesters down? |
58183 | What art tha sayin''? |
58183 | What art tha stondin''hearkenin''to him fur? |
58183 | What art tha stoppin''fur? |
58183 | What art tha stoppin''fur? |
58183 | What did Mr. Ffrench say to thee? |
58183 | What did she say? |
58183 | What did she say? |
58183 | What did tha tell me that theer fur? |
58183 | What did you go for,he asked,"if it was n''t for that?" |
58183 | What do you mean by''it''? |
58183 | What do you mean? |
58183 | What do you want of me? |
58183 | What do you want to know,she asked,"that I can tell you?" |
58183 | What do you want? |
58183 | What do you want? |
58183 | What do you want? |
58183 | What does he say about_ her_? |
58183 | What does he want of you? |
58183 | What does he want with me-- to- day? |
58183 | What does he want? |
58183 | What does he want? |
58183 | What does it mean? |
58183 | What does it_ mean_? |
58183 | What does tha believe? |
58183 | What does tha think on her? |
58183 | What does tha want to know fur? |
58183 | What dost want? |
58183 | What falseness is there in me,he cried,"that I should have_ forgotten_ it?" |
58183 | What has he made of himself? |
58183 | What has he to offer? |
58183 | What has she ever give me? |
58183 | What has tha been sayin''? 58183 What has tha been sayin''?" |
58183 | What have they been saying to her? |
58183 | What have you been up to? |
58183 | What have you found, lad? |
58183 | What have you heard? |
58183 | What is it this time? |
58183 | What is it? |
58183 | What is it? |
58183 | What is the matter now? |
58183 | What is the matter? |
58183 | What is the matter? |
58183 | What is the romantic folly? |
58183 | What is the trouble now? |
58183 | What is this row about? |
58183 | What is to be done? |
58183 | What is wrong? |
58183 | What is your name? |
58183 | What lot does he go with? |
58183 | What mun I say? |
58183 | What must I do? |
58183 | What of that? |
58183 | What should I have to say of her? 58183 What soart does tha want?" |
58183 | What was it you wanted to try to do? |
58183 | What was it? |
58183 | What were you doing? |
58183 | What would I wish you to do? |
58183 | What would be the use in_ not_ saying it? |
58183 | What wur it aw about? |
58183 | What''s a body to do wi''her? |
58183 | What''s he after? |
58183 | What''s he goin''to do wi''em? |
58183 | What''s he up to now? |
58183 | What''s in th''barrils? |
58183 | What''s she been up to? |
58183 | What''s th''matter wi''thee? |
58183 | What''s tha been doin''? |
58183 | What''s tha been doin''? |
58183 | What''s that he''s reading? |
58183 | What''s that tha''rt saying? |
58183 | What''s that? |
58183 | What''s that? |
58183 | What''s up wi''thee, lad? |
58183 | What''s up wi''thee? |
58183 | What''s up with me? |
58183 | What''s up, man? |
58183 | What''s up? |
58183 | What''s wrong wi''yo''? |
58183 | What, you''re here, are you? |
58183 | What,she faltered,--"what do you mean?" |
58183 | What,she said,"would you wish me to do?" |
58183 | What-- has she to say? |
58183 | What? 58183 Wheer am I goin''?" |
58183 | Wheer art tha fro''? |
58183 | Wheer art tha puttin''my cap? |
58183 | Wheer hast tha been? |
58183 | Wheer is he? 58183 Wheer is he?" |
58183 | Wheer is he? |
58183 | Wheer is it? |
58183 | Wheer is th''thing we coom fur? |
58183 | Wheer''s Ffrench an''wheer''s Haworth? |
58183 | Wheer''s Ffrench? |
58183 | Wheer''s he gone? |
58183 | Wheer''s th''flower? |
58183 | Wheer''s that flower? |
58183 | Wheer-- wheer does tha expect to go when tha dees? |
58183 | When I give up what I''d worked twenty year to get, what did I give it up for? 58183 When and how?" |
58183 | When shall you bring it back? |
58183 | When shall you take it away? |
58183 | When? |
58183 | Where did you get it? |
58183 | Where did you put the model? |
58183 | Where do you stand? |
58183 | Where is he? |
58183 | Where is he? |
58183 | Where were you? |
58183 | Where''s Briarley? |
58183 | Where''s Haworth? |
58183 | Where''s your father? |
58183 | Where''s your mother? |
58183 | Where? |
58183 | Which way does he go home? |
58183 | Who did she say yo''wur? |
58183 | Who is it they want? |
58183 | Who is it, by----? |
58183 | Who is it? |
58183 | Who is she, and why do you choose her? |
58183 | Who is your leader? |
58183 | Who next? |
58183 | Who said it? |
58183 | Who says so? |
58183 | Who sent it? |
58183 | Who should go to him but his mother? 58183 Who threw the stone?" |
58183 | Who told you? |
58183 | Who was he? |
58183 | Who was it? |
58183 | Who''s Ffrench? |
58183 | Who''s getten it? |
58183 | Who''s that theer? |
58183 | Who''s that? |
58183 | Who''s there? |
58183 | Who''s to blame but her? |
58183 | Who? |
58183 | Who? |
58183 | Who? |
58183 | Whom do you mean? |
58183 | Whom do you mean? |
58183 | Why did I stand there like a fool? |
58183 | Why did you come here? |
58183 | Why did you dress yourself in that manner? |
58183 | Why did you go? |
58183 | Why do n''t you say summat? |
58183 | Why do n''t you take the thing up yourself? |
58183 | Why do you cry for Me? |
58183 | Why do you go back to it? |
58183 | Why do you say master? |
58183 | Why do you want him? |
58183 | Why does tha stand it, tha foo''? |
58183 | Why have you darkened the room? |
58183 | Why not? |
58183 | Why should it matter? 58183 Why should they not dare?" |
58183 | Why should you think of such a story now? |
58183 | Why there? |
58183 | Why--she said--"why did he touch me-- in that manner?" |
58183 | Why,he kept saying to himself weakly and wearily,--"_why_ was it? |
58183 | Why-- not? |
58183 | Why? |
58183 | Why? |
58183 | Why? |
58183 | Why? |
58183 | Why? |
58183 | Will he come to the house? |
58183 | Will ta-- will ta promise tha will na let out who did it? 58183 Will there?" |
58183 | Will they live here? |
58183 | Will yo''coom in? |
58183 | Will you believe_ me_? |
58183 | Will you drink this for me? |
58183 | Will you listen to what I have got to say? |
58183 | Will you tell me,he said,"what wrong I have done you?" |
58183 | Will you tell me,she said, almost in a whisper,"what wrong I have done_ you_?" |
58183 | Would n''t they? |
58183 | Would tha moind me axin thee summat? |
58183 | Would tha tak''owt as was offert thee? |
58183 | Would you-- really? |
58183 | Wrong? |
58183 | Wur theer money i''that thing thy feyther wur tryin''at? |
58183 | Yet? |
58183 | You are going to share it with Ffrench? |
58183 | You are not going to drop the poor fellow like that? |
58183 | You did n''t believe_ them_,he said hoarsely,"and you do n''t believe_ me_?" |
58183 | You have been doing_ what_? |
58183 | You have n''t heard the report? |
58183 | You let it out, did you? |
58183 | You might have known----"Aye,he returned,"what was I doing? |
58183 | You want me to go now? |
58183 | You wish,repeated Murdoch,"that you were in my place? |
58183 | You''ll go to- night? |
58183 | You''re not afraid? |
58183 | You''ve knowed her a good bit, I dare say, my dear? |
58183 | You''ve made up your mind to that? |
58183 | You-- saw-- what I was going to do? |
58183 | You-- you do n''t think it will be worse for us? |
58183 | _ Am_ I like-- anybody? |
58183 | A good un, wur he? |
58183 | Am I to let the fellow insult me and not resent it-- touch me with his foot, as if I were a dog?" |
58183 | And then clenched the matter by adding still more feebly,"Ay, to be sure it''s thy comp''ny, is na it, Sararann?" |
58183 | And then some one had said to him:"Why do n''t you try America? |
58183 | And when Murdoch said"Why?" |
58183 | Are yo''goin''?" |
58183 | Are you sure of what you said?" |
58183 | Are you,"--almost timidly,--"are you tired?" |
58183 | Are-- are you going out?" |
58183 | But where is this_ protégé_ of yours?" |
58183 | Can it be-- is it true?" |
58183 | Can you tell me?" |
58183 | Can you understand that it is enough as it stands-- enough?" |
58183 | Con tha coom? |
58183 | Did na she swound away, nor nothin''?" |
58183 | Did she set i''th''room an''talk wi''yo''?" |
58183 | Did tha hear what she said about th''money?" |
58183 | Dixon?" |
58183 | Do you know who he is, and what''s up with him?" |
58183 | Do you think I do n''t know the look on it?" |
58183 | Do you think I look forward or backward? |
58183 | Do you think I will let them fancy that_ I_ am afraid of them?" |
58183 | Do you think,"with deadly coolness,"I''d stop at aught if th''time come?" |
58183 | Do you-- do you know what you have said?" |
58183 | Do you-- think he is really ill?" |
58183 | Do you?" |
58183 | Does na tha see''em?" |
58183 | Does tha think because I''ve got a bit o''brass, I can hot th''bake- oven wi''head- dresses?" |
58183 | Dost tha think tha con pin it reet, or mun I put th''beer down an''do it mysen?" |
58183 | Has tha getten a big head- stone up?" |
58183 | Hast tha ivver seed her at Chapel, Jane Ann?" |
58183 | Have n''t you done enough? |
58183 | Haworth?" |
58183 | He stopped her and asked deliberately:"Did you come because you thought I might do myself harm?" |
58183 | How art tha now, lad?" |
58183 | How did you like it yourself?" |
58183 | How many on you''s going to follow them?" |
58183 | How''s-- how''s thine, Misses?" |
58183 | I sez,''why dost na tha lift him?'' |
58183 | I swore I''d make my way with her, and how far have I gone? |
58183 | If it''s true-- not as I believe it, for I don''t-- where is he?" |
58183 | If there''d have been wrong in his life, who''d have been liker to see it than me?" |
58183 | Is it me that luck''s gone agen on every side or a chap that''s useder to it?" |
58183 | Is it_ that_?" |
58183 | Is n''t bullying and frightening two women enough for you, that you must come here?" |
58183 | Is na it bad enow to_ be_ a workin''mon, wi''out havin''th''gentry remindin''yo''on it fro''year eend to year eend? |
58183 | Is not that enough?" |
58183 | Is she as fond of him now?" |
58183 | Is that it?" |
58183 | Now tell me if there''s aught else to do but what I''ve set my mind on?" |
58183 | Once her father had turned to her restlessly, saying:"Why do you stand there? |
58183 | THE"WHO''D HA''THOWT IT?" |
58183 | The inventing chap was your father?" |
58183 | The"Who''d Ha''Thowt It?" |
58183 | Then Granny Dixon spoke out:"Wheer''st flower?" |
58183 | Then, after a pause, he said,"I saw Briarley yesterday, and he said Mrs. Dixon was very ill. You sometimes go there, I believe?" |
58183 | Then, turning to Rachel:"Does ta want to know wheer th''money come fro''? |
58183 | Then, with a quick change of subject,--"How did tha loike th''sermont?" |
58183 | This here''s it--''_Look out!_''""What does it mean?" |
58183 | To think of them poor things----""How much did you give her?" |
58183 | What are you going to do with it?" |
58183 | What art tha starin''at?" |
58183 | What did Ffrench want of you?" |
58183 | What did it matter? |
58183 | What did yo''talk about?" |
58183 | What do you mean?" |
58183 | What else had you, my lad? |
58183 | What ha''yo''getten to say?" |
58183 | What had I done? |
58183 | What has my life been worth? |
58183 | What have I done? |
58183 | What is it?" |
58183 | What is the matter?" |
58183 | What is the trouble?" |
58183 | What is there in_ me_, that she should give me a thought when I am not near her? |
58183 | What should you say if another woman had gone so far? |
58183 | What was it?" |
58183 | What was to pay me? |
58183 | What''s he done that he should stand there and fondle her as if he''d bought and paid for her? |
58183 | What''s that you were reading?" |
58183 | What''s up?" |
58183 | Wheer did tha foind it?" |
58183 | Wheer did yo''get that?" |
58183 | Wheer does he get th''brass fro''?" |
58183 | Wheer is it? |
58183 | Wheer''s he gone?" |
58183 | Wheer''s th''use o''givin ten shillin''to hear summat yo''know yo''rsen? |
58183 | When I took Ffrench in partner, what did I run the risk for? |
58183 | When you contrast his position with yours is not_ that_ an extraordinary thing? |
58183 | Where did you get it? |
58183 | Where is my mother?" |
58183 | Who cares for her?" |
58183 | Who is he?" |
58183 | Who is she?" |
58183 | Who should find him an''be a help to him if I ca n''t? |
58183 | Who told it?" |
58183 | Who was the chap that threw the stone?" |
58183 | Who was the chap that threw the stone?" |
58183 | Who''d have thought that a simple body like me would ever have a grand home like this-- and it earned and bought by my own son? |
58183 | Who''s fed''em and clothed''em while you''ve been on th''spree? |
58183 | Who''s this here?" |
58183 | Why did Haworth go away? |
58183 | Why did you come?" |
58183 | Why do n''t you carry your traps out there?" |
58183 | Why do you cry for me?" |
58183 | Why should I come?" |
58183 | Why should I?" |
58183 | Why should n''t you be as good and happy as any woman who ever lived?" |
58183 | Would yo''loike to see it?" |
58183 | Would yo,''"in some hurry,"ha''owt agen me gettin''behind th''pump?" |
58183 | Would you mind it?" |
58183 | Would you-- would you mind me a- kneelin''down an''sayin''a prayer here to myself as I used to when you was a boy, Jem? |
58183 | You are too proud and too fond of yourself, and yet"----"And yet what?" |
58183 | You do n''t mean to tell me you''ve not got pluck enow?" |
58183 | You''re at work at it again, are you?" |
58183 | _ You_ battled against your love?" |
58183 | _ You_ loved me? |
58183 | and then remembering the episode of the handkerchief, he added, rather slowly,"You mean Miss Ffrench?" |
58183 | drawing a long breath,"but is na there a lot on''em? |
58183 | he raved,"do you see what you have done?" |
58183 | it''s thee, is it?" |
58183 | she answered,"_ I_?" |
58183 | she exclaimed,--"money to gi''away?" |
58183 | what art tha comin''to?" |
58183 | what''s she been up to now?" |
26045 | Adrian, are you a man at all? |
26045 | Adrian,she sobs,"you have forgiven me? |
26045 | Again at your window? |
26045 | Ah, does it rouse so much anger in you even to hear repeated what she did not hesitate to write, did not hesitate to allow me to read? 26045 Aha, what have we here; a couple of drowned rats? |
26045 | Am I mistaken,he said, with some hesitation,"surely this is Hubert Cochrane''s voice?" |
26045 | An expression of regret-- from_ me_? |
26045 | And did the scoundrel say so? 26045 And did you not always look upon my exile as a blessing undisguised, Rupert?" |
26045 | And did you,he asked,"hear its creaking, Renny, as it swayed in the wind?" |
26045 | And if it be Adrian? |
26045 | And is it not too late? |
26045 | And now what will you do with me? |
26045 | And so you would really care to stop here,said he, with a smile of wonder on his face,"if it were not for that reason?" |
26045 | And what''ll be to do now? |
26045 | And why should n''t it be for her happiness? |
26045 | And you have never seen your father since? |
26045 | And you-- what would you do? 26045 Any damage, Curwen?" |
26045 | As her kinsman, have I your approval? |
26045 | At least you will send him a message? |
26045 | Ay, sir; who''s afraid? |
26045 | Boat loaded, Curwen? |
26045 | But what does it mean? |
26045 | But why should she have gone with them? |
26045 | But why, my dear fellow, these further risks and adventures? 26045 But you heard other voices in the next room-- a man''s voice-- whilst you were waiting?" |
26045 | But_ what_ is smuggling? |
26045 | Can you ask, my fair cousin? |
26045 | Casualties? |
26045 | Could n''t I stop with you, sir? |
26045 | Did she love him? |
26045 | Do I not remember? 26045 Do not think me mad, child,"he said at last;"tell me who you are-- what has brought you here? |
26045 | Do you hear me? |
26045 | Do you know what the mission is-- do you know to whom? 26045 Do you know, Curwen,"he said,"that you brought me the wrong young lady last night?" |
26045 | Do you not remember then-- what she has said to you? 26045 Do you not see me overcome with joy? |
26045 | Do you want to be hanged, Johnny Shearman? |
26045 | Do you wonder that I have no tears, cousin? |
26045 | Does Molly know of your visit to me? |
26045 | Does he bite? 26045 Does she expect my visit?" |
26045 | Dost thou think I can not bear ill news-- My husband? |
26045 | Eh bien, René,she said gaily,"or should I call you Monsieur Potter? |
26045 | Emigré, I presume? |
26045 | Emigré? 26045 For God''s sake,"exclaimed Sir Adrian, suddenly losing patience,"what are you driving at, man? |
26045 | For Madeleine? |
26045 | Have you heard anything; has anything happened? |
26045 | Have you made out yet what particular kind of new frenzy it was that seized chère Tante? |
26045 | Have you no word for me? |
26045 | He came, then? |
26045 | Here is Renny; he will carry word that with me you remain to- night.... Come, Renny, do you recognise an old acquaintance? |
26045 | Hoche has forbidden it, has he? 26045 How came it that you never sought to go back to your country?" |
26045 | How dare I what? |
26045 | How did your honour know? 26045 How is that?" |
26045 | How many have we got here? |
26045 | How many were you on board the cutter? |
26045 | How now? |
26045 | How? |
26045 | I ai n''t agoing to seize it off you or take you up, he-- he-- he-- eh, Mr. Landale? 26045 I dared not think of seeing you again,"he murmured, clasping her hands;"yet my return... pleases you?" |
26045 | I leave you resolved to die then? |
26045 | I----? 26045 If I may take the liberty,"said he with subdued voice,"will his honour come and look out, without showing himself?" |
26045 | If he expects you,she asked, fixing cold, curious eyes on her sister''s distress,"and he is in danger, why_ do n''t_ you go?" |
26045 | Is it you, me poor child? |
26045 | Is that a star? |
26045 | Is that not dangerous? |
26045 | It is so, then? |
26045 | Let him speak,she cried,"what matter what he says? |
26045 | Letter or message? |
26045 | Look-- is not this day just like-- one we both remember well...? 26045 Madeleine resembles her father, I am told; but then you never saw the_ feu Comte_, did you? |
26045 | Madeleine,he said, with low rapid utterance;"I am not mistaken, I trust, in thinking you look on me as a good friend?" |
26045 | Madeleine? |
26045 | Madness? 26045 Murderers, who said murderers? |
26045 | My God, Madeleine,cried he, with genuine emotion,"have I deserved this? |
26045 | My God, my God, what have I done? |
26045 | My God, what has happened? 26045 My Lady----?" |
26045 | My dear Miss O''Donoghue,he cried, as I curtsied,"do my senses deceive me, or do I not once more behold_ Murthering Moll_?" |
26045 | My dear aunt,cried Adrian,"nothing has happened, I trust?" |
26045 | My room is ready, I suppose? |
26045 | No,continued Mr. Landale,"I am sure you do n''t, eh?" |
26045 | No? 26045 Nor do you? |
26045 | Not dead, Renny? |
26045 | Nothing more than a friend, sweet? |
26045 | Of whom are you speaking? |
26045 | Oh, Rupert, it was a letter; had I not better destroy it? |
26045 | Oh, Rupert, what shall we do? |
26045 | Oh, what are you made of? 26045 Oh, what does it matter? |
26045 | Pensive, as usual, cousin? |
26045 | Pulwick; you come from Pulwick? |
26045 | Ready to cast? |
26045 | René knew? |
26045 | René, your ladyship-- or Mademoiselle is it? |
26045 | René? |
26045 | Rupert? |
26045 | She is not ill? |
26045 | Silly child,said Madeleine,"and so that is the reason you are glad to remain here?" |
26045 | So brave-- so handsome? |
26045 | So our lovers are to come after us, is_ that_ it? 26045 Still hankering after that beggarly scoundrel?" |
26045 | That was, no doubt,put in Sir Adrian, in his gentle, indulgent way,"what made the Kings''Heads so glorious?" |
26045 | Then you have hope, real hope? |
26045 | There are_ two_ Demoiselles de Savenaye, Jack; which is it? |
26045 | They are very like, are they not? |
26045 | To Adrian? |
26045 | To Madeleine? |
26045 | Unlucky, is it? 26045 Was not she happy enough with you here in this God- forsaken hole, with nothing but the tempest besides for company? |
26045 | Well what happened when he came in and caught you? 26045 Well, Adrian, and what have I done_ now_?" |
26045 | Well, Captain Smith, and about this account? 26045 Well, Madeleine?" |
26045 | Well, Renny,said he,"what is wrong? |
26045 | Well, and how are the little ones? |
26045 | Well, and then? |
26045 | Well, are you glad to see me, Cousin Rupert? |
26045 | Well, but how about me, nurse,observed Molly,"what about_ me_?" |
26045 | Well, no, not exactly, and yet-- unless--? 26045 Well, well,"continued the hermit,"what else? |
26045 | Well-- is that all? |
26045 | Well? |
26045 | Well? |
26045 | What are you going to do? |
26045 | What are you talking about? 26045 What do you think you would find? |
26045 | What do you want with me? |
26045 | What do you want? |
26045 | What does it mean? |
26045 | What does it mean? |
26045 | What else? |
26045 | What fly stings thee now? |
26045 | What hast thou brought? 26045 What is it you accuse him of?" |
26045 | What is it? |
26045 | What is it? |
26045 | What is smuggling? 26045 What is that?" |
26045 | What is the meaning of this, my poor girl? |
26045 | What is to be done? |
26045 | What was it? 26045 What''s the use of_ you_?" |
26045 | When have you seen him last? 26045 When,"she pursued,"in the darkness you took me in your arms and kissed me; what did the touch of my lips bring to you? |
26045 | Where is it? |
26045 | Where was it my mother parted from me? |
26045 | Whither, my fair sister,said he, ranging himself with his best courtesy against the bannisters,"so late in the day?" |
26045 | Who are you, sir, and what do you want? |
26045 | Who is she? |
26045 | Who knows? 26045 Why are you so late?--why have you brought no one with you? |
26045 | Why should I crouch if you stand up? |
26045 | Why this hatred? 26045 Why, you little devil, what is the matter with you?" |
26045 | Why-- is not Adrian coming back to- night? |
26045 | Why-- what? 26045 Why_ demme_"( as Mrs. Hambledon''s nephew says),"_ what the deyvil_ have I got to say?" |
26045 | Will I keep you a little longer? |
26045 | Will not your honour come in? 26045 Will they hang him?" |
26045 | Will you go? |
26045 | Will you not have me? |
26045 | Will you take me back to that strange old place of yours, Adrian, when we are married? |
26045 | Would I not be kind to her?--would I not cherish her?--would I not----? 26045 Would ever any one have guessed anything approaching this? |
26045 | Would you have every one live like a limpet on a rock? |
26045 | Would_ you_ allow your friends to continue fighting alone for all you love, because you happened to be in safe and pleasant circumstances yourself? |
26045 | Yes, why should you think first of strangers,he grumbled,"when you have your own blood, to stand by you-- blood is thicker than water, ai n''t it? |
26045 | You have reason to think that Mr. Landale knew of these men''s errand; other reason, I mean, than having seen them with him just now? |
26045 | You heard them mention my brother''s name? |
26045 | You want me to believe he is mad, I suppose? |
26045 | You would risk your life to save me? |
26045 | You, Curwen? 26045 Your master?" |
26045 | Your sister? 26045 _ Eh bien_, dreamer?" |
26045 | _ Mais, comment donc!_exclaimed the lady,"my dear uncle did you chide your son just now? |
26045 | _ Sacrebleu_,he cried, feeling with quick hands the nature of the obstruction,"more kegs?" |
26045 | _ You_, return to that place now... what good do you think you could do-- eh? |
26045 | ''Am I not the most unfortunate...? |
26045 | ''Well, and what do you think of him?'' |
26045 | ''Why, this is René L''Apôtre? |
26045 | ''_""Well?" |
26045 | ( Indeed where is now the writer who will for a moment admit, even tacitly, that his records are not of reality?) |
26045 | ( You remember how dreadful it was?) |
26045 | A lonely widower like myself, why should I? |
26045 | Adrian''s wide acres are succulent, hey? |
26045 | Ah, Lord God, what are we coming to? |
26045 | Ah, ca n''t you let the poor fellow rest in his grave Sophia? |
26045 | Ah, you have heard? |
26045 | Am I to be blamed for judging you by the ordinary standard? |
26045 | Am I too old, or is he too young, to wait on you-- hey, madam?" |
26045 | Among his literary family is there not one nearer his heart than all the rest-- his_ dream- child? |
26045 | And Madam is ill? |
26045 | And if, my fair cousin, it is such that all English gentlemen would help, why then this secrecy?" |
26045 | And really, uncle, you give your own son to my cause?--and you, cousin, you are willing to work for me? |
26045 | And she, where is she?" |
26045 | And so he did not reach in time to meet you? |
26045 | And so this is the latest fashion? |
26045 | And then when, and where, and how? |
26045 | And what sort of a devil is it your generosity has made of_ him_? |
26045 | And yet you love her? |
26045 | And yet...? |
26045 | And, after a pause,"Madeleine does not know the nature of your present pursuit?" |
26045 | And, after another pause, she added, pensively:"But tell me, does Sir Adrian never leave his solitude? |
26045 | Any more letters from the smuggler to- day, eh? |
26045 | Are the souls of the damned patient? |
26045 | Are you deaf, stupid, as well as heartless? |
26045 | Are you mad?'' |
26045 | Are you quite sure, sir?" |
26045 | Aye, have we not a proverb about it: as well be hanged for a sheep as for a lamb?... |
26045 | Bad news-- bad news? |
26045 | But after a second, controlling herself:"And what should that be now, sister, to you or to me?" |
26045 | But how? |
26045 | But is_ this_ the sort of thing that will be of interest to read hereafter? |
26045 | But let me be frank, or else what is the use of this diary? |
26045 | But there is no saying, your honour eats more when I have brought him back onions, eschalot, and_ ail_; now do I lie, your honour? |
26045 | But we''ve run many a risk together in our day, have we not?" |
26045 | But what I wants to know is: Why, if you knew all about the fellow''s little games, you sent us to spy on him? |
26045 | But what can they know of life at a convent? |
26045 | But what does your smuggler do, miss-- your rollicking, dare- devil chap of a smuggler? |
26045 | But what if dreams of a return to the life of the world should arise after to- day in the recluse''s mind? |
26045 | But what of the writer? |
26045 | But where was the use of either argument or expostulation with one so incapable of even understanding the mainsprings of his actions? |
26045 | But will not my knight continue to fight for my bidding, even without hope of such?" |
26045 | But with you? |
26045 | But you will surely think of asking a few likely young fellows over to the house, occasionally? |
26045 | But you_ would_ have all the credit, and where are you? |
26045 | But, what if Mr. Landale were right? |
26045 | But, who had come for the children, and where had they been taken? |
26045 | By the way, will you embark a few bags with me? |
26045 | CHAPTER V THE AWAKENING Oh, what hadst thou to do with cruel Death, Who wast so full of life, or Death with thee? |
26045 | CHAPTER XX TWO MONTHS LATER: THE QUICK AND THE DEAD Neighbour, what doth thy husband when he cometh home from work? |
26045 | Can you trust your men?" |
26045 | Can you wonder, Adrian, that my brain was reeling? |
26045 | Could anything be more suitable, more fortunate? |
26045 | Could ever two birds be killed with one stone with more complete felicity than in this settling of the two people she most loved upon earth? |
26045 | Could justice ever have served up a spicier dish whereon to regale the multitude? |
26045 | Could n''t you even shoot straight? |
26045 | Crackenshaw?" |
26045 | Dear me-- you do n''t mean to say, Madeleine, that you are corresponding with that person; that he is near us? |
26045 | Did he think( as indeed has happened) that the Light- keeper would take too kindly to the Savenaye children? |
26045 | Did they like no little fresh soles this morning? |
26045 | Did you say you were a Landale of Pulwick? |
26045 | Do I not deserve my fate, if the Bible law be right? |
26045 | Do n''t they know who murdered him? |
26045 | Do n''t you understand? |
26045 | Do n''t you understand?" |
26045 | Do n''t you, sir, do n''t you? |
26045 | Do you know that if my husband were here to notice them you might be taken to task?" |
26045 | Do you mean to remain?" |
26045 | Do you think your brother mad, child?" |
26045 | Do you want to be hanged?" |
26045 | Does he gibber? |
26045 | Does it make you suffer much? |
26045 | Far more trouble than pleasure when you have it, and yet a dreadful nuisance when you have not-- But what''s this I hear about Adrian? |
26045 | For you will keep us a little longer?" |
26045 | Good- night, Captain Smith, I shall see you to- morrow?" |
26045 | Guilty? |
26045 | Had he not been so five days ago? |
26045 | Had the merciless waters of the earth that had murdered the mother, grasped at the child''s life also? |
26045 | Had the sea given up its dead? |
26045 | Had you no thought for your woman''s good name? |
26045 | Hallo, what is the damned_ crapaud_ up to?" |
26045 | Has she not brought my love under your protection? |
26045 | Have I the choice already between two such cavaliers? |
26045 | Have they not welcomed a child of Cécile de Savenaye at Pulwick?... |
26045 | Have you never heard of his admiration for Moggie Mearson, our maid? |
26045 | He does not know?" |
26045 | He saw the emptying seats, the shipped oars, the name_ Peregrine_ in black letters upon the white paint of the dingey; and she?... |
26045 | He spoke so nobly, Rupert, and said: What better place could they have for their meetings than one consecrated to such faithful love as this? |
26045 | How could I have been so stupid? |
26045 | How could I have thought_ that_ baggage like my princess? |
26045 | How could it be that he loved her? |
26045 | How could it have come so soon to your honour''s ears? |
26045 | How dare you have a lover, and not tell me all about him? |
26045 | How did it go?" |
26045 | How did you behave to the poor innocent from the very instant she crossed your threshold? |
26045 | How did you come? |
26045 | How do you do, my cousin?" |
26045 | How is it that our organ- songs at the convent_ never_ moved me in this fashion? |
26045 | How is it we never know such delight in waking hours? |
26045 | How is the arm? |
26045 | How often does he come here? |
26045 | How often these last days, and how earnestly have I not begged of you to return to Pulwick? |
26045 | How the devil came you here then, and thus?" |
26045 | How you stare-- oh you remember now do you? |
26045 | I am not conceited, I hope, but what, pray, will become of your honour here without me?" |
26045 | I called out,''Stretchers, lads; they want to take your captain?'' |
26045 | I hope this is not to be a mere flying visit? |
26045 | I know you hate company yourself, and all the rest of it; but how can these things here affect you upon your island? |
26045 | I seized him by the hand--"Are you ill, Adrian?" |
26045 | I should n''t have moved with two men in a boat patrol, d''ye think? |
26045 | I thought that flattering: I am a Briton, of Brittany, you know, myself, uncle: would you have_ me_ be a worthless Briton? |
26045 | I tried to take up my life there, but----""But you have come back-- for me?" |
26045 | I warrant you have never told her the story for fear she would want to copy her mother in other ways besides looks-- Hey? |
26045 | I wonder who to? |
26045 | If I love you? |
26045 | If so, how would this proud rebellious nature bear another failure? |
26045 | If we were lonely before, my faith, now we are desolate?" |
26045 | Imbecile that I am, his honour-- where is he? |
26045 | In fact, were he to come across the children of his dead love-- above all Molly, who must be startlingly like her mother-- what might the result be? |
26045 | In five minutes you will be with him? |
26045 | Into what strange world had she come this night? |
26045 | Is he not with you? |
26045 | Is it guineas that nipping young man is a taking over seas, if I may make so bold? |
26045 | Is it hang him they will, and he so beautiful and brave? |
26045 | Is it my fault that you are not as other men? |
26045 | Is it not a shame that there should be such a thing as death?" |
26045 | Is it water that runs in your veins? |
26045 | Is it yet too late?" |
26045 | Is not that a feather in my cap?) |
26045 | Is that some of the joy we are to feel in Heaven, the music we are to hear? |
26045 | Is there any sin of human frailty that a human being dare condemn? |
26045 | Is this life, I am so eager for, but horror and misery after all? |
26045 | Is this the way to treat these pretty things?" |
26045 | It is a record with a vengeance, is it not? |
26045 | It is almost four years since I was here last, is it not?" |
26045 | It is good, in verity, to have My Lady back, but, Mr. the Captain, is it well for_ him_ to be here? |
26045 | It seems then, that you expected Mademoiselle, my sister, here for some purpose and that you regret she did not come; may I ask for an explanation?" |
26045 | Landale?" |
26045 | Let me see your face-- are you faint? |
26045 | Looking back to those delightful three days, did not the_ thought_ come to me, if not the words? |
26045 | May I?" |
26045 | Molly stood, her black brows drawn, gazing down upon her in silence.--Did she love him after all? |
26045 | Molly thought that the girl eyed her hesitatingly, as if she wished to speak:"Well, Moggie?" |
26045 | Molly!--What is the meaning of this? |
26045 | Mrs. Potter, your careful husband could not leave the island?" |
26045 | My God, were there then two Céciles? |
26045 | My safety? |
26045 | My task lies to my hand; the sacred legacy of my dead I have accepted; is there any of you here who will help the widow to maintain the fight?" |
26045 | No congratulations from the model brother? |
26045 | No doubt the fruits of peace?" |
26045 | No? |
26045 | Not even a word of thanks to Molly de Savenaye for bringing the truant to his home at last? |
26045 | Not indeed in his accusation of Mr. the Captain, René knew, René had seen enough to trust him: he was no false friend; but as regarded My Lady? |
26045 | Nothing about your wife--?" |
26045 | Now listen to me,"sitting down beside her, and speaking slowly and impressively,"you are to make our relatives feel welcome, do you understand? |
26045 | Now what good fare have you got for me to- day?" |
26045 | Now what prospect before her hungry heart but-- starvation? |
26045 | Now, what sort of game is she making of you? |
26045 | Now, where does the difference come in? |
26045 | Now,_ why_ did not Mr. Landale wish his brother to know? |
26045 | Oh, a poor fisherman, what was it to him? |
26045 | Oh, give me your hand, friend, can I think of anything now but your peril and your truth to me?" |
26045 | Old men and young they leapt up, with a roar; pressing round her, pouring forth acclamations, asseverations and oaths-- Would they help her? |
26045 | On the wings of the storm and the wind had she come to him, his love-- across the awful barriers that divide life and death? |
26045 | Or if he had been a dirty, untidy hermit, as Madeleine thought? |
26045 | Or to one of them? |
26045 | Or, yet, had she come to call him from the weary world that their souls might meet and be one at last?... |
26045 | Ought n''t you to be ashamed to be so hard- hearted?" |
26045 | Renny,"sinking his voice and clasping the man''s sturdy arm with clammy hand,"is it true they have placed him on the sands to- day?" |
26045 | Rupert, my good soul, can you ascribe any reason for this terrible state of affairs... that blow on the head?" |
26045 | Say the word, madam, am I to make the signal? |
26045 | Shall I signal?" |
26045 | She bent her ear-- was there nothing to hear yet, nothing but the lap of the restless waters? |
26045 | She, yielding her cheek carelessly to the Squire''s hearty kiss, examined the new- comer curiously the while:"Why-- how now, tut, tut, what''s this?" |
26045 | Should he tell them now? |
26045 | Sits the wind still in that quarter? |
26045 | Smuggler-- pirate? |
26045 | So you are going to take my gig? |
26045 | So you have met her?" |
26045 | So you see I owe poor Lady Maria a good thought.... You laugh?" |
26045 | So, it''s you again, Johnny, my lad; the pretty Mercury.... Can it be possible that Captain Smith is at his old games once more?" |
26045 | So, that is what five and twenty years have done for you-- what would you say to what they have done for me...?" |
26045 | Some said Jack spitted himself on his sword-- but dead he was anyhow, and monsieur your father-- what was his name? |
26045 | Sophia, this is a terrible thing your brother wants me to believe-- may I ask what_ your_ opinion is? |
26045 | Sophia, what would your feelings be then?" |
26045 | Surely, even at your showing you have enough of this world''s goods; why not come forward, now, at once, openly? |
26045 | The answer came with the promptitude of a return shot:"Do? |
26045 | The doctor considers her quite convalescent? |
26045 | The light of Scarthey?" |
26045 | The old man caught up the unsatisfactory reply in an exasperated burlesque of mimicry:"I can not say, sir-- you can not say? |
26045 | The shouts around us died away, there were cries upon him for"Speech-- speech,"then playful queries--"How is this, Sir Adrian? |
26045 | Then Tanty caught me by the arm and shook me:"How_ dare_ you, miss, how dare you?" |
26045 | Then abruptly asked:"Have you ever heard of guinea smuggling?" |
26045 | Then she asked, hoarsely:"Where have they taken him to?" |
26045 | Then there is Rupert paying now open court to this sly damsel-- for the sake of her beautiful eyes, or for the beautiful eyes of her casket? |
26045 | Then thoughtfully:"And now you will be wanting to return home?" |
26045 | Then with sudden deadly composure:"So_ this_ is the reparation you propose to make for the mischief you have wrought?" |
26045 | Then, catching fear from his servant''s distraught countenance:"My wife,"he exclaimed, bounding up; and added,"you left her, Renny?" |
26045 | Therefore he can not be cheating the King, if that is smuggling-- Oh Rupert, is there not some grievous mistake?" |
26045 | This is a handy sort of an old Robinson Crusoe place for hiding and storing, is it not?" |
26045 | This is all that marriage has brought me; and what has it not taken from me? |
26045 | To leave you alone, deserted, helpless at St. Malo, you could not have thought I should mean that? |
26045 | To their motherland, perhaps; even it might have been before he himself had left it; or yet to Ireland, where still dwelt kinsfolk of their blood? |
26045 | Traitors? |
26045 | Wannut you go in, sir?" |
26045 | Was it really I that endured such a life for seventeen years? |
26045 | Was no one true then? |
26045 | Was not the situation you placed me in with regard to Adrian already odious enough that it needed this added folly? |
26045 | Was she to leave him so, without even one kind word? |
26045 | Was there happiness indeed yet in store in the future? |
26045 | Was this to be the end? |
26045 | We have lowered the blue, white and red too often, have not we? |
26045 | We shall be firm to the last, shall we not, cousin?" |
26045 | Well, shall we return home now? |
26045 | Well,"she continued, looking round over her shoulder,"why do n''t you say something, you lackadaisical thing?" |
26045 | Were they watching the island? |
26045 | Were those men false? |
26045 | Were you not happy then? |
26045 | Were, then, these twenty years all an evil, fevered dream, and was he awake at length? |
26045 | What ailed the fellow, when every second was crucial, life or death bringing? |
26045 | What ails you then?" |
26045 | What am I to him?" |
26045 | What are we waiting for, may I ask?" |
26045 | What are you mumbling about to yourself? |
26045 | What are you sighing for? |
26045 | What are your plans?" |
26045 | What can this man of his have to say to me?" |
26045 | What could she say, and how excuse herself? |
26045 | What could_ he_ do for her, now that she required his helping hand no more? |
26045 | What did he know? |
26045 | What did he mean? |
26045 | What do you want?" |
26045 | What does anything matter if we are only together? |
26045 | What does anything matter now? |
26045 | What else has marriage brought her? |
26045 | What had happened? |
26045 | What has he done to offend you? |
26045 | What have I to do with you, Adrian''s wife? |
26045 | What in the name of goodness can a man smuggle_ out_ of England but gold? |
26045 | What is coming to me? |
26045 | What is it that creaks so? |
26045 | What is it you want to know?" |
26045 | What is it, why do n''t you tell me?" |
26045 | What is it?" |
26045 | What is that? |
26045 | What is the meaning of this? |
26045 | What is your guilt compared to mine for bringing you to this, allying my melancholy age with your bright youth?" |
26045 | What manner of man was this, that not love, nor jealousy, nor anger had power to stir? |
26045 | What meant this change? |
26045 | What need for words between them, then? |
26045 | What next? |
26045 | What should I care if you were an adventurer, a smuggler, a traitor? |
26045 | What should we do without tea in this weary world? |
26045 | What sort of man then is it I would allow to love me? |
26045 | What though her heart failed her at the eleventh hour?--God forgive her for it!--surely she never sanctioned this masquerade?... |
26045 | What was he spying after me for, like that? |
26045 | What was that infernal little French husband of hers hatching now? |
26045 | What was this strange feeling of oppression, of terror? |
26045 | What were you talking about in the picture gallery for an hour before dinner, eh?" |
26045 | What will they do to him?" |
26045 | What would Tanty say?" |
26045 | What would she do? |
26045 | What would you say if I were to issue invitations for a ball? |
26045 | What''s this? |
26045 | What, then, has marriage brought me? |
26045 | What, you never knew it? |
26045 | What-- despair now? |
26045 | What? |
26045 | When ought one to start such a record? |
26045 | When was ever any one made to suffer as he has been, in only forty years of life? |
26045 | Whence had come to her this strange power of feeling pain? |
26045 | Where was she, when he began that seemingly endless cruise with the frigate_ Porcupine_? |
26045 | Who are you?" |
26045 | Who can fathom the mystery of another''s heart? |
26045 | Who shall say that your skipper is not still Lucky Smith? |
26045 | Who told you I wonder?--of course, such a couple as we are, Adrian and I, could not be divided from each other for over half a day, could we? |
26045 | Who would have thought of seeing you here, René L''Apôtre?'' |
26045 | Whom have you but a mad- cap sister, a poor dreamer of a brother- in- law, an octogenarian aunt, to look to? |
26045 | Why did God place such creatures on His earth to take all savour from aught else under the sun? |
26045 | Why did you not speak? |
26045 | Why do n''t you answer me, Sophia?" |
26045 | Why do n''t you fire now, you lubbers?" |
26045 | Why had he never thought of the children these weary years? |
26045 | Why is he so anxious that Sir Adrian should not know that Aunt Rose has brought us here? |
26045 | Why should not she be happy, then, when you come back to your own good place? |
26045 | Why was her hair cut short? |
26045 | Why was she in this sordid little room? |
26045 | Why weep? |
26045 | Why, I myself fell into the same mistake, and we had not much time for finding it out, had we? |
26045 | Why, cousin Landale, you that knew Cécile de Savenaye so well have you forgotten two babes that were born at your own house of Pulwick? |
26045 | Why, in the name of conscience, should not you marry? |
26045 | Why, then what the devil have you been driving at?" |
26045 | Why, why, Adrian, old friend?" |
26045 | Why? |
26045 | Why? |
26045 | Will you engage to restore it to its owners, in all privacy? |
26045 | Will you go now, my child, and fetch me the letters I left on the drawing- room table? |
26045 | Will you trust me, Madeleine, will you come with me? |
26045 | Will you trust me? |
26045 | Would it be better to leave the book unopened? |
26045 | Would not you be_ kind_ to her?--would not you cherish her if she were your wife?" |
26045 | Would she forgive him, would she go with him? |
26045 | Would you make the breach between me and my friend irreparable?" |
26045 | Would you?" |
26045 | You are not faint?" |
26045 | You ca n''t leave the little ones, your husband does not ask you to come back and leave them, does he? |
26045 | You did not find them, did you?" |
26045 | You did not look for this, sir?" |
26045 | You fear for me? |
26045 | You have bitter truths to learn; would it not be better to wait and learn them quietly without further scandal?" |
26045 | You have done a bad day''s work there all these years, but, please God, there are better times dawning for us all.--What are you doing, Adrian? |
26045 | You shall soon know all; will you trust me?" |
26045 | You will not be frightened, will you, my beautiful love? |
26045 | You will suffer from this-- what shall we do to comfort you? |
26045 | You would like to go to Madeleine, would not you?" |
26045 | Your light will burn all safe for the time, will it not? |
26045 | _ Ces gredins!_ and will they hang so good a gentleman?" |
26045 | _ Jack_,"calling in his ear,"do n''t you see? |
26045 | _ Monsieur le Maire_ and the rest, appointed by the King, they were in a great fright, they had to give way-- what does Madame say? |
26045 | and had he not actually laughed? |
26045 | and_ where''s_ my share? |
26045 | cried Sophia,"Rupert, do not tell me, lest I swoon away, that he is married already?" |
26045 | cried he, goaded at length into some sort of despairing anger himself,"what would you have me do?" |
26045 | did ye ever hear such a thing? |
26045 | does it not strike you as savouring a little of the unamiable dog in the fable? |
26045 | echoed Lady Landale with her eyes still fixed upon his downcast face--"If I like-- what?" |
26045 | exclaimed the man with a paling face,"what are you saying?" |
26045 | if_ this_ had been his purpose, what motive was prompting him when he divided her from her deceiving lover? |
26045 | not know how one dances the gavotte? |
26045 | or have we trapped you at last, the ci- devant Savenaye and her_ godam_ from England? |
26045 | she cried,"Is it you?" |
26045 | she echoed, with an angry cry; and then wheeling round upon him fiercely:"Do you want to kill me?" |
26045 | she is one of those that will not weep for Jack Smith, eh, Adrian? |
26045 | she said in a dry whisper,"is he at Pulwick?" |
26045 | she says angrily; and adds, more gently, yet with some contempt:"_ Enfant, va!_--is this the time for such follies?" |
26045 | tell me, did she love you?" |
26045 | that you and he did come upon this Captain Smith, red- handed as you call it, loading or unloading his vessel on Scarthey Island?" |
26045 | what boat is that?" |
26045 | what can be done? |
26045 | what is there to be so astonished at? |
26045 | what she wrote to you in cold blood-- the coward-- in the very moment when you were staking your life for love of her? |
26045 | who am I that I should judge you? |
26045 | why-- where have you been then since you ran away from the dining- room? |
15493 | ''Who but witches can be proof against witches?'' 15493 A good and sufficient reason, Master Potts,"said Nicholas, laughing;"is it not so, Mistress Nutter?" |
15493 | A most praiseworthy resolution, Bess,said the rector;"but what is to be done with this fellow?" |
15493 | A present for me, Jennet,cried Alizon;"what is it?" |
15493 | After what has occurred, I wonder whether he will go over to Rough Lee to- morrow? |
15493 | Ah, Tib,said the little girl,"how are ye, Tib? |
15493 | Alizon accused of witchcraft-- say''st thou? |
15493 | Am ey to go free if ey comply? |
15493 | An arrival!--of whom? |
15493 | An so this is your grand scheme, eh, sir? |
15493 | An whoam doth it represent, mother? |
15493 | An whot else didsta see, mon? |
15493 | An yet, why canna ey enjoy such seets like other folk? 15493 An''t''black mon,"cried Hal o''Nabs, breathlessly,--"t''black mon wur Nick Demdike?" |
15493 | And can you think I would allow you to be borne away a captive to ignominy and certain destruction? |
15493 | And how shall we accomplish this? |
15493 | And leave him? 15493 And no pity for the innocent moved you?" |
15493 | And now, as we are on this subject,he added to the reeve,"I would gladly know the precise nature of your office?" |
15493 | And sae it is a hopeless suit, young sir? |
15493 | And so Master Potts is in favour with his Majesty, eh, Archie? |
15493 | And so it is a piece of gold-- with magic characters upon it, eh? |
15493 | And the prisoner perished in the cell? |
15493 | And there is no other outlet said the squire? |
15493 | And were you amongst those named, lord abbot? |
15493 | And wha''s that ye''d be after dinging, man? |
15493 | And what answer makes the spirit? |
15493 | And what follows if I sign? |
15493 | And what is the end of it all? |
15493 | And where may she be, sir? |
15493 | And wherefore not? |
15493 | And who are you, fellow, who thus volunteer your services? |
15493 | And who bade thee do it-- who brought thee hither? |
15493 | And why is it, then, since you are so quick- witted? |
15493 | And why not, sir? |
15493 | And why not, then? |
15493 | And will no more molest Mistress Nutter? |
15493 | And you are willing to pay for it at the price of your soul? |
15493 | And you deem you can dispose of my soul without my consent? |
15493 | And you think she was forespoken? |
15493 | And you think to deal with me as if I were a puppet in your hands? |
15493 | Any more messages to Malkin Tower? |
15493 | Are he and his followers lodged at your house, Bess? |
15493 | Are not the words synonymous? |
15493 | Are they fabrications, sir? |
15493 | Are you acquainted with Mother Demdike''s history, sir? |
15493 | Are you bewitched, like your neighbours? |
15493 | Are you coming out now? |
15493 | Are you drunk, sir, that you forget your manners? |
15493 | Are you ill? |
15493 | Are you of this abbey? |
15493 | Are you ready, Paslew? |
15493 | Are you sure you behold that figure? |
15493 | Are you wise, then, in going on? |
15493 | Art thou the abbot''s shade? |
15493 | Aught more? |
15493 | Ay, wherefore? |
15493 | Ay, why do you ask? |
15493 | Be it so,replied Sir Ralph;"but must yon unfortunate lady,"he added, pointing to Mistress Nutter,"be taken with them?" |
15493 | Because what? |
15493 | Boh who the dole''s that? 15493 Boh whot mays ye so inqueesitive? |
15493 | But I ask thee is she not a servant of Satan?--dost thou not know it?--canst thou not prove it? |
15493 | But I want a witness,pursued Potts,"and if you''ll serve as one--""Whot''ll ye gi''me?" |
15493 | But can it not be avoided? |
15493 | But can other aid save him? |
15493 | But do you think he will keep his word? |
15493 | But for another meikle-- is that what ye wad hae us infer? |
15493 | But hae ye heard what has happened? |
15493 | But have they set out on the expedition? |
15493 | But have you heard from her-- have you seen her? 15493 But how are you likely to know what your mother will think and do, you forward little hussy?" |
15493 | But how have I forfeited the King''s good opinion? |
15493 | But how shall we get the carcase here? |
15493 | But how, father-- how? |
15493 | But how, my sweet Fancy? 15493 But how-- in what way?" |
15493 | But how? |
15493 | But is Mistress Nutter''s retreat secure, think you?--May it not be discovered by some of Nowell''s emissaries? |
15493 | But is he one of the ambuscade? |
15493 | But my child!--where is my child? |
15493 | But the ink? |
15493 | But these terms could not be accepted? |
15493 | But to what do I bind myself? |
15493 | But to whom, madam? |
15493 | But what has she got beneath her arm? 15493 But what of Mother Demdike?" |
15493 | But what_ is_ the danger? |
15493 | But who is he? 15493 But whot dust theaw say, Hal o''Nabs?" |
15493 | But why should she not like Mistress Nutter? |
15493 | But why the devil do you want to go in? |
15493 | But you can point out its situation, I suppose? |
15493 | But you were saved, madam? |
15493 | But, entertaining this feeling, how conies it you screen so heinous an offender frae justice? 15493 By Mother Demdike?" |
15493 | Can he be of sound mind? |
15493 | Can this be true? |
15493 | Can this be? |
15493 | Can you hesitate, when it is to save_ her_? |
15493 | Can you not guess? |
15493 | Can you save her? |
15493 | Can you see aught more? |
15493 | Can you speak to her character, Baldwyn? |
15493 | Canna we throw in a good word for ye? 15493 Christopher Demdike?" |
15493 | Con ey get thee onny thing? |
15493 | Dare you lay hands on me? |
15493 | Did the child die, madam? |
15493 | Did you hear that? |
15493 | Did you mark the slot, sir? |
15493 | Did you speak? |
15493 | Did you speak? |
15493 | Did your brother think this? |
15493 | Didna ye see her yoursel''this morning? |
15493 | Didna yo tell me at Myerscough to come here, squire, an ey, Bess Baldwyn, should play Doll Wango to your Jem Tospot? |
15493 | Do you commit such outrages as this-- do you break into habitations like a robber, rifle them, and murder their inmates? 15493 Do you dare to liken me to a common robber and murderer? |
15493 | Do you indeed believe the charge, Dorothy? |
15493 | Do you know who I am, I say? 15493 Do you know who I am?" |
15493 | Do you mean to impugn the sagacity and justice of our high and mighty king, the head of the law, and defender of the faith? |
15493 | Do you not hear that laughter? |
15493 | Do you not see her? |
15493 | Do you see no one within the dungeon? |
15493 | Do you think Sir Thomas Hoghton would lend me that sum if I consent to wear his cloth, and attend him? |
15493 | Do you think so? |
15493 | Does she resemble the portrait of Isole de Heton? |
15493 | Dost deride me? |
15493 | Dost thou not see that the picture is gone? 15493 Dost thou, indeed, repent thee of thy iniquities? |
15493 | Dunna yo knoa me, lort abbut? |
15493 | Eigh by t''mess, whot_ win_ it cum to? |
15493 | Eigh, who else should it be from? |
15493 | Ey dunna knoa the feace? |
15493 | Fearful, am I? |
15493 | Feel nowt? |
15493 | First, then, is your hut in sight? |
15493 | Fro Mistress Nutter, ey suppose? |
15493 | Ha yo onny weepun abowt yo, lort abbut,he cried,"wi''which ey con free mysel fro''this accussed hound?" |
15493 | Han ey? |
15493 | Has Mother Chattox been here? |
15493 | Has all been done to your satisfaction, John Paslew? |
15493 | Has any one been with you? |
15493 | Has he owerheert us? |
15493 | Has it ever occurred to you that Alizon might be addicted to these practices? |
15493 | Has your Majesty made any further inquiries about the girl suspected of witchcraft? |
15493 | Hast thou no comfort for me? 15493 Hast thou thy knife, Mould- heels?" |
15493 | Have I been dreaming? |
15493 | Have I indeed guessed rightly? |
15493 | Have I slept long? |
15493 | Have I your Majesty''s permission to despatch him? |
15493 | Have the wretches done you a mischief? |
15493 | Have you any knowledge,he said,"when the boundaries of Pendle Forest were first settled and appointed?" |
15493 | Have you any other request to prefer? |
15493 | Have you been in the church, old woman? |
15493 | Have you forgotten the common saying,cried Nicholas--"that the Assheton who stands on that unlucky grave shall die within the year? |
15493 | Have you given him no provocation, sir? |
15493 | Have you no notion who he is? |
15493 | Have you not noticed it, Dick? |
15493 | Have you offended any one besides Mother Chattox, my poor fellow? |
15493 | Have you preached against them, and denounced their wickedness, menacing them with the thunders of the Church? |
15493 | Have you your smelling- bottle about you? 15493 He stawncht it, seyst to?" |
15493 | Here!--where? |
15493 | Hoo goes theere to fish, mon? |
15493 | How am I to answer him, Alizon? |
15493 | How am I to set them free? |
15493 | How can I be sure that I shall not be deluded in the matter? |
15493 | How can he have procured the robe? |
15493 | How conney wench, whon its flown away? |
15493 | How do I know thou art not sent hither by Mother Demdike to tempt me? |
15493 | How has this happened? |
15493 | How know you that, sir? |
15493 | How know''st thou that? |
15493 | How like you the water- ordeal-- eh, Master Attorney? 15493 How like you these diversions?" |
15493 | How mean you, sirrah? |
15493 | How now, fellow, what mean you? |
15493 | How say you, Captain Gauntlet-- and you too, Captain Storks, is not this an expedition to your tastes-- ha? |
15493 | How should you know it, fool, since you have never seen her in whose likeness it is made? |
15493 | How so, friend? |
15493 | How so? |
15493 | How so? |
15493 | How''s that, Tib? |
15493 | How''s this? |
15493 | How? |
15493 | I affirm he is bewitchit,continued the King;"and wha sae likely to do it as the glamouring hizzie that has ensnared him? |
15493 | I am fully prepared,she replied;"but will you not go to the others?" |
15493 | I am known am I? 15493 I now wish to be informed by you, James Device, whether that dyke cuts through the middle of the moor, or traverses the side; and if so, which side? |
15493 | I should desire nothing better, sweet young lady,replied Alizon;"but--""But what?" |
15493 | I will be scarce a moment,said the witch;"but I must warn thee that she is--""What-- what hast thou done to her, thou wicked hag?" |
15493 | I would fain know the subject of your studies, father? |
15493 | In danger of what, my good woman? |
15493 | In what manner, may I ask, have you proved your courage, sir? |
15493 | Is Alizon a witch? |
15493 | Is Mother Demdike with him? |
15493 | Is aw reet? 15493 Is he dancing with any one?" |
15493 | Is he of these parts? |
15493 | Is it a ghost, Lorry? |
15493 | Is it possible you can say this to me, Jennet? |
15493 | Is it thou, villain? |
15493 | Is it to pray to Beelzebub, thy master, that thou wouldst go to the crosses? |
15493 | Is it you, John Braddyll? |
15493 | Is it, indeed, you? |
15493 | Is she so very winning? |
15493 | Is that all? |
15493 | Is that nothing? |
15493 | Is there no other door? |
15493 | Is there no way of averting my terrible destiny, father? |
15493 | Is there no way to avoid this? |
15493 | Is this Bess Demdike''s child? |
15493 | Is this Nance Redferne? |
15493 | Is thy heart broken, poor bird? |
15493 | It is not likely your mother will stand in the way of your advancement, and you have not, I suppose, any other tie? 15493 It would be difficult to increase the darkness of the picture,"said the chirurgeon;"but what remedy will you apply?" |
15493 | Knows''t thou not I have the means of chastising thee? |
15493 | Marvellously,replied Dorothy;"but why have you scared my partner away?" |
15493 | Mary Baldwyn, daughter of Richard Baldwyn of Rough Lee, aged-- How old was she, sexton? |
15493 | May I attend you thither, father? |
15493 | May I cast eyes upon it? |
15493 | May I guess? |
15493 | May I inquire your name, friend? |
15493 | May I not know what has occurred to you? |
15493 | May I not tell Richard? |
15493 | May I take a last farewell of my child? |
15493 | May he? |
15493 | Meanin''Potts? |
15493 | More nor enough, lad,replied Elizabeth;"fo what had ey to tell her? |
15493 | Mother Demdike, ah? |
15493 | Murder? 15493 Nay, if it comes to that,"rejoined Richard,"why do not you and Sherborne wear it, instead of flaunting like daws in borrowed plumage? |
15493 | No, my liege,replied Nicholas, alarmed by the King''s manner;"what is it?" |
15493 | No; this is news to me,replied Nicholas;"does your business relate to his visit?" |
15493 | Nor offer any opposition, I hope, sir? |
15493 | Nothing hath happened to the prisoners? 15493 Nothing hath happened to them, my lord,"said the officer,--"but--""But what?" |
15493 | Now what dost thou here, Alice Nutter? |
15493 | Now, Jem, what hast got to say to me, lad, eh? |
15493 | Now, John, my good man, be pleased to tell us by whom you have been bewitched? |
15493 | Now, can you see more plainly? |
15493 | Now, tell me frankly, what you will do when you depart hence? |
15493 | Of what account would thy life be to me? |
15493 | Oh, if I were a queen in right earnest, or even a great lady--"Whot would yo do? |
15493 | On which side of the field does the rivulet flow? |
15493 | Once more, am I dismissed? |
15493 | Once more, art thou willing to admit me? |
15493 | One of the villagers? |
15493 | Our May Queen, Alizon Device, is Mother Demdike''s grand- daughter, is she not? |
15493 | Relative to her parentage? |
15493 | Saw''st thou ever face like mine? |
15493 | Shall I summon Master Potts to prepare the conveyance? |
15493 | Shall I summon assistance? |
15493 | Shall I take her away? |
15493 | Shall I tell you another secret? |
15493 | Shall we go to Malkin Tower? |
15493 | Shall we put him to the torture to make him confess? |
15493 | Shan ey go back to Granny Demdike, an tell her yo''re too proud to receive her message? |
15493 | Shan ey tee her hands, yer warship? |
15493 | She has found out she is not Elizabeth Device''s daughter? |
15493 | She is,replied the young man;"but why do you ask? |
15493 | She was bewitched? |
15493 | Sir Thomas is still willing to refer the case to my arbitrament, I believe, sir? |
15493 | Sister Alizon,cried Jennet, staring at her in surprise,"what makes you here?" |
15493 | So ye ha''seen Mistress Nutter? |
15493 | Soh, yo mean to hong me, eh, wizard? |
15493 | Speak, what would you say? |
15493 | Tawkin o''Nick Demdike,cried Hal o''Nabs,"yo''d a strawnge odventer wi''him t''neet o''t''great brast o''Pendle Hill, hadna yo, Cuthbert?" |
15493 | Tell me who you are? |
15493 | Tell me why I am brought here, Jennet? |
15493 | Tell the worthy baronet,continued Potts,"that his old and esteemed friend, Master Roger Nowell, is in great jeopardy-- am I not right, sir?" |
15493 | The captain of the robbers, Fogg or Demdike, escaped-- did he not? |
15493 | The talisman, the talisman? |
15493 | Then I suppose you pay tribute to Mother Chattox, hostess? |
15493 | Then whoy tak it? |
15493 | Then why does she keep out of the way-- why does she not surrender herself? |
15493 | Then you are confident of the adjudication being in your favour? |
15493 | Then you are my mother? |
15493 | Then you can not tell what changes may have taken place in your dwelling during your absence? |
15493 | Then you consent on that condition? |
15493 | Then you mean to dismiss the matter without further investigation? |
15493 | Then you mean to make a determined resistance? |
15493 | Then you really believe me to be a witch? |
15493 | Then you think Mistress Nutter is a witch, eh? |
15493 | They have somewhat misinformed you in this instance,replied Alizon;"but how, in the name of wonder, did you come here?" |
15493 | This is not a snare laid to entrap me, madam? |
15493 | Those finely modelled features, that graceful figure, and those delicate hands, can not surely belong to one lowly born and bred? |
15493 | Tib,said the child, patting him,"thou hasna answered my last question-- how is one to become a witch?" |
15493 | Time for what? |
15493 | To Mistress Nutter? |
15493 | To be sure,rejoined Potts;"where should a man make himself at home, if not at an inn? |
15493 | To what purpose? |
15493 | To what purpose? |
15493 | Wad ye loike to knoa why brother Jem is gone to Pendle to- neet? |
15493 | War it owt relatin''to that little Lunnon lawyer, Mester Potts? |
15493 | Was I not right in saying my love would be fatal to you? |
15493 | Was her death sudden? |
15493 | Was my name mentioned? |
15493 | Waste not your sympathy upon me,replied Richard;"but, tell me, how went the show at Preston yesterday?" |
15493 | Weel, han yo settled your business here, Mester Nowell? |
15493 | Weel, sir,cried Jennet, eyeing him sharply,"what does all this suspicion tend to?" |
15493 | Well, Fogg,cried Nicholas, after exchanging salutations with his friend,"what say you to hunting the otter in the Ribble after breakfast? |
15493 | Well, Master Nowell,said Nicholas,"are you willing to concede the matter at once, or will you pursue the investigation further?" |
15493 | Well, Master Sudall, how goes on your patient? |
15493 | Well, then, leave it to me,said the squire;"but you will not set out till the storm is over?" |
15493 | Were not what? |
15493 | Wha speaks? |
15493 | Wha was that officer? |
15493 | What accursed thing addresses me? |
15493 | What are thy terms, knave? |
15493 | What are you about to do, cousin Nicholas? |
15493 | What are you doing here, lass, eh? |
15493 | What art thou doing here, Jem? |
15493 | What brings you here, Mother Chattox? |
15493 | What can I do for you, fair mistresses? |
15493 | What can I have done to offend her? 15493 What can be done in this extremity?" |
15493 | What can be the matter with her? |
15493 | What circumstances? 15493 What did Mistress Nutter do to you, my little dear? |
15493 | What did you behold? |
15493 | What do I mean to do with you? |
15493 | What do you mean, Dorothy? |
15493 | What do you mean? |
15493 | What do you want with me, Nance? |
15493 | What else can you expect from him? |
15493 | What enemy? |
15493 | What han ye getten there, lapped up i''your kirtle, eh? |
15493 | What has become of her-- where is she gone? |
15493 | What has detained thee so long? |
15493 | What has happened? |
15493 | What has he done? |
15493 | What hast thou done with Cuthbert Ashbead? |
15493 | What have I done to incur your hatred? 15493 What have we here, Master Potts-- marks or boundaries?" |
15493 | What have you been saying to these girls? |
15493 | What have you done? |
15493 | What if I deliver thine adversaries into thine hands, and revenge thee upon them? 15493 What if I should share the same fate as the robber Blackburn,"he ruminated,"and be dragged to perdition by her? |
15493 | What in Heaven''s name can it be, Sir Richard? |
15493 | What is it, man? 15493 What is it? |
15493 | What is it? 15493 What is that mon sayin''to thee, Ruchot?" |
15493 | What is the matter, friend? |
15493 | What is the matter? |
15493 | What is the matter? |
15493 | What is the meaning of all this, worthy sir? |
15493 | What is the nature of the delusion? |
15493 | What is to be done? |
15493 | What leader will they own, then? |
15493 | What makes you here, Mother Chattox? |
15493 | What makes you think so? |
15493 | What manner of man is he? |
15493 | What mean you, Alizon? |
15493 | What means the fellow? |
15493 | What means this unseemly disturbance, Nicholas? |
15493 | What mischief is afoot? 15493 What more would you have?" |
15493 | What more? |
15493 | What mun ey do to become a witch? |
15493 | What new jugglery is this? |
15493 | What new wonder is in store for me? |
15493 | What news do you bring me, sir? |
15493 | What next? |
15493 | What of Richard Assheton? |
15493 | What of him, in Heaven''s name? |
15493 | What other matters dun you mean, mother? |
15493 | What portrait? |
15493 | What possible motive can it be, if not of affection? |
15493 | What promise have you made, sir? |
15493 | What promise, worshipful sir? |
15493 | What reason hast thou for this assertion? |
15493 | What saddening thoughts cross you, fair girl? |
15493 | What say you to Master Potts there? 15493 What should prevent you? |
15493 | What the devil does he want with her? |
15493 | What think ye then o''Nance Redferne? |
15493 | What think you of him? 15493 What was it Sir Thomas said to you, Jem?" |
15493 | What was that? |
15493 | What would''st thou do? |
15493 | What''s that? |
15493 | What''s the matter? |
15493 | What''s to become o''me? |
15493 | What, Nicholas Demdike of Worston? |
15493 | What, have these robbers taken up their quarters there? 15493 What, have you changed your mind already, Jem?" |
15493 | What, is the poor girl bewitched? |
15493 | What, still outside? |
15493 | What? |
15493 | Where are the foes you spoke of? |
15493 | Where are you about to take her? |
15493 | Where con he ha''gone? |
15493 | Where have you been during our stay at Goldshaw? 15493 Where is Nicholas?" |
15493 | Where is Sir Richard Assheton of Middleton? |
15493 | Where is a fitting place for the trial? |
15493 | Where is he? |
15493 | Where is it? |
15493 | Where is she? |
15493 | Where is the child? |
15493 | Where shall I go? |
15493 | Where the devil is the old witch gone, Dick? |
15493 | Where then-- who was it? |
15493 | Where-- where? |
15493 | Where? |
15493 | Wherefore should I go thither? |
15493 | Whither are you going? |
15493 | Whither go you, sir? |
15493 | Who are they? |
15493 | Who are ye? |
15493 | Who art thou? 15493 Who art thou?" |
15493 | Who art thou? |
15493 | Who has lost one? |
15493 | Who has taken it down? |
15493 | Who is Nicholas dancing with? |
15493 | Who is he? |
15493 | Who is it speaks to me? |
15493 | Who is it speaks to me? |
15493 | Who is it? |
15493 | Who is she in the nunlike habit? |
15493 | Who is the May Queen? |
15493 | Who the devil have you got there, Adam? |
15493 | Who the dule are yo? |
15493 | Who was he? |
15493 | Who''s that? |
15493 | Who, and what are you? |
15493 | Who, and what art thou, in Heaven''s name? |
15493 | Who, think you, can have placed this funeral garland on the abbot''s grave? |
15493 | Whoa wor it spoake? |
15493 | Whose child is she? |
15493 | Whot are ye abowt, Jennet? |
15493 | Whot are ye abowt, ey sey, wench? |
15493 | Whot d''ye want wi''me? |
15493 | Whot han yo dun wi''t''steigh? |
15493 | Whot mun one do to be a witch like grandmother Demdike? |
15493 | Whot would ye do fo me, Alizon, if ye were a queen? |
15493 | Whot''s that yo sayn, Suky? |
15493 | Whot, indeed? |
15493 | Whoy dusna seize her, an tear her i''pieces? |
15493 | Whoy should yo be better than me? |
15493 | Whoy so? |
15493 | Why am I brought hither? |
15493 | Why are you here? 15493 Why d''ye ask, Jem?" |
15493 | Why did you not leave her if you thought so? |
15493 | Why did you not prevent this terrible malediction? |
15493 | Why did you not wake me before? 15493 Why do you loiter here, madam?" |
15493 | Why does your sister shun me? |
15493 | Why dost thou trouble me thus, unhappy spirit? |
15493 | Why not? |
15493 | Why not? |
15493 | Why should an enemy deposit a garland on the abbot''s tomb, since it was by mere chance that it hath met my eyes? |
15493 | Why should this sad presentiment still haunt you? 15493 Why so?" |
15493 | Why so? |
15493 | Why, Richard Baldwyn, is that you? |
15493 | Why, Tib!--where are yo, Tib? 15493 Why, dost mean to deny that she is a witch?" |
15493 | Wi''the Demdikes? |
15493 | Wicked, am I? 15493 Will it please your Majesty to ride towards yon glade?" |
15493 | Will not your friends come with you? |
15493 | Will you not come with us? |
15493 | Will you obey me now? |
15493 | Will you return to your duty if I help you in this extremity? |
15493 | Will you swear to deliver the child to me unharmed, if I set you free? |
15493 | Wilt let us go? |
15493 | Wilt thou accept my life for hers? |
15493 | Wilt thou help me to liberate Alizon? |
15493 | With whom? |
15493 | Would it not be better to stick to the defence of others, rather than practise in your own behalf? |
15493 | Ye dinna say so? 15493 Yo dunna mean Alizon Device?" |
15493 | Yo hanna towd us whot yo''d do fo yurself if yo war a great lady, Alizon? |
15493 | Yo winnaw go? |
15493 | You are aware that a dyke intersects the heath before us, namely, Worston Moor? |
15493 | You are not going to defend him, I hope, sir? |
15493 | You do not attribute the attack to witchcraft, I suppose, Master Sudall? |
15493 | You do not include Alizon Device in your list? |
15493 | You do not mean to aver that Alizon Device is a witch, sir? |
15493 | You do not surely doubt that it is so, Master Richard? |
15493 | You had no compunction? |
15493 | You have a brother, have you not? |
15493 | You have a funeral here to- day, I suppose, Master Sexton? |
15493 | You have been long absent,she said to Dorothy;"but I suppose you have been exploring the ruins?" |
15493 | You have no regard, then, for their innocence? |
15493 | You mean Malkin Tower? |
15493 | You measure from the clough, I presume, sir? |
15493 | You overtook him, Dick, of course? |
15493 | You provide food for your family, eh, Zachariah? |
15493 | You say you know not whence he comes? 15493 You see, and can you doubt?" |
15493 | You think not? |
15493 | You think so? |
15493 | You think the attack occasioned by witchcraft of course, sir? |
15493 | You think with me, that that lovely girl is well born? |
15493 | You were a cunning fox, in good sooth, to come hither,rejoined Nicholas, in a taunting tone;"but will you go hence if I liberate you?" |
15493 | You were saved? |
15493 | You will swear this? |
15493 | Your Majesty will not give heed to such a villain''s fabrications? |
15493 | Your answer, I say? |
15493 | Your answer? |
15493 | Your name, good fellow? |
15493 | Your name? |
15493 | Your own name, Master Sexton, and I have done? |
15493 | A witch, Nicholas-- do you mark the word? |
15493 | After a pause, employed in eating, he added,"Did Mistress Nutter put onny questions to ye about Alizon?" |
15493 | Alizon Device is comely to view, no doubt, but who shall say whence her beauty is derived? |
15493 | All right, eh, Master Potts? |
15493 | An dunna yo knoa that t''Abbuts o''Jervaux an Salley wor hongt o''Tizeday at Loncaster Castle?" |
15493 | An what could ey say to it aw, except--""Except what, mother?" |
15493 | And he goeth on to say,''For who but witches can be proofs, and so witnesses of the doings of witches?''" |
15493 | And how does thy mother purpose to requite me? |
15493 | And is not my title equally well chosen? |
15493 | And now what brings thee hither, lad? |
15493 | And now, hae ye not some ither drolleries in store for us?" |
15493 | And see you not how easily the matter is explained? |
15493 | And shall I not save the child left her, if I can?" |
15493 | And she dwells here-- in Whalley, fellow?" |
15493 | And so Mistress Nutter takes an interest in you?" |
15493 | And this, I apprehend, is the substance of your petition?" |
15493 | And were they not true sons of their fathers? |
15493 | And what right hast thou to forbid me Alizon? |
15493 | And whaur was Alizon the while?" |
15493 | And why should your love prove fatal to me?" |
15493 | And, above all, how should they conjecture I should come so well provided? |
15493 | Another attempt to borrow money-- eh?" |
15493 | Ar''t crazed, as well as blind and palsied, that thou knowest not that this is a merry- making, and not a devil''s sabbath? |
15493 | Are these the old boundary stones?" |
15493 | Are they in possession of unfading youth and beauty? |
15493 | Are they rich? |
15493 | Are they splendidly lodged? |
15493 | Are ye quite sure Potts didna owerhear your conversation wi''Mistress Nutter?" |
15493 | Are ye tired o''life-- or was it the muckle deil himsel''that drove ye on? |
15493 | Are you agreed to this, madam?" |
15493 | Are you agreed?" |
15493 | Are you content, my lads?" |
15493 | Are you not, Nell? |
15493 | Are you quite sure you have never ridden on one yourself, Jennet, and got whisked up the chimney without being aware of it? |
15493 | Are you willing to renounce your baptism, and enter into a covenant with the Prince of Darkness?" |
15493 | At last he looked up, and said gruffly to Jennet, who stood watching him,"See if mother be come whoam?" |
15493 | At length she turned fiercely to Richard, and demanded--"Was it thou who kindled the beacon?" |
15493 | At this moment the door was tried without, and the voice of Bess was heard, saying,"Who ha''yo got wi''yo, Ruchot; and whoy ha''yo fastened t''door?" |
15493 | Aught mair anent these witches?" |
15493 | Aweel, fair Alizon,"he added, eyeing her narrowly,"ye hae lost your mither, we understand?" |
15493 | Belike ye hae been lang ill?" |
15493 | Bo ye shan go, too-- ay, an be brunt os a witch-- a witch-- d''ye mark, wench? |
15493 | Boh are na ye gettin''on rayther too fast, lass? |
15493 | Boh ey''st grow tall i''time, an get straight-- eigh straighter than yo, Suky, wi''your broad back an short neck-- boh if ey dunna, whot matters it? |
15493 | Boh save us, your reverence, what were the ill- favort gullions ridin''after ye for? |
15493 | But are you aware that Christopher Demdike is a prisoner here in Hoghton Tower? |
15493 | But are you aware, Sir John, upon what evidence the charge is supported-- for mere suspicion is not enough?" |
15493 | But could she be executed without trial, without judgment? |
15493 | But have you aught mair? |
15493 | But how do you know all this, Nance?" |
15493 | But how the devil should these rascals expect me? |
15493 | But is not that young man, who is now going forth, your cousin, Richard Assheton? |
15493 | But to turn to Pendle Forest-- the greater part of it has been disafforested, I presume?" |
15493 | But touching the dame, Master Nicholas-- have you found one willing and able to take part in the masque?" |
15493 | But what does this bottle contain?" |
15493 | But what of Jennet? |
15493 | But what of that? |
15493 | But what said he to you, Dick? |
15493 | But when shall I see you again?" |
15493 | But where can Alizon be all this while? |
15493 | But where is the use of giving advice to a young man who is over head and ears in love? |
15493 | But wherefore comes not the signal? |
15493 | But you hold in abhorrence the crime laid to your mother''s charge-- eh?" |
15493 | But, what do I behold? |
15493 | Can Norfolk have accepted our conditions? |
15493 | Can aught have gone wrong? |
15493 | Can that cadaverous object, with the white hair, that seems newly- arisen from the grave, be she? |
15493 | Can that curse be recalled? |
15493 | Can that malediction be recalled? |
15493 | Canna ye find an excuse, man? |
15493 | Canna you contrive to produce the mother, too, Maister Nicholas?" |
15493 | Could fancy cheat him thus? |
15493 | Could he be mistaken? |
15493 | Could it be for her execution? |
15493 | Could it be that the wrestlers shifted their position, or that the wizard was indeed aided by the powers of darkness? |
15493 | Could it be? |
15493 | Could these dread beings be permitted to exercise such baneful influence over mankind? |
15493 | D''ye hear?" |
15493 | D''ye heed?" |
15493 | D''ye mind that? |
15493 | Did you ever remark the strange look they all-- save the fair maid in question-- have about the eyes?" |
15493 | Do we ken the lassie, and is she to be here to- day?" |
15493 | Do you desire to do all this?" |
15493 | Do you hear that boding cry?" |
15493 | Do you imagine that this stream can have changed its course in a single night; or that yon sheepfold has been removed to the further side of it?" |
15493 | Do you know what ails me, Richard?" |
15493 | Do you know where you are standing?" |
15493 | Do you know, Alizon, what I should like better than all? |
15493 | Do you mark me, Master Richard?" |
15493 | Do you mind, Dorothy?" |
15493 | Do you not see Alizon coming towards us? |
15493 | Does Mistress Nutter think I will give up my prize the moment I have obtained it, for the mere asking? |
15493 | Does naething strike you as strange about him?" |
15493 | Does she imagine she can frighten me as she frightens others? |
15493 | Does she know whom she has to deal with? |
15493 | Dost fear me now?" |
15493 | Dost know where he is, my sweet Fancy?" |
15493 | Dost thou abjure the devil and all his works?" |
15493 | Dost thou know the man with whom she is wedded-- or supposed to be wedded-- for I have seen no proof of the marriage? |
15493 | Doth he not ever abandon them when they are no longer useful, and can win him no more proselytes? |
15493 | Doth thy master ever help his servants in their need? |
15493 | Dunna yo hear how angry the cats are-- how they growl an spit? |
15493 | For the last time, wilt obey me?" |
15493 | For what purpose were they met? |
15493 | For why may not God use any kind of extraordinary punishment, when it pleases Him, as well as the ordinary rods of sickness, or other adversities?''" |
15493 | Ha''n''t it, neeburs?" |
15493 | Hae ye nae braw claes to put on to grace our coming? |
15493 | Has she killed the child? |
15493 | Has she no thoughts of escape? |
15493 | Has the dog no conscience?" |
15493 | Have I not done well?" |
15493 | Have not ten thousand of our brethren been driven from their homes to beg or to starve? |
15493 | Have not the houseless poor, whom we fed at our gates, and lodged within our wards, gone away hungry and without rest? |
15493 | Have not the sick, whom we would have relieved, died untended by the hedge- side? |
15493 | Have they all they desire? |
15493 | Have we your word that you will not attempt to disobey the injunction?" |
15493 | Have you any thing more to commit to me?" |
15493 | Have you done, madam?" |
15493 | Have you heard that the King is about to visit Hoghton Tower in August?" |
15493 | Here the plans correspond, I believe, Master Potts?" |
15493 | Hideous screams of laughter followed this announcement, and the voice that had spoken first asked--"A sacrifice of whom?" |
15493 | How are you, Farmer Tetlow?" |
15493 | How came she there amid that weird assemblage? |
15493 | How can I be owned as your daughter without involving the discovery of this tragic history?" |
15493 | How can I defend one whom I know to be guilty?" |
15493 | How dun ye find yersel, Nance?" |
15493 | How gay you, fair one? |
15493 | How goes on Sir Ralph''s black charger, Dragon? |
15493 | How goes on the young colt you were breaking in? |
15493 | How have you broken the chains of slumber in which I bound you? |
15493 | How is it you have such a rout with you? |
15493 | How many minutes remain to her? |
15493 | I desire also to be informed where it commences, and where, it ends?" |
15493 | I shall see you on Thursday, eh?" |
15493 | In a word, then, you let him escape, Dick?" |
15493 | Is Malkin Tower far off?" |
15493 | Is he wi''yo?" |
15493 | Is it my lord''s fault if your desire of vengeance expires in its fruition-- if, when you have accomplished an object, you no longer care for it? |
15493 | Is it not so, Master Nicholas? |
15493 | Is it not so? |
15493 | Is it not so?" |
15493 | Is it so?" |
15493 | Is it so?" |
15493 | Is not the Church smitten with poverty? |
15493 | Is not this very much like a waltz? |
15493 | Is she in danger? |
15493 | Is she not adorable? |
15493 | Is she, too, to die?" |
15493 | Is such conduct worthy of you, or likely to redound to your credit? |
15493 | Just ridden over from Sladeburne, eh? |
15493 | Know you ought concerning it?" |
15493 | Lemme ask ye some questions, Tib?" |
15493 | Look again-- what do you behold now?" |
15493 | Master Jem, are you here? |
15493 | Might they not have been made with mischievous intent? |
15493 | Nah nearer-- yo onderstand?" |
15493 | Not insulting you, I hope?" |
15493 | Nothing I should prefer to the sport you promise; but I thought you had other business for me to- day? |
15493 | Now will you listen to me?" |
15493 | Now, John Paslew, what wouldst thou?" |
15493 | Now, John, as to the cause of your quarrel with the old hag?" |
15493 | Now, do you know me, wench? |
15493 | Of course you have often seen the old conventual church before, Alizon?" |
15493 | Of what profit is her worship of the false deity-- of what avail the sacrifices she makes at his foul altars? |
15493 | On seeing him, the lady immediately regained her courage, and addressed him in a haughty and commanding tone--"Why this intrusion? |
15493 | Only let me get out of this horrible place?" |
15493 | Onny more orders?" |
15493 | Or had he been thrust into some hole, and a stone placed over it, which he found it impossible to remove? |
15493 | Perhaps you shrink from the task you have undertaken?" |
15493 | Richard obeyed, and, leaning over the table, asked in a low deep tone,"Where is Mistress Nutter, Nicholas?" |
15493 | Richard,"she replied, forcing a smile,"why conjure up visions of happiness which never can be realised? |
15493 | Shall I bring your daughter here? |
15493 | Shall I show thee how to destroy them?" |
15493 | Shall it be our hopeful cousin? |
15493 | Shall we be content with this doubtful experiment?" |
15493 | Shan ey ever be Queen o''May, like sister Alizon?" |
15493 | So old Peter Potts, the draper of Chester, was your father, eh? |
15493 | So you can prove the practice of witchcraft against Mistress Nutter-- eh?" |
15493 | Soh look to yersel, proud ledy-- look to yersel? |
15493 | Somehow or other, it has come into my head that Alizon is the daughter of-- whom do you think?" |
15493 | Spare her-- in pity spare her!--Have we not suffered enough? |
15493 | Stands the magnet yonder, eh?" |
15493 | Suppose this poor young woman really guilty-- what then? |
15493 | Tell me, is she well and happy?" |
15493 | The marks are such as I have described, eh?" |
15493 | They are set down in Mistress Nutter''s plan, it is true; but when, let me ask, was that plan prepared? |
15493 | They say it''s sinfu''to be a witch-- if so, how comes grandmother Demdike to be one? |
15493 | They then rode on for a few minutes in silence, after which; Richard inquired--"You had brave doings at Myerscough Lodge, I suppose, Nicholas?" |
15493 | Think''st thou a witch like thee can bless an union, Alice Nutter? |
15493 | This is she, I suppose?" |
15493 | Thou know''st it?" |
15493 | Throwing open the window, she looked forth, and demanded in harsh imperious tones--"Who dares to summon Mother Demdike?" |
15493 | Tom Brockholes, are you here? |
15493 | Was it fancy, or did a low groan break upon her ear? |
15493 | Was it man or woman? |
15493 | Was it possible the unfortunate attorney had been buried alive? |
15493 | Was it you?" |
15493 | Was it, indeed, to remove you from the baneful influence of Elizabeth Device that Mistress Nutter adopted you?" |
15493 | Was it, she asked herself, too late to repent? |
15493 | Was she their sovereign mistress, that they bent so lowly at her coming, and rose so reverentially at her bidding? |
15493 | Was there no way of breaking her compact? |
15493 | We are not too late?" |
15493 | Were there, in short, so many cases of witchcraft, real or supposed?" |
15493 | What answered he, eh? |
15493 | What are the lovers talking of now? |
15493 | What are thy terms, I repeat?" |
15493 | What brings the grisly she- wolf from her forest lair? |
15493 | What can we do for you, lad?" |
15493 | What could he mean?" |
15493 | What could it do? |
15493 | What favour would you have shown you?" |
15493 | What hae ye got to say, sir? |
15493 | What has Master Potts been about? |
15493 | What has he to do with the Devices?" |
15493 | What have I done? |
15493 | What if I should be wilfully forgotten? |
15493 | What if no food should be given me, and I should be left to perish by the slow pangs of hunger? |
15493 | What is an old witch like her, compared with two young handsome persons, dying for love of each other, and yet not able to marry on her account?" |
15493 | What is the matter with Dorothy? |
15493 | What joint do ye ca''it, Sir Richard?" |
15493 | What makes the darkness- loving owl abroad in the glare of day? |
15493 | What mays yo here, yo little plague?" |
15493 | What mean you, old woman?" |
15493 | What means the knave by such attention? |
15493 | What mun ey do, good mesters? |
15493 | What mun ey do?" |
15493 | What profit to them is their long service? |
15493 | What say you, my men? |
15493 | What think ye of Alizon Device?" |
15493 | What was the liquid in the phial? |
15493 | What was to be done? |
15493 | What was within it? |
15493 | What will become of her?" |
15493 | What will she do now? |
15493 | What will she think of me, if she learns I have indulged such a notion? |
15493 | What''s to be done, squoire?" |
15493 | What, still obstinate? |
15493 | What, you wo n''t have it? |
15493 | When is that shooting match at the bodkin to come off, eh? |
15493 | Whence gott''st thou thine information?" |
15493 | Where did you get it? |
15493 | Where is he?" |
15493 | Where is the fellow in the water? |
15493 | Where then should I fly? |
15493 | Wherefore this delay? |
15493 | Whereupon the piper chanted in reply,--"I pray you, good sir, why say you so-- why say you so?" |
15493 | Who are you?" |
15493 | Who art thou?" |
15493 | Who can it be?" |
15493 | Who han ye gotten there?" |
15493 | Who shall it be?" |
15493 | Who will be luckiest, Alizon or me?" |
15493 | Who wins, for a piece of gold, cousin Richard?" |
15493 | Whot could he mean?" |
15493 | Whot dun yo mean to do wi''''em?" |
15493 | Whot''ll t''warlt cum''to? |
15493 | Whoy ha ye brought her here, madam?" |
15493 | Why did she stand proudly in the midst of them, and extend her hand, armed with the knife, over them? |
15493 | Why did they so humbly salute her, and fall prostrate before her, kissing the hem of her garment? |
15493 | Why dunna she make me good- looking, then? |
15493 | Why is Alizon always to be thrown i''my teeth?" |
15493 | Why not wear the livery of our house?" |
15493 | Why should I go hence, and at whose bidding?" |
15493 | Why should I slay him?" |
15493 | Why utter prayers which are rejected, and supplications which are scorned? |
15493 | Why were those tapers burning in the side chapel? |
15493 | Why, then, these unavailing lamentations? |
15493 | Why, therefore, should I not risk it in your defence? |
15493 | Will he do?" |
15493 | Will he suit you?" |
15493 | Will it please you to go on?" |
15493 | Will not this interfere with my other plans with Jennet? |
15493 | Will she not dance with me?" |
15493 | Will that content you, masters?" |
15493 | Will you not pledge me, Dick?" |
15493 | Wilt thou baptise my child if I send my dog to save thee?" |
15493 | Wilt thou do it?" |
15493 | Win it please yo to cum wi''me, lort abbut?" |
15493 | Win yo do it?" |
15493 | Win yo set me free?" |
15493 | Would confession of her sins and voluntary submission to earthly justice save her? |
15493 | Would it never stop? |
15493 | Would you have vengeance on the murtheress of your child?" |
15493 | Ye have heard, and understand?" |
15493 | Yo''n moind Wiswall, yeawr own birthplace, abbut? |
15493 | Yoan been up to t''Holehouses to tey a look at it, beloike?" |
15493 | You assert that, by witchcraft, she has changed the features of your land, but in what way can you make good the charge? |
15493 | You did not put up at the hostel?" |
15493 | You have a few minutes left-- do you wish him to aid her? |
15493 | You have not told me what occurred at the interview?" |
15493 | You hear what I have said?" |
15493 | You know the dark offence laid to her charge?" |
15493 | You must go in as Doll Wango-- that is, as a character in the masque to be enacted to- night-- d''ye mark?" |
15493 | You understand me, gentlemen?" |
15493 | You understand, Fogg-- eh?" |
15493 | You understand, Master Nicholas?" |
15493 | You understand?" |
15493 | You will ask me how these things could be familiar to me? |
15493 | You will engage to confront Alizon with her mother?" |
15493 | You will now baptise my child?" |
15493 | You will see it done, Nicholas?" |
15493 | You would not fix a brand for ever on Alizon''s name; you would not destroy her?" |
15493 | Your name and abode, friend?" |
15493 | Your name and description, friend?" |
15493 | _ Sir Jeffery_.--Is there a justice in Lancashire has so much skill in witches as I have? |
15493 | a daughter of Alice Nutter of Rough Lee?" |
15493 | art thou really dying? |
15493 | can no other hangmen be found? |
15493 | cried Demdike, pushing her roughly aside;"wouldst have me save thy lover?" |
15493 | cried Newell,"are you an upholder of these witches? |
15493 | cried Nicholas;"why should I not dance with whom I please? |
15493 | cried Potts, looking at the little girl,"So this is a born witch-- eh, Nance?" |
15493 | cried Potts,--"butter, eggs, and milk from the farm, ale and wine from the cellar, with a flitch of bacon now and then, ey?" |
15493 | cried Richard Assheton, pale with rage,"or--""What will you do, young sir?" |
15493 | cried the abbot, starting up and pressing his hand to his temples;"thou here?" |
15493 | cried the abbot;"he whose wife is a witch?" |
15493 | d''ye ken that?" |
15493 | does she so?" |
15493 | dost presume to laugh at me, fellow? |
15493 | exclaimed Bess;"who con it be? |
15493 | exclaimed James, winking cunningly at those near him;"and ye swarfit awa''wi''the pain? |
15493 | exclaimed Lady Assheton;"and yet you have lived all your life in the village?" |
15493 | exclaimed Mistress Nutter,"are you the person he called Lawrence Fogg?" |
15493 | exclaimed Nicholas, who overheard the reply,"you do not mean to say your name is Thomas Potts? |
15493 | exclaimed Nowell,"but how knew you we were coming?" |
15493 | exclaimed Potts,"was Mother Demdike so early connected with that family? |
15493 | exclaimed Roger Nowell,"and you live in the forest?" |
15493 | exclaimed the earl,"is this a new trick? |
15493 | exclaimed the elder of the two,"is there no means of escape?" |
15493 | ey see,"replied the wounded man, looking round;"but whot matters it? |
15493 | ey thowt he wur i''a strawnge fettle,"replied Bess;"an so he be a lawyer fro''Lunnon, eh? |
15493 | good- day to you, Dick,"he cried, shaking him heartily by the hand;"what happy chance brings you here so early? |
15493 | hast thou found it?" |
15493 | he cried,"the whole of the land mine without payment?" |
15493 | he exclaimed, suddenly pausing, and staring at the portrait--"Would you believe it, Dick? |
15493 | he repeated,"Why dunna ye go to t''green to see the morris- dancers foot it round t''May- pow? |
15493 | how cam you in sic sad and sombre abulyiements? |
15493 | how is this?" |
15493 | how shall I go on? |
15493 | how, my little darling?" |
15493 | is it thou, accursed traitor?" |
15493 | is it you, Sir Thomas Metcalfe?" |
15493 | is the knave a warlock and a riever?" |
15493 | is this the father?" |
15493 | must it be thus?" |
15493 | pondering over the masque, Master Nicholas, or thinking of the petition you have to present to his Majesty?" |
15493 | say yo so, feythur abbut?" |
15493 | say you so, madam?" |
15493 | shall we not strive to rescue that poor benighted creature from the pit? |
15493 | she exclaimed,"what can it mean?" |
15493 | she replied, falling into his arms,"have we been preserved by you?" |
15493 | then there are others concerned in it?" |
15493 | they didna mean to rob ye, surely?" |
15493 | what can have occasioned this sudden seizure?" |
15493 | what do you take me for, cousin Dick?" |
15493 | what is this I see?" |
15493 | what is this red brand upon her brow? |
15493 | what is this?" |
15493 | what was that? |
15493 | what!--then you admit your mother''s guilt?" |
15493 | what''s that?" |
15493 | what''s the meaning of this?" |
15493 | what, are you come to the wake? |
15493 | what-- d''ye ken wha it is?" |
15493 | what?" |
15493 | whey didna yo ha''a tussle wi''him? |
15493 | who comes here?" |
15493 | who is here?" |
15493 | who is that at the window?" |
15493 | why was I born?" |
15493 | why, indeed?" |
15493 | you ignorant and insolent hussy,"cried Potts, furiously;"do you think I''m to be taught manners by an overgrown Lancashire witch like you? |