Questions

This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.

identifier question
3799Discussions have at various times taken place upon the question,"Was the land- system of this period FEUDAL?"
3799Each farmer and each landlord will ask himself, Does it pay to grow grain?
3799Succeeding sovereigns strove also to check this disorder?
3799why not apply to the land at each side of the railway, the principle which governs that under the railway itself?
37853How can I be satisfied,he said,"when my rent is at the same rate as Hurson''s rent?"
37853''Did they get an equal portion?
37853And are the objections of the Irish Catholics, in this province, as''irrational''and''superstitious''as has been scoffingly said?
37853And how could moral philosophy, metaphysics, and modern history, nay, even physical science itself, be made parts of University studies?
37853And what judgment is to be passed on the thoughtless optimism too common in opinion with respect to Ireland?
37853And what security would the Irish land afford for the payment of this enormous impost?
37853And what were the circumstances, during a large part of this period, of the country on which this enormous burden had been laid?
37853But could a National University of this type be set up in Ireland with a prospect that it would succeed or flourish?
37853But what does the compulsory purchase of the Irish land involve, and what, confessedly, are its essential conditions?
37853How could Protestants and Catholics be examined in them in common?
37853Is it for nothing that they have been called the British garrison by her foes, the strongest obstacle to rebellion and treason?
37853Is not one individual as much a part of the public as another?
37853Is that a reason for destroying them after the lapse of centuries, and when England planted them in the land to be her mainstay?
37853On the other hand, have they not been for ages the staunchest friends of England in Irish affairs, especially in troubled and perilous times?
37853Still, taking it as we find it, can nothing be done to amend, in some measure, at least, the existing land system?
37853The interest of individuals, it is said, ought to yield to the public interest; but what does that mean?
37853Was not this because the opportunity was given by law, and was not the law the work of successive Parliaments?
37853What if they are the heirs of conquest and confiscation in the past?
37853What if, in instances, comparatively few in the extreme, they have abused the social trust imposed on them?
37853What would be the consequences, economic, social, political, of this sudden agrarian revolution in one of the Three Kingdoms?
37853When the thing was over, I said to Quinn, who was one of the tenants,"Are you satisfied with your reduction?"
37853Would not such an act be dishonourable, nay, infamous?
37853Would the first approve of Locke''s Essay on the Human Understanding as a subject of examination in the University schools?
37853Would the second approve of Bellarmine and even of Bossuet?
37853p. 498):''Now, what are you to do to a tenant who bids for a farm from which his neighbour has been evicted?
12486Why should Congregational worship be excluded to make room for others?
12486And how do they fulfil the solemn trust?
12486Are the Indians at Marshpee, protected in the same manner the whites are, in their religious freedom?
12486Are the interests of a whole people to be sacrificed to one man?
12486Brothers, our fathers of this State meet soon to make laws; will you help us to enable them to hear the voice of the red man?
12486But what says the amended article on this subject of religious freedom?
12486But who is the"_ Marshpee Deputation_,"that is showing off to such advantage in the city?
12486Can I think that Apes will press it?
12486Can he ever have read the third Article of the Bill of Rights, as amended?
12486Can it be wondered, that the Indians become more and more degraded?
12486Can you, gentlemen, can the Legislature, resist the simple appeal of their memorial?
12486Do they not look exclusively to his own benefit, without regard to the wishes of the Indians?
12486Do you think the white men would like it?
12486Does he mean to insinuate he does not walk worthily now?
12486Does it not appear from, this, and from his message, that the Ex- Governor is a man of pure republican principles?
12486Does not he better deserve the name who took from us two dollars for sleeping in his stable?
12486Fish beyond the period of their own existence?
12486Fish continue to hold the parsonage against their will?
12486Fish in possession of this property, which he claims to hold by the Laws?
12486Fish the improvement of the parsonage and Meeting- house?
12486From the days of Elliott, to the year 1834, have they made one citizen?
12486Have not the Indians a right to their own property?
12486How has it ever been conveyed out of their hands?
12486How will the white man of Massachusetts ask favor for the red men of the South, while the poor Marshpee red men, his near neighbors, sigh in bondage?
12486If the white man desired the welfare of his red brethren, why did he not give them schools?
12486In the name of Heaven,( with due reverence,) I ask, what people could improve under laws which gave such temptation and facility to plunder?
12486Is it creditable to let the_ white_ spiders break through the laws, while we catch and crush the poor Indian flies?
12486Is not depriving them of all means of mental culture the worst of all robberies?
12486Is not the conclusion then, from all the facts in the case, that the system of laws persisted in since 1763, have failed as acts of paternal care?
12486Is not this a gross perversion of the design of the donors, even if they had any power to have made this grant?
12486Is not this more expensive in proportion to the good done, than any heathen mission on record?
12486Is there any thing unreasonable in their requests?
12486Is there, then, any danger in giving the Indians an opportunity to try a liberal experiment for self- government?
12486Is this language for a Christian minister to address to the Legislature of Massachusetts?
12486Is this possible?
12486Is this religious liberty for the Indians?
12486Is this right, and ought the Indians to be sacrificed to the advantage a single man derives from holding an office of very trifling profit?
12486Is this sword designed to protect or oppress the Indians?
12486Mr. Dwight, one of the Committee, asked, if so many whites being there, did not tend to discourage the Indians from being interested in the meeting?
12486Now what power had these men in 1783, to sequester four hundred acres of the common land of the Indians, for any purpose?
12486O, ye who despise Indians, merely because they are poor, ignorant, and copper- colored; do you not think that God will have respect unto them?
12486Or, can it be that there is no disgrace in persisting in wrong toward Indians?
12486Should he turn them loose to shift for themselves, at the risk of losing them?)
12486Should the worst come to the worst, does the proud white think that a dark skin is less honorable in the sight of God than his own beautiful hide?
12486The Speaker put the question, shall the petition be read?
12486The question is, how can a man do good among a people who do not respect him or desire his presence, and who refuse to hear him preach?
12486Their object was to promote the gospel in Marshpee, but how has it turned out?
12486This being the case, ought he not to pay as much regard to them?
12486To petition for an established Church in Marshpee?
12486Was it by virtue of his settlement, so that he now claims the land as a sole corporation?
12486Was it then a public use?
12486What has been the result of those"rival factions,"in Marshpee?
12486What kind of law is this?
12486What says the Bill of rights?
12486What would the pious Williams say to Harvard College, could he visit Marshpee on a Sabbath?
12486Where and how was their consent given to this act of 1809?
12486Where are all our Cherokee philanthropists, at this time?
12486Where did the General- Court get any power to give away the property of the Indians, any more than the lands of white men, held in common?
12486Who shall dare to call that in question?
12486Who were the Congregational church, and who the society in Marshpee, in 1811?
12486Who, then, dared to teach them?
12486Why has not the State done something to supply us with teachers and places of instruction?
12486Why is it more iniquitous to plunder a stranded ship than to rob, and perhaps murder, an Indian tribe?
12486Why should not this odious, and brutifying system be put an end to?
12486Why should they not_ vote_, maintain schools,( they have volunteered to do this in some instances,) and use as they please that which is their own?
12486Will not your white brothers of Georgia tell you to look at home, and clear your own borders of oppression, before you trouble them?
12486Will other papers publish this simple appeal to the justice of the white men?
12486Will the good people of Massachusetts revert back to the days of their fathers, when they were under the galling yoke of the mother country?
12486Will you think of this?
12486Would they ever have thus yielded to an Indian, if they had not been compelled?
12486You plead for the Cherokees, will you not raise your voice for the red man of Marshpee?
12486when they petitioned the government for a redress of grievances, but in vain?
15450And even if we suppose the Irish Legislature and Executive to confine themselves within the letter of the Act, are the checks of any real value?
15450And if raised in driblets, on what will it be spent?
15450And if they could, what sort of a residuum of a United Kingdom government would be left over?
15450Are electors not responsible to Him for the use they make of their votes?
15450Are the forces to be controlled from England, and what is this but a counter revolution?
15450Are we deliberately to take a step which will almost certainly involve us in a similar dilemma?
15450Are we prepared to see four( or, if Wales be added, five) legislatures, and four( or five) executives, in these islands?
15450Are you now going to place a legislative weapon in her hand whereby she will be able to dominate Protestants also?
15450At what rate could an Irish government raise the money?
15450But Ulstermen ask, What is industrial prosperity without freedom?
15450But how would Protestants fare?
15450But if the civil power in Ireland does not call in the military force, how can the latter be used to enforce the law?
15450But what layman takes the slightest interest in these paper supremacies?
15450But what of the Church of Ireland under Home Rule?
15450But would she be secure under Home Rule?
15450But, could an Irish Government Guaranteed Railway Stock be issued at 4 per cent.?
15450Can Great Britain divest herself of a religious responsibility in dealing with Home Rule?
15450Can it be expected that this attempt, even if it succeeds, will produce better results for land purchase than the pitiable failure of the Act of 1909?
15450Can this be done with impunity?
15450Could the Irish Government borrow £50,000,000, and at what rate?
15450Does any one suppose that a million of the most earnest Protestants in the world are going to submit to such an arrangement?
15450Does not the balance of credit when the comparison is made with the Nationalists come on the side of Ulster?
15450Does this fact suggest nothing?
15450For what are the main constitutional dangers of creating rival Parliaments in the same State?
15450Has she ever said that she would practise toleration towards Protestants when she was in power?
15450Hedged in by British bayonets the Lord Lieutenant may exercise his veto, but upon whose advice will he do it?
15450How has he been met?
15450How is it that the line of demarcation in Irish politics almost exactly coincides with the line of demarcation in religion?
15450If they sow to the wind, must they not reap the whirlwind?
15450If this is not progression-- and progression under the Legislative Union-- to what can the predicate be more truthfully applied?
15450In what sense are any of these conditions likely to be true of, let us say, an Irish landlord under this Home Rule Bill?
15450Is federation consistent with the predominance of one state, England, in wealth and population?
15450Is it conceivable that all this can he accomplished if the Union between the countries is rent asunder?
15450Is it extravagant to suppose that the complainant would not gain much by his appeal to CÃ ¦ sar?
15450Is it not certain that less money will be raised in England, for Ireland, after Home Rule?
15450Is the Admiralty prepared to discharge this office in the event of war?
15450Is there not a God in Heaven who will take note of such national procedure?
15450Is this Bill likely to be so framed that its provisions can be adapted unchanged to Scotland, Wales, or England?
15450Must not each unit in a Federation be put as regards financial matters upon a like footing; and, if so, can Ireland bear her share?
15450Neither Englishmen nor Scotsmen would be willing themselves to enter under such a yoke, and why should they ask Irishmen to do so?
15450Once again, it is not unreasonable to ask-- How will a Dublin Parliament be able to provide the necessary funds?
15450Should Ireland under Home Rule be represented at Westminster by its members and representative peers?
15450The Union has been no obstacle to their development: why should it have been the barrier to the rest of Ireland?
15450They say, What has religion got to do with Home Rule?
15450What are the prospects of Irish agriculture under Home Rule?
15450What could she do, except, after a futile struggle, to give way?
15450What fiscal resources, and under what conditions are they obtainable?
15450What has been done in the domain of Irish Education, and what still remains to be done?
15450What has been the Irish Nationalist attitude?
15450What indissoluble relationship is there between the two that the expenditure upon the one should be made dependent upon the requirements of the other?
15450What is it?"
15450What then is the_ primâ facie_ case which has induced many Englishmen and Scotchmen to think that it ought to be seriously debated?
15450What will be the effect upon Ireland?
15450What will it avail, when that time comes, that in 1912 the Irish leaders declared themselves content with a subordinate legislature?
15450What, in the name of common sense, has land purchase to do with education?
15450What, then, is the secret of this determination?
15450What, then, would England do?
15450Whenever have they been treated in this manner before by the Government in their schemes of legislation?
15450Where in these instances is our"bigotry"or our hostility to Irish progress?
15450Where is the money to come from?
15450Who is going to be the_ de facto_ ruler of Ireland?"
15450Who is going to exercise supremacy?
15450Why can not similar safeguards be introduced into the Intermediate system?
15450Why should the opposition of aristocratic Tory landlords be thought worthy of respect?
15450Why should we then hesitate to apply to Irish discontent the"freedom"which has proved so sovereign a remedy elsewhere?
15450Why should"bigots"be conciliated; or"deadheads"receive so much consideration?
15450Will a Nationalist Parliament be prepared to find it, and if so, from what source?
15450Will an Irish elected authority agree to pay for these boons, and will they be able to pay?
15450Would independence have been granted to the Transvaal or Orange Free State had their use of it been foreseen?
15450gold_ rentes_ stand at 92, or of the Argentine, which has to borrow at nearly 5 per cent.?
59654Are they not as pretty?
59654And how is this to be done?
59654And if some of you went there to give what little of leisure, what little of strength, you have to spare, would your own neighbourhood suffer?
59654And is our money doing any good?
59654And yet the problem has become appalling, gigantic: viewed in its entirety, it might make us almost tremble?
59654Are the old words,"Bear ye one another''s burdens,"to pass away with the day of coal- tickets?
59654Are there no eternal laws binding us to charitable spirit and deed?
59654Are there no improved public- houses, no improved theatres, no better machinery for collecting savings, which we may establish and give our money to?
59654Are there no men of leisure, with intellect and heart, who will come forward?
59654Are there no places to plant with trees, no buildings to erect, no libraries to found, no scholarships to endow?
59654Are there no voices still speaking in our hearts the old commandment,"Love one another?"
59654Are they, too, valueless because so nameless?
59654Are those who own estates to have their gardens, and the people to have none?
59654Are we as a nation to have any flower- garden at all?
59654Are we going to look out and up, but never down?
59654Are we in turn never to be pioneers?
59654Are we not most likely to be away?
59654Because we went in and gave those boots, because others like us gave coal- tickets and soup- tickets last winter, what may not turn up?
59654But do we not owe this to the efforts of a body of men in earlier time who were content to lose money in experiments and example?
59654But how do the better ones feel it?
59654But is it not strange to take away free enjoyment from many, and to offer in exchange, at any money payment, a privilege to the few?
59654But, I ask, where are the donors?
59654Can there be energy, independence, vigour, healthy activity among them?
59654Can we afford it?
59654Can you give him a little pause, a little more room, especially this sultry summer afternoon?
59654Did you ever see the district-- the family-- the individual that was richer for this repeated alms- giving?
59654Do they not lead him to trust to them, to spend up to the last penny what he earns, and hope for help when work slackens or altogether fails?
59654Do they not often succeed worse?
59654Do they not scorn them, and desire to be seen to benefit nothing by them?
59654Do they succeed better than the clergy and the visitors?
59654Do we care to set aside ground for it, or will we have beet- root and cabbages only?
59654Do you know what I mean?
59654Do you realise how limited is our notion of it now, and what it has brought us to?
59654Do you think that, be our earnings much or little, that kind of help would be likely to be helpful?
59654Does he try, cost what it may, to provide for sickness, for times when trade is dull and employment scarce?
59654Does this imply no duty?
59654For what is it that we look forward to as our people gradually improve?
59654Has it ever been powerful, even for outside good, to be recipients?
59654Have any of you influence with them, or can anything be done?
59654Have most gentlemen any idea how much this work needs doing in the poor districts of London?
59654Have n''t I myself such a body of fellow- workers as makes me hardly know how to be thankful enough?
59654Have n''t your gifts absolutely tended to alienate them from churches and chapels?
59654Have the words,"Ye are members one of another,"ceased to be true because our tract and dole distribution has broken down?
59654Have we no bright flowers to take to the people, no books to lend, no sweet sympathy and young brightness to carry among them?
59654Have we not a most distinct place among the poor, if this be so?
59654Have you asked yourselves whether your presence, your companionship, is needed there?
59654I do n''t like to be enjoying myself at garden- parties with my wife and daughter and not consider my poorer neighbours"?
59654I wonder whether you have among you instances of the solitary, inexperienced district visitor, and can feel for her difficulties?
59654If the allotments are not made now we may still hope for them in the future; but if we lose our open spaces now, shall we ever recover them?
59654If the question, Who is my neighbour?
59654In other words, is all the land, so far as the people are concerned, from sea to sea, to be used for corn- growing, or building over only?
59654Is it best to let the largest possible amount of it in allotments to the poor?
59654Is it best to parcel it out amongst various owners, and increase the building or corn- growing area?
59654Is it impossible, I would ask lawyers and statesmen, to recognise this right as a legal one acquired by custom, and not to be taken away?
59654Is it not pleasant to think of the children having those words to read-- painted in pretty colours, too-- rather than looking at a blank wall?
59654Is it the children whose parents take them to the sea, or the country, or the Continent, when the summer sun makes London unbearable?
59654Is not our very presence a help to them?
59654Is the bed better covered in the long run for the lent blankets, or the children better fed for the free distribution of soup?
59654Is the influence of such doles so healthy that we should wish to see them taking the place of a Common right over a little bit of English soil?
59654Is the influence of the rich and powerful so slight that we should let it be thus silently strengthened?
59654Is there only land enough for exercise near the big city, or can we have any for beauty far away from it?
59654Is this the lesson our workmen are to learn?
59654Is your bright young presence not asked for by the gray, monotonous, slowly- ebbing life of those wards?
59654It may be there are a few spaces unbuilt over close by, but who will open the gates for them, plant a few flowers, put a few seats?
59654It seems almost incredible, does it not?
59654Let us imagine that in another case we give to a man whose income is small; what is the effect on his character of these irregular doles?
59654My friends, who made it different?
59654Now, have you ever paused to think what Londoners would do without this holiday, or what it would be without these open spaces?
59654On whom does the continuous watchfulness devolve at best?
59654Or is it not rather the tiny child of the hard- working widow, whose frail form seems almost to grow smaller year by year instead of larger?
59654Or is it, as of old, to go forth and gather in the feeble, the out- of- the- way, the poor?
59654Ought we not to be accumulating those memories which will give us a place near them as real friends if the time of loss and trial comes?
59654Respect its claims; but are there no times when it may be worth while to make a change in work, even if it cause one to see less of friends?
59654Shall we doubt it?
59654Should not the few spaces be available for these latter to the very utmost of your power?
59654Should we stand by, we who ought to see farther, and let them part with what ought to be a possession to the many in the future?
59654Specially what is the duty of those of us who are, in any sense of the word, trustees of charitable funds?
59654The clergy?
59654The district visitors?
59654What can they do?
59654What form, then, shall our charity take in the immediate future?
59654What is our duty with regard to it?
59654What is to be the ultimate object of your decisions respecting relief?
59654What kind of homes they make?
59654What ought its decision to be, having in view the future life of the nation as well as the present one?
59654What sort of human beings live and die there?
59654Where are the representatives of the various relieving agencies?
59654Whether the little children want your teaching?
59654Whether your gentleness, your refinement, your gaiety, your beauty, are wanted there?
59654Why should the lord absorb to himself alone the"unearned increment of the land?"
59654Why, then, am I here?
59654With the small holdings, is there to pass away from our people the sense that they have any share in the soil of their native England?
59654With these forms are we to let charity itself pass?
59654Yet though we have by our gifts encouraged him in not making the effort to do this, are we quite sure to be at hand when the need comes?
59654You who are merchants''wives and daughters, nay, even those of you who buy the merchants''goods, have the dock- labourers no claims upon you?
59654or, if any, how many and how pretty may they be?
14562''"I can go no further,"said I;"what have you brought me here for?
14562''"Then you wo n''t reduce our rents?"
14562''"Will you state the amount of money you will give to each of us?"
14562''But,''asked Sir Robert Peel,''what great measure, which has stamped its name upon the era, has ever been carried without difficulty?
14562''For what else could be done?
14562''I went to the wood and shot a tory:''''I went to the wood, and shot another;''''Was it the same, or was it his brother?''
14562''The spirit of a man may sustain his infirmity; but a wounded spirit who can bear?''
14562''They had a great siege one time over there?''
14562''Who dare,''he says,''compare the English, the most degraded of all races under heaven, with the Welsh?
14562''Why not, indeed?''
14562A.M. Sullivan, and Mr. John Mitchell, not to speak of the''national press''?
14562And shall we join in affinity,''they ask,''with a people of these abominations?
14562And what is its management?
14562And where were the provisions got?
14562And why did they transform this wilderness into fruitful fields?
14562And why is that district now amongst the most peaceable in the county?
14562And why should they not be disaffected still?
14562And will the legislature deal with it more effectually by shutting its eyes to facts?
14562And yet is it not possible to set all our peasantry to work at the profitable cultivation of their native land?
14562Are they not the same flesh and blood?''
14562Bring those women and children, those sick and aged folk, back to their homes?
14562But how did Queen Elizabeth receive the news of the treacherous and atrocious massacre at Belfast?
14562But if possible, would it be desirable?
14562But on what is this founded?
14562But should the legislature contemplate, or make provision for the exhaustion of improvements?
14562But what did he attempt to do?
14562But what must the world think of our Christianity when they read of the things that, in a most Bible- reading age, Englishmen did in Ireland?
14562But what of Scully?
14562But what was the great plea which Primate Boulter urged on the English Minister on behalf of the Presbyterian clergy of his day?
14562But what was to be done with the people?
14562But what, then, did they mean?
14562But why should I have recourse to illustration, which may be accounted fantastical, in order to elucidate what is in itself so plain and obvious?
14562But will not the thoughts of many hearts be revealed in the same manner?
14562By what means was the revenue of the landlord increased?
14562By what right, then, can they be turned out?''
14562Can he be_ Anglicised_?
14562Can you convince them by the musket that their principles are false?
14562Can you demonstrate to them by martial law that they enjoy the blessings of a free constitution?
14562Can you prove to them by the bayonet that their pretensions are unjust?
14562Did any portion of the capital annually abstracted from the estate return to it, to fructify and increase its value?
14562Did the enlightened and liberal Irish Society hail with satisfaction this wise measure of reform?
14562Did the landlord drain the swamps, reclaim the moors, build the dwellings and farmhouses, make the fences, and plant the orchards?
14562Do they all speak Irish?''
14562Does not Mr. Meehan see that crusading is a game at which two can play?
14562Does not this picture look very like Ireland?
14562Dr. Kernan, applied for aid to the Commissioners of National Education, and obtained it; but where was he to procure building materials?
14562Have not we also some rights?''
14562He answered,''Why should they not?
14562He was asked,"Grateful for what?"
14562How can this encouragement be most effectually given?
14562How did he do this?
14562How did this happen?
14562How shall we account for the change?
14562How was the Protestant constitution in church and state to be maintained in that part of the empire?
14562I asked,''Did you ever know a place like this old home of yours to have been made by a tenant- at- will?''
14562If Down and Antrim had been divided into farms of thousands of acres each, like Lincolnshire, what would Belfast have become?
14562If insubordination compels you to give, how are you to retain by law what you propose to maintain while insubordination remains?
14562If to Captain Bolton, by what right did Dean Stannus take it from him and give it to the landlord?
14562If to the landlord, by what right did Dean Stannus take it from Lord Hertfort and give it to Captain Bolton?
14562If true, by what right did they recall the grant, and re- possess themselves of those lands?
14562If, under these circumstances, the security of tenant- right fails, where else can it be trusted?
14562In ours whom else have we for our herdsmen, shepherds, cobblers, skinners, cleaners of our dog kennels, ay, even of our privies, but Englishmen?
14562In this great land controversy, on which side lies the truth?
14562Is it not possible to extend the same advantages through the whole island without wronging the landlord or degrading the tenant?
14562Is it that the landlords of the present day are more righteous than their grandfathers?
14562Mr. Pitt Skipton, D.L., a landed proprietor, who has nothing to gain or lose by the Irish Society, asks,''Where is our money laid out now?
14562Now, what has effected this marvellous change?
14562On the history of Ireland itself?
14562Put this question to an English philosopher, and he will answer with Mr. Froude--''Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots?''
14562Security for the farmer is essential-- of what nature should the security be?
14562Shall we attempt to repair the breaches, and fortify the ruins?
14562Suppose, then, that the marquis should raise the rents, say twenty- five per cent., what would be the consequence?
14562The rod of oppression is the wand of this enchanter, and the book of his spells is the penal code?
14562This is easily said; but how was Ireland to be governed?
14562To take an example near home,--what rendered Ballinamuck a by- word for deeds of violence?
14562Uncritical as they were and extremely credulous, how can we trust the records which they give of remote ages?
14562Was it by any expenditure of his own?
14562Were there no courts of justice?
14562What can be better than the social picture which Harris presents of the state of society here 130 years ago?
14562What can be expected, then, from covenants to improve and plant, when the person to do it knows he is to have_ no property in them_?
14562What could be more natural than to send him a present of the choicest wine from the viceregal cellars?
14562What could they do with the farms?
14562What do they do with the money?
14562What do they govern?
14562What do you want me to do?"
14562What is the use of scolding and reviling the tenant''s advocates?
14562What kind of people are they over there?
14562What then, shall be our conduct?
14562What was the cause of this misery, this desolating process going on over the plains of Ulster?
14562When the visitors entered a village their first question was:''How many deaths?''
14562Where was Mr. Shirley?
14562Where were the clergy and the respectable inhabitants of the town?
14562Wherefore?
14562Who made it the garden of the north?
14562Whom was he to trust?
14562Why did he refuse?
14562Why did not the Irish nation rise_ en masse_, and drive them into the sea?
14562Why talk about leases?
14562Will that weaken one iota the tremendous force of social discontent-- the bitter sense of legal injustice, with which the legislature must deal?
14562Without fuel, without milk, without potatoes, unless bought at a high rate for ready money, how are they to live?
14562Would they pay the increase willingly?''
14562brother Teig, what is your story?''
30606''Deed, then, Master Flory, who can tell that? 30606 A dozen, perhaps?"
30606About Florian?
30606Ada, have I not been true to you?
30606Ada, love, you mean to enjoy yourself, do n''t you?
30606Ada,said Mr. Jones suddenly,"is there anything between Edith and Captain Clayton?"
30606All what? 30606 Am I right in believing the engagement to be over which bound you to Mr.--Jones?"
30606Am I to bring up my own boy to swear that he was there, witnessing what was done, as the friend of my enemies? 30606 Am I to come back?"
30606And I am to leave you,--without another word?
30606And are not you beautiful?
30606And are not you fond of society?
30606And are you going to put Rachel into his hands?
30606And have the girls no servants yet?
30606And have you asked yourself how many twelve pounds will be likely to fall into your hands just at present? 30606 And he did n''t?"
30606And he stays? 30606 And how if she had accepted your offer?"
30606And if I were to wallop you because you had taken it into your stupid head to leave me at a moment''s notice, should I be justified in doing so?
30606And if the wife earns it instead of the husband;--isn''t that honest? 30606 And it''s really true that you are boycotted?"
30606And live upon you?
30606And my father is paying separate rent for it?
30606And now what are we to do about his breakfast? 30606 And that boy can talk now?"
30606And that she sings gloriously?
30606And the boy?
30606And then the kennels were set on fire?
30606And then?
30606And this you think will be continued always?
30606And two ball dresses, quite new?
30606And what business have you here?
30606And what do they do to you? 30606 And what he says agrees with the three men?
30606And what would become of him; and what would become of me? 30606 And where did you first see him?"
30606And who are you, you young deevil?
30606And who else was there?
30606And who is the third papa?
30606And who was the sixth?
30606And will he not tell the truth?
30606And yet you can come here to this ball?
30606And you think that it''s the best joke in the world?
30606And you wo n''t? 30606 And you, what are you thinking of?"
30606And you?
30606And you?
30606And your health?
30606And your sisters?
30606And,--and what about that valiant gay young gentleman, Captain Clayton?
30606Another murder?
30606Are you fetching all these people down from here to do the work the men there ought to do? 30606 Are you friends with him yet?"
30606Are you sure about that fellow Moss?
30606Are you to let this ruffian pass unpunished while you have the power of convicting him? 30606 As much as that?"
30606At any rate you are now free?
30606Because of his fear about this very man?
30606But Mr. Jones is gone?
30606But Mr. Moss is to pay nothing?
30606But have you told me nothing?
30606But he did n''t do anything?
30606But how are we to get back to London, father?
30606But how are you to live with me? 30606 But how does he say it?
30606But how is a man to get the land?
30606But is anything the matter between you and Rachel?
30606But is it true,said Ada,"that Rachel is making a lot of money?"
30606But now about this ball?
30606But what am I to do with him? 30606 But what does Florian do with himself?"
30606But what does he say to you?
30606But what does she mean? 30606 But what is the good of a man being nice when he is a''woodcock''?"
30606But where will you go?
30606But why did you accept him?
30606But why is he going now? 30606 But why not?"
30606But why should you want me now, more than for the last fortnight?
30606But why? 30606 But wo n''t they sell you anything at Tuam?"
30606But you did see the sluice gates torn down, and thrown back into the water?
30606But you wo n''t be in Parliament for County Cavan before next August?
30606But you would not encounter the danger in carrying out a trifling amusement such as this?
30606But, papa, you will let us go to this ball in Galway, will you not? 30606 Ca n''t he be made to speak?"
30606Ca n''t he be turned out of the room?
30606Can I come in yet?
30606Can it be possible that you should not be anxious to begin your new career under respectable auspices?
30606Can not you get rid of him?
30606Can you see any end to it?
30606Could you change so soon?
30606Did he show his pistol?
30606Did he threaten you?
30606Did the Crown intend to pretend that they had any shadow of evidence against him as to the shooting of Terry Carroll?
30606Did they say anything to threaten you?
30606Did ye hear what happened to old Phil Jones down at Morony?
30606Did you hear anything about Castle Morony?
30606Did you not see it in his face?
30606Did you see him?
30606Do n''t I though?
30606Do n''t you know? 30606 Do n''t you think your father is making an ass of himself,--just a little, you know?"
30606Do n''t you, now? 30606 Do you know anything of the man?"
30606Do you know his story, father? 30606 Do you know, or have you an idea?
30606Do you know, there is something in it all that makes me love him the better?
30606Do you love me, then?
30606Do you mean that he will be murdered?
30606Do you mean that there was a crowd?
30606Do you mean to ask him to take you back again?
30606Do you mean to live on what she may earn as an actress?
30606Do you mean to say that you require my presence to prevent anything so disagreeable as that?
30606Do you mean to say, father,she exclaimed,"that you have joined yourself to him?"
30606Do you not know his character? 30606 Do you remember any particularly?"
30606Do you think they will convict him?
30606Do you wish that somebody else should come, as you say?
30606Does he not know that he has done his duty by the lie he has told?
30606Does it suit your book upon the whole?
30606Does not a young girl lose something of the aroma of her youth by seeing too much of the world too soon?
30606Does your religion bid you tell a lie?
30606Even to do evil for its sake? 30606 Father is there?"
30606Father, what has brought him here?
30606Florian, do you give me your most solemn assurance that you saw nothing of this evil work while it was being perpetrated?
30606Florian,said his father,"you know, do you not, the trouble to which I have been put about this man, Pat Carroll?"
30606Flory, what do you know of all this?
30606Flory,said Edith to the boy that afternoon,"you did see the men at work upon the sluices that afternoon?"
30606For a little monkey, what do you think of yourself?
30606For papa to flirt with?
30606For yourself, now?
30606Frank, what on earth did you come here for?
30606Frank,she said to her brother,"whom do you think this letter is from?"
30606Go? 30606 Had you been intimate with this man before?
30606Had you not better trust it with me?
30606Has anyone been speaking to him about his religion?
30606Has anything gone wrong with Rachel?
30606Has he done anything new?
30606Has the same thing happened to any other pack?
30606Have I followed this man simply as a duty? 30606 Have all the helpers gone?"
30606Have n''t you got half the land of Ballintubber in your hands?
30606Have they got nobody?
30606Have you a pistol with you, Daly?
30606Have you asked yourself what will be the expense?
30606Have you been speaking to Florian about him, Captain Clayton?
30606Have you come here this morning, Mr. O''Mahony, to abuse the Speaker?
30606Have you got evidence of that?
30606Have you heard what the boys are going to do?
30606Have you quarrelled with the League, Con?
30606He is an Irish politician, is n''t he?
30606He knows at any rate of Lord Castlewell, and does he think that I am not to trouble myself about him?
30606Him we used to call Buckshot? 30606 How am I to tell you why it is more than that?
30606How are the girls, and how is Mrs. Blake, and what is going on here at Carnlough?
30606How can I make him? 30606 How can they see all that in my face?"
30606How did it end?
30606How do you know?
30606How do you think I am to feed my hounds if you take away the horses which they would eat?
30606How does he bear it?
30606How has it gone with Flory?
30606How is Rachel?
30606How make him?
30606How many horses have you got here and at Ahaseragh?
30606How many months ago is it since last year you took yourself off without even a word said to man or woman? 30606 How many were there with him?"
30606How old do you expect her to be when she''s to die?
30606How should he not be frightened? 30606 How so?"
30606How was it done? 30606 I do n''t see what it has to do with it?
30606I had the poor boy''s head on my knees, Captain Clayton; and how is a poor man to look much about him then?
30606I know I am,said I demurely,"but why?"
30606I suppose all this is troubling you?
30606I suppose he does like me?
30606I suppose he''ll come?
30606I suppose there''s nothing in it?
30606I suppose we may take it for granted that Pat Carroll was there, and that you did see him?
30606I suppose you never heard of me before?
30606I suppose you would like it?
30606I think they will? 30606 I thought your father had given his consent?"
30606I''m not to mind a bit about my religion then?
30606If I am attacked may I not defend myself?
30606If I have a friend, is my friend to cudgel you, my lord?
30606If I were to suggest Captain Yorke Clayton? 30606 If a ball at any time is a good thing, why should it be bad now?
30606If they attempt to stop my horse?
30606In arms?
30606Is Captain Clayton Ada''s special young man?
30606Is it about the theatre?
30606Is it puir for yer honour, and is it rich for the like of me?
30606Is it so bad as that with him?
30606Is n''t anyone to take you in his arms, then?
30606Is n''t that unjust, father?
30606Is not her father with her?
30606Is that all that you''ve got to say for him, Rachel?
30606Is that all you have come to tell me?
30606Is that the little game with which he attempts to cajole you? 30606 Is that the way they manage things in America?"
30606Is the happiness of two people to be thus sacrificed, when nothing is done for the benefit of one?
30606Is there a salary attached?
30606Is there? 30606 Is this her decision?"
30606Is trade so plentiful?
30606Is your maid here, Miss O''Mahony?
30606It was n''t the widow who saw him, I think?
30606It would break your heart if you did n''t think I was going right, and why should n''t I be as anxious about you? 30606 Just as he is?"
30606Knows what?
30606M. Le Gros has explained that? 30606 May I have the extreme honour of introducing Mademoiselle O''Mahony to Lord Castlewell?"
30606May I not look at his letter?
30606Meaning me?
30606Miss O''Mahony, may I say a few words to you?
30606Most particularly special, is he not, Ada?
30606Mr. Moss, ma''am?
30606My dear,said her father when the man had left the room,"do you wish to declare all your animosities before the waiter?"
30606No debts?
30606No rents?
30606Nor anyone else?
30606Nor has his brother?
30606Nor of the terrible character which has been given you by your daughter?
30606Nor will the United States have risen in their wrath so as to have settled the entire question before that time?
30606Not for life and death?
30606Not one kiss, Rachel?
30606Not to be splitting on yourself?
30606Not to your sister?
30606Nothing but murders and floods?
30606Now, Frank,said she,"shall I give you a bit of advice?"
30606Now, my fine fellow,said the former,"have you got your pistols ready?
30606Oh, Ada, dear Ada, what is troubling you?
30606Or from someone who has evidence to give about some of these murders that are going on?
30606Or the boy Florian?
30606Pat Carroll, you mean?
30606Pat Carroll?
30606Rachel, do you care for mine?
30606Shall I go down and make her say that I am here, and then come up again?
30606Shall we withdraw him?
30606She wo n''t be able to lend me the money?
30606So you and Frank have made it up, have you?
30606So you are boycotted?
30606Taking Rachel with you?
30606Tare and ages, man, what''s the good of it? 30606 Tell me, Blake, what had I better do?"
30606Terry was Pat''s brother?
30606That obstacle is then removed?
30606That''s all very well,said Ada,"but how?
30606Then there was a quarrel?
30606Then why do n''t you leave her alone? 30606 Then why do you be talking at me like that, sir?"
30606Then why do you say that father made a mess of it?
30606Then why on earth can not you make them tell?
30606Then you must send them on to Westmeath; I suppose the Mullingar butchers wo n''t boycott you?
30606Then, Flory, am I to gather that you will say nothing further to me?
30606There were emotions then?
30606They are sticking to their story, all through?
30606To decide what?
30606Was there a supper?
30606Well, Con; how are you?
30606Well, Jones, how are you;--and how are the girls, and how is Frank, and how is that young pickle, Master Florian?
30606Well, Master Florian,said the priest,"and how are things going with you?"
30606Well, Moss, how are you getting on in this little house?
30606Well, Mr. Lafferty, how are things going with you to- day?
30606Well, O''Mahony, how is your charming daughter?
30606Well, Tom,said Persse, as he walked into the house,"how are things using you now?
30606Well, my boy, how are you?
30606Well, my dear, what did you do with Frank?
30606Well, yes; how was I to help it? 30606 Well; what is it?"
30606What about Madame Socani?
30606What about Madame Socani?
30606What am I do about Florian? 30606 What am I expected to suggest now?"
30606What am I thinking of?
30606What am I to do about the poor boy?
30606What are we to do about this boy?
30606What are yours?
30606What can Mr. Blake know about it?
30606What can be worse?
30606What can it signify what Mr. Moss may say?
30606What did you say?
30606What do the police do to him?
30606What do they want at Moytubber? 30606 What do you blame me for?"
30606What do you call sure about him? 30606 What do you mean by that?
30606What do you mean by that?
30606What do you mean by that?
30606What do you mean by that?
30606What do you propose to do, Daly?
30606What do you think of Peter? 30606 What does Florian do with himself?"
30606What does all that mean, Lynch?
30606What does he do? 30606 What does he say, and what is the card?
30606What does it matter? 30606 What else do you want?"
30606What else should I main? 30606 What fellows?"
30606What good is it? 30606 What has brought you over here to- day?"
30606What has she done?
30606What have they done?
30606What have we done amiss?
30606What have you been doing all the time?
30606What have you done with the money, Con,--the five gales of rent?
30606What is Madame Socani to me?
30606What is he going for?
30606What is he to do then?
30606What is it ails him?
30606What is it, Yorke?
30606What is it?
30606What is the use of your carrying on like that with the man?
30606What is there to be told?
30606What is there to suspect?
30606What made her suspect him?
30606What made you tell him that you were engaged to Frank Jones?
30606What makes you ask, papa?
30606What man?
30606What message did you send to me by Madame Socani?
30606What message? 30606 What property?
30606What property?
30606What property?
30606What reason?
30606What row do you mean?
30606What shall we do?
30606What should I know?
30606What sort of a row, my dear?
30606What sport have you had, Frank?
30606What throuble''s up now?
30606What two?
30606What was Mr. Jones to me? 30606 What was the end of it all?"
30606What will Mr. Parnell do with such a follower?
30606What will they do?
30606What will you do for money for the next three months? 30606 What will you do, Daly?"
30606What will you do?
30606What would he be at the end of it?
30606What would he do with himself if he did n''t stay?
30606What would they do to him?
30606What would you have had me do?
30606What wrong?
30606What''s Daly up to now?
30606What''s all this about?
30606What''s that, my dear? 30606 What''s that?"
30606What''s the chap up to now?
30606What''s the good of axing when ye knows that I knows nothing?
30606What''s to come of it, I wonder?
30606What''s up with Black Tom now?
30606What''s yer father to do with it now you''re a Catholic? 30606 When a man is doing so much for us ought n''t he to have his breakfast ready for him at half- past six o''clock?"
30606When you tell me of such a proposition as that made to you by the woman, am I to say nothing?
30606Where are the shoes and stockings?
30606Where did that piano come from?
30606Where did you see the man in the mask?
30606Where were you at four o''clock yesterday afternoon?
30606Whereabouts was it the young gentleman perished?
30606Which of the men?
30606Who did it?
30606Who insulted her?
30606Who is it from?
30606Who is milking them?
30606Who is the judicious gentleman?
30606Who is the man in the mask?
30606Who lays the tablecloth?
30606Who says so?
30606Who says that we are crushed?
30606Who says that you were in it? 30606 Who was it?"
30606Who''s Mr. Lax? 30606 Who''s to take them to Dublin?"
30606Whom will you tell, and when?
30606Whose fault is that?
30606Why Captain? 30606 Why am I to be made to speak when I want to sleep?"
30606Why am I to be shaked up in bed?
30606Why am I to be treated in this way?
30606Why am I to tell you what I did?
30606Why are n''t you jealous of that man?
30606Why are you going at once, in this sudden manner?
30606Why did he tell you that I was a reprobate?
30606Why did n''t you tell the truth at the time?
30606Why did you say just now that I insulted you?
30606Why did you tell him so?
30606Why do n''t you suppose so? 30606 Why do they care about such a matter as that?"
30606Why do you talk to a poor boy in that way?
30606Why do you wish to keep me at a distance?
30606Why does he not go away and leave the horrid country?
30606Why has all this been done?
30606Why in such a hurry?
30606Why is papa so hard to me?
30606Why not be Mrs. Morony,Rachel would say,"or Mrs. Ballintubber?
30606Why not true? 30606 Why not with me as well as with others?"
30606Why not? 30606 Why should I wallop her for leaving my service?"
30606Why should it be pretended?
30606Why should n''t a girl be engaged to a man named Jones? 30606 Why should n''t he take my money, since it is here to be taken?
30606Why should they not hunt at Moytubber?
30606Why so?
30606Why so?
30606Why were you not allowed?
30606Why would n''t he make me a statement when I asked for it?
30606Why would n''t you; and I''d have done nothing against you?
30606Why, what do I say?
30606Why, what do you expect from me?
30606Will he make you his wife?
30606Will you tell papa, then?
30606Wo n''t he now? 30606 Wo n''t he?
30606Wo n''t they cost money?
30606Wo n''t you go first and brush your hair?
30606Would it alter him?
30606You are thinking of the man who fired at you?
30606You ask Father Brosnan also, whether you ai n''t to be thrue to us Catholics now you''re one of us? 30606 You ca n''t suppose you are the best man I ever saw, can you?"
30606You did n''t tell him all that you told me-- about letting in the water?
30606You do n''t mean to say that you do n''t think he did make a mess of it?
30606You do n''t mean to say that you think he''ll be killed?
30606You do n''t mean to say you''d take her yet?
30606You do n''t think the wife that is to be need mind it?
30606You drive about London with me in that dress? 30606 You have no reason to accuse Pat Carroll, except by what you have heard?"
30606You know, then?
30606You mind''s Muster Bingham, Muster Flory; eh? 30606 You never tried to kiss me?
30606You saw nothing, and you knew nothing?
30606You saw nothing?
30606You see that jintl''man there?
30606You were out then, yesterday?
30606You will come and meet him, Ada?
30606You wo n''t mind my fellow coming with us?
30606You would n''t have a fellow go and put himself out of favour with all the boys through the country? 30606 You would n''t leave the country?"
30606You would n''t pretend to?
30606You''ve given a promise?
30606You''ve promised not, you mean?
30606You''ve sharp eyes, ai n''t you, to be seeing what warn''t there to be seen at all? 30606 ''What may I talk about?'' 30606 After all, was notLove''s young dream"the best?
30606After all, what''s £ 500?
30606Ai n''t the hounds property, or were property a few weeks ago?
30606Am I ever to get strong in my limbs again, so as to be able to cross the water and go back to my own country?"
30606Am I to have no relief from that?"
30606Am I to put myself forward as a bigoted Protestant?
30606Am I to sing at twenty shillings a day for just as long as Mr. Moss may want me?
30606Among whom has there not come a change in half a century?
30606And I''ll tell you something else I want--""What do you want?"
30606And are we to remain here, and run up a bill which we shall never be able to pay, till they put us out of the door and call us swindlers?"
30606And are you to remain here, and to go down and down in the world till you become such a one as Pat Carroll?
30606And had not Rachel already begun the battle in a manner intended to show that she meant to be the victor?
30606And have we forgotten so soon poor Florian?
30606And he did whisper to me,--may I tell you what he whispered?"
30606And how could I expect him to yield to me in everything, with this brute Moss insulting me at every turn?
30606And if he were thus harassed could he be expected to give his evidence in a clear manner?
30606And if it came to pass that there was a man who would thus sacrifice himself to me, what must I do with him afterwards?
30606And if the ten were now all spared, whose life would be safe in such a Golgotha?
30606And if this family of Kellys were doomed, why should there not be other families of other Kellys,--why not their own families?
30606And then what could Frank do but come?
30606And what about poor Florian and his religion?
30606And what did Edith do?
30606And what of the other man?
30606And what should he do with the boy?
30606And what would become of the dreadful little impediments which might follow?
30606And where was the young lady, singer or no singer, who if disengaged, would reject the heir to a marquisate because he was forty?
30606And which way did the murderer run?"
30606And who''s to subscribe without any prospect of hunting?
30606And why had Frank deserted her?
30606And why should not the Captain have his?
30606And why should we not lead them as may best suit us?
30606And why was I so foolish as to have believed you?
30606And would not your brother and your father have in some way settled their affairs?
30606Are we all to go into mourning, because Mr. Carroll has so decreed?
30606Are you going to turn round and be merciful?"
30606Are you well enough to tell me where did Mr. Lax go when he left you this morning?"
30606Be that as it may, what are we to do with ourselves next autumn?"
30606Bright to govern it?
30606But how am I to go on in my present impecunious position if I quarrel altogether with my bread and butter?
30606But how should their compromises be effected?
30606But how would they like to have Carnlough empty?"
30606But suppose I earn my money for another season or two?
30606But supposing me to be wrong in that, can I be wrong in thinking that a period of declared rebellion is not a time for concessions?
30606But what about his daughter?"
30606But what do you intend to do?"
30606But what if I am sure that he loves me; and what, again, if I am sure that he is the only one I love?
30606But what would have been the use?
30606But when a year had passed by, where should I be?
30606But who is to be the judge?
30606But why, oh why did you ever make that great mistake?
30606But why?
30606But yet, in truth, who could have expected that the noble lord would have married the singing girl?
30606But yet, was it worth his while to make her Marchioness of Beaulieu?
30606But you do n''t mean to say that he knew it was to be done?
30606But, Captain Clayton, you do n''t mean that you''ll walk down to the boat to- morrow?"
30606But,--but was she in truth delighted?
30606Ca n''t you arrange your debates for the other nights?"
30606Can any man''s love be worth it?
30606Can it be possible that we are wrong in our opinions respecting the others of the set?
30606Can not a woman sing without being wife to any man?"
30606Can not you tell me?"
30606Can you fancy a man caring for a girl?"
30606Can you lend me some money this autumn-- say £ 100?"
30606Could any man be justified in asserting that a woman loved him till she had told him so?
30606Could they get me a veal cutlet, or a bit of cold chicken?"
30606Could we leave our father?
30606DEAREST FRANK, You do love me, do n''t you?
30606Did I not tell you to let poor father come into the room?
30606Did anybody in his senses expect that the noble lord would marry Miss Rachel O''Mahony?
30606Did not Mr. Jones do the same?"
30606Did they know the thoughts which it cost him, the hard work by which it was achieved, the days and nights which were devoted to it?
30606Did you ever hear of a prima donna who thought that another prima donna sang better than she did?"
30606Did you ever know him spare one of them?
30606Did you ever think of the glory of being an absolutely live marchioness?
30606Did you know him?"
30606Do all the girls refuse the lords who come and ask them?"
30606Do all the servants leave you?"
30606Do n''t you think so, Rachel?"
30606Do n''t you think, father, that I can sing?"
30606Do ye know what would happen you if ye commit such a sin as that?
30606Do you ever realise to yourself what it is to think that your father is ruined?"
30606Do you hear what he did over at Ardfry?
30606Do you know that fellow Lax?
30606Do you not know that you loved him before you ever bade me to do so?
30606Do you not love me?"
30606Do you suppose I do not care to hear about those girls whom I love,--pretty nearly with all my heart?
30606Do you think that I do not wish to become a countess?"
30606Do you think that it would not be pleasant for me to have a lover to congratulate me every day on my little triumphs?
30606Do you think this kind of thing is going to remain?"
30606Does he look you in the face?
30606Does not my father think of sending him to England?"
30606Does your father see his way to bringing those meadows back into his hands?
30606Edith, how can you think of such a thing?"
30606Father, do n''t you think Mr. Moss might go away?"
30606For the matter of that who''s to feed the poor dumb brutes?
30606Has he slackened in his admiration so as to postpone his expiring to the close of every song?
30606Has he told up as yet?
30606Have I lain awake thinking of it till I have given to the pursuit such an amount of energy as no duty can require?
30606Have you been speaking to Captain Clayton on the subject?"
30606He was the Old Man of the Sea, and how should she shake him off?
30606Her father, of course, would not go; but should he be left alone at Morony Castle to the tender mercies of Peter?
30606How am I to take upon myself to say that she is not right to go?
30606How am I to tell you-- you, of all men, what my reasons were?
30606How are the men there to get their wages?"
30606How are we to expect a man like Clayton to come forward and be shot at in that fashion?
30606How are you getting on with all your own pet troubles?
30606How are you going on in Galway?"
30606How are you, Jones?
30606How can I tell?
30606How can a fellow be frank when he''s suspected like this?"
30606How could I be angry?"
30606How do the tidings of such a commission operate upon the ears of Irishmen at large?
30606How has he got his hand into the treasury of the theatre, so that he may be able to help you so conveniently?
30606How have you been enlightened so far as to see that this is the way in which you may best make yourself happy?"
30606How is Master Florian getting on with his priest?"
30606How is a fellow to remember after so many months?"
30606How is a fellow to remember them all?
30606How is your charming daughter this morning?"
30606How many does Lord Castlewell wear?
30606How many will he wear when he is a marquis?
30606How should he, when he had n''t a horse that he could ride upon?
30606How was I to marry a man when I loved him,--I who had been so treated?
30606How were Noah''s daughters dressed?
30606I ai n''t to say that he goes wrong when he never goes right by any chance?"
30606I ca n''t keep them, and who''ll buy them?
30606I daresay he is nice, but what''s the use?"
30606I have the pistol, but what is that?
30606I suppose it is a comfort, eh, my bold young man?
30606If God does not walk atop of the devils what''s the use of running straight?
30606If I were to suppose that he is the man who is to have the privilege?"
30606If Mr. Morris, then why not another-- and another-- till the whole country would be depopulated?
30606If a tenant has to be evicted for a demand of £ 10, will he be able to live in comfort if he pay only £ 8?
30606If beaten to- day, why should they not be beaten on another day, and then what would become of Tom Daly''s employment?
30606If he were to marry me what would become of you?"
30606If it came to her would she refuse her hand to a man because his courage led him into special perils?
30606If that could be prevented and atoned for, and set right by the hanging in one row of ten such miscreants as those, would it not be a noble deed done?
30606If they should turn upon him?"
30606If you have spent your income hitherto, what do you mean to do till the end of November?
30606In either case, if a tenant shall do well with two children, how shall he do with six or eight?
30606In the first place, how was he to be kept out of his father''s presence?
30606Is Frank to go with you?
30606Is Madame Tacchi in sight, so that I can see her?"
30606Is Peter nobody?
30606Is it Mr. Blake of Carnlough?"
30606Is n''t it a pretty family history?
30606Is n''t it honest money,--money that has come by singing?"
30606Is n''t that an inducement?"
30606Is not that rational?"
30606Is she in any trouble?"
30606Is the little subsiding lake at Ballintubber still a lake?
30606Is there no one else?
30606Is this a time for marriage,--if it were otherwise possible,--which it is not?
30606Is this her message?"
30606It is the honest who are murdered; but would it not be well to rid the world of these ruffians?
30606It''s all nonsense saying that there should be no rent; where are we to get our clothes from?"
30606Jones?"
30606Jones?"
30606Jones?"
30606Lafferty?"
30606Moss?"
30606Mr. Jones, if you treat me in that way, wo n''t I punish you?
30606Mr. Moss had got hold of her, and how should she get rid of him?
30606Much or little, what is it?
30606Must he pay a similar penalty for her blunder?
30606Now I ask your respectable parent, is Miss Rachel unreasonable?
30606Now, father, had he not better go?"
30606Now, which am I to take of these three?
30606Oh, Frank, why do n''t you speak to me?
30606Or were they dressed at all?"
30606Or why is it that Frank should be allowed again to come up and trouble your dreams?
30606Peacock?"
30606Persse?"
30606Pulteney?"
30606Shall the idle man be made equal to the industrious,--or can this be done, or should it be done, by any philanthropy?
30606Shall the normal tenant earn wages beyond what he gets from the land under his own tillage?
30606Should he tell the lord the exact truth, and explain all about Frank Jones?
30606Should she ask M. Le Gros to lend her some small sum of money in advance for the uses of the autumn?
30606Should she be afraid of Mr. Moss, and fly from her destiny because a man was greasy?
30606Suddenly the idea struck Rachel, and she called out with a loud voice,"Father, where on earth are we going?"
30606Taking all the chances one way and another, shall we say sixty?"
30606That would be a great deal worse, would it not, father?
30606The difficulty he saw was this: what should you do with the property when you took it away from the landlords?
30606Then would there not be danger that he should be driven to look for his friends elsewhere?
30606There are those who think that man to be great and good; but how can he be great and good if he lets loose such spirits among us?
30606There, do you see that ugly old man there?"
30606They have not mutilated any of your cattle?"
30606They will drive every gentleman out of the country, and where will they be then?"
30606To live at Morony Castle and be Frank Jones''s wife, would not that be sweeter than to sing at a theatre under the care of Mr. Mahomet M. Moss?
30606To this they could not bring themselves, for are not the murderers armed?
30606To whom am I to consign''em in Dublin?
30606To you?
30606Touching this money, I suppose father has not got it yet?"
30606Was ever the like of that seen since the mortial world began?"
30606Was he not going to pay too dearly for his whistle?
30606Was he to let the young lady off altogether?
30606Was it a fact that she was in love with the Captain?
30606Was it probable that Lord Castlewell should on his own behalf recover from the treasury of the theatre the sum of £ 200?
30606Was n''t one side in pollitiks the same as another to an old woman like me, who only wants to''arn her bit and her sup?
30606Was not Pat Gilligan her sister''s husband''s brother''s child?
30606Was not his character known?
30606Was not the girl there to show you up?"
30606Was she wise in what she was doing?
30606Was that not so?"
30606Was this work of his life, this employment on which he was so conscientiously eager, to be called trifling?
30606Well, Florian, what came next?"
30606What am I to do about Pat Carroll?"
30606What am I to do if he tells me to my face that I''m a beautiful young woman?"
30606What am I to do?
30606What am I to say to you about Frank, who will not talk much of your perfections, though he is always thinking of them?
30606What are her allurements?"
30606What could I do but tell Frank?
30606What could Mr. Jones do?
30606What curate lives with Father Malachi?"
30606What did the man in the mask say to you?"
30606What do I know about letting in the water?"
30606What do you mean to do with yourself?"
30606What do you think Moss will say?"
30606What do you think of that as the condition for a man to be brought to?"
30606What does he say himself?"
30606What does it signify what I wear?"
30606What has Captain Clayton to do with you two?"
30606What has an American girl to do with aroma, who''s got her bread to earn?
30606What has brought you to London?"
30606What has come of it?
30606What if Frank Jones has spoiled me altogether?
30606What is all this that has happened here?"
30606What is money to me?
30606What is the good of fathers?
30606What is this that you were saying about Rachel and her money?"
30606What is to be the end of it?
30606What made you want to marry me?"
30606What might not they two do together in the musical world?
30606What more can a girl want than to have a lord to fall in love with her, and to give her up just as her inclination may declare itself?
30606What more can you want?
30606What more do you want than that?
30606What on earth has brought you here?"
30606What on earth is to become of me when I have not a hound left to give a dose of physic to?"
30606What right had he to tell that her happiness was in question?
30606What shall we do next?
30606What shall we do?
30606What should he do with himself during the remainder of his life, if hunting in County Galway was brought to an end?
30606What should he do with this girl, so as to make the best of her?
30606What should she do now?
30606What the deuce was he to think now of the lord who would not be let off?
30606What was Lord Castlewell to her,--what even was Frank''s love?
30606What was Mr. Lax doing?"
30606What would he have had her do?
30606What would they say if I was to take away my wife and girls, shut up Carnlough, and go and live in France?
30606What''s that about rent?"
30606What''s the good of a ball without them?
30606What''s the reason of it?
30606What''s the use of my loving you, and thinking that you are everything, only that you are to love me?
30606What''s to be the end of it all?
30606When a Protestant child does go to a priest on such a mission, what can the priest do but accept him?
30606When a gentleman has lost his heart in true love, is he to be reproached because he endeavours to seize one little kiss?
30606Where on earth has he taken himself?"
30606Which of them has been most with him since your edict went forth?"
30606Which way does your heart go?"
30606Who could wish it?"
30606Who did it-- and why?"
30606Who is to milk them?"
30606Who says--"But mine own?"
30606Who wants you back again now, I wonder?"
30606Who was to be the keeper of the list and decide finally as to the victims?
30606Who would want to buy a horse even, now that the chief object for horses was at an end?
30606Who''ll subscribe for next year?
30606Who''s to keep them without any subscription?
30606Why Clayton?"
30606Why ai n''t the boys to be having their fun?"
30606Why are we to take the property from Jack and give it to Bill?
30606Why did n''t they allow Mr. Flory just to hould his pace and say nothing about it to no one?"
30606Why did the truth suffer?
30606Why did you teach me to believe a falsehood?"
30606Why do I do that?"
30606Why do n''t you tell him, father?"
30606Why do n''t you tell me about them, and your father?
30606Why do n''t you tell me their love?"
30606Why do you come to trouble me with a matter you can know nothing about?"
30606Why do you say things so cruel to me?"
30606Why is she so fierce?"
30606Why not by some of these gallant fellows at Galway?
30606Why should I do the likes of that?"
30606Why should I trust him in every detail of life with a perfect faith, and not trust Mr. Mahomet M. Moss to the extent of half- a- crown?
30606Why should Scotland be so governed, why should Wales, why should Yorkshire?"
30606Why should he be better than any other young lady''s Mr. Jones?
30606Why should it not have been postponed?
30606Why should not Ada have her chance?
30606Why should not she have her chance of having a gallant lovable gentleman for a brother- in- law?
30606Why should she not be so?
30606Why should these questions of life and death be remitted to them, to the exclusion of those other three?
30606Why should these ten have all the power in their own hands?
30606Why should you here allow yourself to be degraded by the unmanly name of tenants?
30606Why should you wish to keep him down in the area?"
30606Will that satisfy you?"
30606Will you go back to Ireland to- morrow morning, and undertake not to see me again, until you come prepared to marry me?
30606Will you leave her conduct in his hands?"
30606Worn''t it thrue for me what I said, Master Florian?"
30606Would Miss O''Mahony condescend to take a seat in the carriage which was waiting for her?
30606Would he not associate with Father Brosnan, or, worse again, with Pat Carroll?
30606Would it not be better for him at once to go home, and there to endure the suffering that was in store for him?
30606Would not your Irish brutalities be then over; and my father''s eloquence, and the eccentricities of the other gentlemen?
30606Would ye be unthrue to your own people?
30606Would you wish to see me on this account delivered over to Mr. Mahomet Moss as a donkey between two bundles of hay?
30606Would your father treat you as he does now without a cause?
30606You and I want to go right, do n''t we?"
30606You can not imagine that he would give such advice to my boy?"
30606You did not make two attempts?"
30606You do not suspect him of a desire to injure you?"
30606You do not wish to see your sisters on the stage?"
30606You have not got the money yet, I suppose?"
30606You know there''s a creature called Chairman of Committees?"
30606You will say a word in my favour?"
30606You will understand-- won''t you-- that my anger against you is passed and gone?"
30606You wo n''t deny that?"
30606You''ll bear me out in that?"
30606You''re mindful o''that-- ain''t you?"
30606You;--who will you stick to?"
30606and should Florian be left also without any woman''s hands to take charge of him?
30606asked Frank,"that you can afford to do without it?"
30606asked the Captain,"when he bade you be hand and glove with him?"
30606dear,"exclaimed the lord,"how do you do, Mr. O''Mahony?
30606father, father,"she said to him the next morning,"do n''t you think you''ve made a goose of yourself?"
30606his lordship there?"
30606nor his mode of living, nor his dealing with actresses?
30606or one of them, poor little creatures, that would n''t rise to his bait?"
30606or where he comes from?"
30606said Frank,"as to his whereabouts?
30606said Mr. O''Mahony;"and why has he come?"
30606she said,"how are you?
30606the priest may say to himself, apostrophising the boy;"why do n''t you remain as you are for the present?
30606to give up my whole career for a young man''s love,--merely that I might have his arm round my waist?
30606what am I to do?"
4917A friend of Lord Ballindine?
4917A letther for me, Mrs Kelly? 4917 About what?"
4917About young men, my dear?
4917About your debts, Kilcullen: why did you conceal from me their full amount? 4917 Adolphus,"said Fanny,"I thought there was to be no flattering between us?"
4917Advise you? 4917 Afraid, man?
4917Ah, but was there anything passed about Anty and you getting married? 4917 Ah, now, Mr Daly-- why''d you be putting them words into my mouth?
4917And Fanny: will you see her again?
4917And I''m to sit here, then, and see that young blackguard Kelly, run off with what ought to be my own, and my sister into the bargain? 4917 And Miss Lynch is going to marry him?"
4917And ai n''t she betther there, nor being murthered up here? 4917 And am I to sell the furniture, and everything-- horses, cattle, and everything about the place-- for three hundred pounds?"
4917And did he seem unhappy about it?
4917And did you intend to tell me all this, had I not spoken to you as I have done?
4917And did you send for the master?
4917And do you expect her to accept you?
4917And do you expect her to have you without asking?
4917And do you mind my telling you, I did n''t know from Adam what it was for, that Barry Lynch was sending for me?
4917And do you think I would flatter you? 4917 And does Barry take any notice of her now she''s ill?"
4917And does that make her your friend? 4917 And has he sold all his horses?"
4917And have n''t you heard her express a moral objection to it?
4917And how is she now, doctor?
4917And how often are you so, Barry?--isn''t it so with you every night? 4917 And how shall we manage about the money, my lord?"
4917And if he asks about these wretched horses of mine?
4917And if she declines the honour?
4917And if, Fanny-- if, after that he refuses you?
4917And is it about Barry Lynch''s business?
4917And is n''t it a hundred pities that I must come and upset such a pretty schame as that? 4917 And is that all you called me back for?"
4917And my property?--what''s to become of my property?
4917And now, tell me what is it ails Miss Anty? 4917 And she is engaged to this young man?"
4917And should I not ask to see Fanny?
4917And so you mean to say, Lord Cashel, that I can not see Miss Wyndham?
4917And tell me now, Anty, do you like the inn?
4917And that I tould you, that when I did know I should n''t tell you?
4917And the sooner the better-- is that it?
4917And then shoot him-- be tried by your peers-- and perhaps hung; is that it?
4917And then, where could Fanny wish for a better match than yourself? 4917 And was n''t she very resigned in it?"
4917And what did you do, Doctor Colligan, at the time?
4917And what do you use for it?
4917And what is it then he has to say agin us?
4917And what is that?
4917And what shall I do now?
4917And what should we live on?
4917And what the deuce had I better do? 4917 And what was father Geoghegan preaching about?"
4917And what will you do when you''re married, Frank?
4917And what''d be the good of his opening them yet,answered John,"when a bigger man than himself an''t there?
4917And what''d you be doing out now?
4917And what''s to hinder us marrying, Anty, av''yourself is plazed? 4917 And when did this happen?
4917And where are ye going now?
4917And where have you hidden yourself all the morning, Fanny,said he,"that nobody has seen anything of you since breakfast?"
4917And where''s Judy?
4917And which of you will be staying here along with her, dears?
4917And who is the friend of friends, Fanny?
4917And who the devil''s Dot Blake?
4917And why not run in the North, too?
4917And why not? 4917 And why not?
4917And why not?
4917And why should n''t they all be Repealers?
4917And why should you be sorry I''d speak against him? 4917 And why so?
4917And will they come through this way? 4917 And will yer honour be forgething me afther the news I''ve brought yer?
4917And will your mother be staying down at the shop always, the same as iver?
4917And wo n''t he be dhrunk again, Anty?
4917And would you take my hand without my heart?
4917And ye''re afther telling him where Miss Anty''s gone, Terry?
4917And you are determined to stay in this inn here?
4917And you did not hear a word from him since?
4917And you expect she''ll have another attack to- morrow?
4917And you mean to say, Mrs Kelly, you''ll take upon yourself to prevent my seeing my sister?
4917And you think that I shall?
4917And you think that that which I have found so insufficient for myself, would be enough for both of us?
4917And you want me to tell him so, after having banished him from my house?
4917And you''ll go if you get money-- say ten pounds?
4917And you''re determined,repeated Daly,"to stay here?"
4917And you''re not going to give her any paper-- nor nothing of that sort at all?
4917And you''ve put your name to them, is n''t that it?
4917And your object is, Mr Armstrong--?
4917And, I suppose, what you now want is to saddle the debts on the entire property? 4917 And, afther all, are you going to tell me now, that I may jist go my own way?
4917And, afther all, are you going to wait for what Barry likes? 4917 And, did she tell you, Biddy, that her own brother had trated her that way?"
4917And, if you were in the chair now, before a jury, would n''t you swear that there was a schame among them to get Anty Lynch married to Martin Kelly? 4917 Anty,"he said, at last, blushing nearly brown as he spoke;"Were you thinking of what I was spaking to you about before I went to Dublin?"
4917Are not O''Connell and the whole set under conviction at this moment? 4917 Are you going to answer me or not?"
4917Are you going, doctor?
4917Av''it''s not asking too much, might I throuble you, sir, to set anywhere else but on my shouldher?
4917Axed to the wake, is it? 4917 Bother the lord, Martin; why you''d be asking anything of any lord, and you with £ 400 a- year of your own?
4917But I might get a sum of money for the good- will, might n''t I?
4917But I presume it is his intention to do so?
4917But I think he''s all right-- eh, Grady?
4917But I was saying about Savy O''Leary,again interposed Morris,"did you ever hear what he did?"
4917But about Brien Boru, and the Derby?
4917But about the debts, Daly?
4917But am I not in the right?
4917But could n''t she make a will in my favour? 4917 But did n''t you think I was exactly what I ought not to have been?
4917But did they commit any personal outrages, Mr O''Joscelyn?
4917But did you never hear she was n''t quite right?
4917But does mother know she''s here?
4917But how the devil, man, did you manage to get at her? 4917 But is Miss Lynch so very ill, Martin?"
4917But is it becoming in you, Fanny, to grieve in this way for a man whom you yourself rejected because he was unworthy of you?
4917But it''s not that, Anty-- don''t you know it''s not that? 4917 But no one better than yourself; is that it, eh?"
4917But that wo n''t do at all; do n''t you know they were asked here for your especial edification and amusement?
4917But this letter-- What on earth am I to say to her?
4917But was he satisfied? 4917 But were not the police about, Mr O''Joscelyn?"
4917But what had I_ better_ do? 4917 But what is it ails your sister, Mr Lynch?"
4917But what the deuce is it he''s to do for us, after all?
4917But what the deuce should he do about money?
4917But what''s the use of it at all?
4917But what_ did_ the people do?
4917But when is it to be?
4917But who''s talking of fighting, Anty, dear?
4917But wo n''t you get your brother his dinner?
4917But wo n''t you take a glass of Madeira first, Mr Armstrong?
4917But you did knock him down?
4917But you did n''t take him away from his mother''s funeral?
4917But you did reject him, Fanny: you bade papa tell him to discontinue his visits-- didn''t you?
4917But you do n''t mane, Anty, that you would n''t like to have some kind of work to do-- some occupation, like?
4917But you wo n''t keep him here long, Miss Lynch-- eh? 4917 But you would n''t have left her up there to be murdhered?"
4917But you''ll take your turn, Meg?
4917But, Anty, tell me-- you do n''t want always to be what you call quiet?
4917But, Fanny, if your own way''s a bad way? 4917 But, doctor, you do n''t think there is any chance-- I mean, there is n''t any danger, is there, that she''d go off at once?"
4917But, is she much hurt, Biddy?
4917But, mamma, is Adolphus really to be here on Tuesday?
4917But, mamma,said Lady Selina,"you''re not going to ask people here just immediately, are you?"
4917But, mother, you ai n''t wishing poor Anty was n''t here?
4917But, my dear Ballindine; what is it I''m to do?
4917But, tell me, Martin-- was there anything said between you and Moylan about Anty before she come down here?
4917By the bye, Mat, is that Howard the brother of the Honourable and Riverind Augustus?
4917Confound him!--but tell me, Daly; what is it he''s to do?--and what is it we''re to do?
4917Conspiracy, is it?
4917Conspirator, I believe? 4917 Could the servant get him pen, ink, and paper?"
4917D''you remember my telling you, the day we came into Dunmore on the car together, that I was going up to the house?
4917Dear me-- poor thing; Can I send her anything?
4917Despise you, Anty?--how could I despise you, when I''ve always loved you?
4917Did I manage that well?
4917Did he say anything?
4917Did mother say anything about the schame?
4917Did n''t Serjeant Carroll take that horrible man Leary, that robbed the old widow that lived under the bridge?
4917Did n''t you say, Mr Moylan, that Martin Kelly was talking to you about marrying Anty, some six weeks ago?
4917Did she make any will?
4917Did they burn any thing except the turf, Mr O''Joscelyn?
4917Did they come into the garden at all, or near the house?
4917Did you bring me down to Grey Abbey merely to tell me that you knew of my difficulties, and that you could do nothing to assist me?
4917Did you ever get a letter from her, or see a letter of hers?
4917Did you ever see such a clumsy, ignorant fool? 4917 Did you hear, Miss O''Kelly, what Jerry Blake did yesterday?"
4917Disgrace, Selina!--and am I not now disgraced? 4917 Do n''t you hear me say so?"
4917Do n''t you know, mother, he was head and ears in debt?
4917Do you know what it''s about?
4917Do you mean that you do n''t receive it?
4917Do you mean to give me the lie, sir?
4917Do you mean to go over there from the Curragh next week?
4917Do you mean you''ve no money at all?
4917Do you mean, that you have no schedule of your debts?--no means of acquainting me with the amount? 4917 Do you remember the circumstance, Mr Lynch?"
4917Do you think not? 4917 Do you think, Kilcullen, you have spent the last eight years in a way which it can please a father to contemplate?
4917Do?
4917Drat your impudence, you low- born ruffian,answered his opponent;"who cares for her money?
4917Dreaming, my dear? 4917 Faix, he has, my lord: did n''t he win the Autumn Produce Stakes?"
4917For the purpose of allowing my wife to pay my debts?
4917From where, Selina?
4917Gentleman-- what gentleman?
4917Get rid of who?
4917Give her up, is it? 4917 God was very merciful, and protected us; but who can feel safe, living in such times, and among such a people?
4917Going to marry whom?
4917Good gracious!--and why not, my lord? 4917 Good gracious, Fanny!--what is it?
4917Has she though? 4917 Have you done, now, Misther Barry?"
4917Have you told any one of this, Fanny?--do they know of it at Grey Abbey? 4917 He has no affection; no affection for any one; he has no affection even for me.--What did he say about her, Selina?"
4917He is very clever, is n''t he? 4917 He was a queer man: was n''t he, Mr Daly?"
4917Heaven and''arth,said poor Anty, shaking and shivering--"what''s going to be the matter now?"
4917Heavens and earth!--I hope you''re not going to let her quarrel with you, are you? 4917 His death will make a great difference, as far as Fanny is concerned-- eh?"
4917How are they all at Dunmore and Kelly''s Court?
4917How can he take your property, Barry?
4917How d''ye do, my lord?--I hope I see your lordship well?
4917How long is her brother dead?
4917How many Protestants have you?
4917How much will you want? 4917 How quare?"
4917How you talk, mother,said Martin;"and what''s the use?
4917How''s Brien looking this morning, Grady?
4917How, anything said, mother?
4917I feel it? 4917 I shall not trouble, you, Fanny, by speaking to you now, I hope?"
4917I shall write to Lord Ballindine this evening, Miss Wyndham; will you intrust me with no message? 4917 I suppose I could see him at ten?"
4917I suppose they can wait till a man''s dressed?
4917I suppose you wo n''t object to my having a bottle of soda water?
4917I tell you, I must stand to them; you do n''t suppose I''d ask her to pay a penny as a favour? 4917 I want to see Mrs Kelly,"said Barry;"d''ye hear?
4917I will have no''buts,''Mr Lynch; will you at once and unconditionally agree to the terms I have proposed?
4917I wondher what she''s been about now?
4917I wondher who your lordship''ll put up?
4917I''ll just take a walk among the trees: I suppose the doctor wo n''t be long?
4917I''ll not stop in the room; do n''t you know he was dhrunk when he done all that?
4917I''m very glad of that, Selina, but what was it? 4917 If I did, is it not sufficient that I tell you I love him?
4917If she were to die, Martin, there''d be an end of it all, would n''t there?
4917If there''s anything I can do, I''m sure I''d do it: if there''s anything at all you wish done.--Would you like to come up to the house again?
4917In hundreds?
4917In the name of mercy, what must I do?
4917In the parlour upstairs?
4917Indeed, I did not,said Guss--"but I hope, for the sake of the Blakes in general, he did n''t do anything much amiss?"
4917Is Miss Lynch within?
4917Is Mrs Ellison your own friend?--or Mrs Moore?
4917Is it Anty? 4917 Is it I?"
4917Is it Kate thin, ma''am?
4917Is it about Barry?
4917Is it about the property you mane, Barry?
4917Is it against the Repealers?
4917Is n''t Tom Steele a Protesthant himself, John?
4917Is n''t it? 4917 Is n''t she going to be married then, to the dacentest fellow in Dunmore?
4917Is n''t the Kellys great people intirely, Mr. Barry? 4917 Is n''t there then?
4917Is she ill at all, Mr. Barry? 4917 Is she still so bad, Martin?"
4917Is that Sally, ma''am?
4917Is the establishment in Curzon Street broken up?
4917Is this to be the end of it all? 4917 Is your master at home?"
4917Is''t Miss Anty? 4917 It is a cheque for five hundred pounds, and I may then give it to you?"
4917It looks like it, at any rate, do n''t it?
4917It was very odd my finding you down here, all ready before me, was n''t it?
4917It''s asy to say''go asy''--but who''s to sit still and be tould sich things as that? 4917 Lady Selina, my lord; her ladyship bids me give your lordship her love, and would you see her ladyship for five minutes before you get up?"
4917Leaving Grey Abbey?
4917Make her?--who''s talking of making her?
4917Maning?--what''s the good of maning? 4917 May I ask you, Mr Tierney, who told you so?"
4917May be so; but would n''t she be a dale happier with Martin than up here wid him? 4917 Maybe he was drunk this evening, at Lynch''s?"
4917Maybe it''s a message from her brother, Mr Daly?
4917Me, ill- natured, my lady? 4917 Me?"
4917Mr Blake, thin-- Mr Blake, darlint-- doesn''t ye remimber the promise you guv me?
4917Mr Lynch,said the parson,"do you remember the night Doctor Colligan knocked you down in this room?
4917Murder?--Who talked or said a word of murder?
4917My present plans, my lord? 4917 My sister, Miss Lynch, is still staying here, I believe?"
4917No more you sha n''t now,said Martin:"Who''s to hurt you?
4917No, but-- he''d draw up a deed, would n''t he, Blake? 4917 Nor would n''t now, Martin, eh?
4917Now, Frank, do n''t be a fool, or you''ll repent it all your life: what does it signify how much you give up to such a man as Lord Cashel? 4917 Object, man!--How the devil can I object?
4917Occurrence? 4917 Of course she has; and, surely she wo n''t refuse to pay half the claims on the estate?"
4917Of course you know, I''d do anything for you, as of course I ought-- anything that ought to be done; but what is it exactly you wish me to say?
4917Of course, Grady, you think he might be trained here, as well as at the other side of the water?
4917Oh, Mr Daly, poor Anty''s dying: did you hear, Mr Daly-- she''s all but gone?
4917Oh, ah-- yes; your attorney, you mean?
4917Oh, of course he will; why would n''t he, and you wishing it? 4917 Oh, they were about, to be sure, poor men; but what could they do?
4917Oh, we will-- we wo n''t say a word about it; but she''ll never change her mind because of her money, will she?
4917Oh, yes-- certainly, Doctor Colligan; to be sure-- that is-- tell me, doctor, is she really so bad?
4917Oh-- ah-- yes-- Mrs Kelly, I believe?
4917Protecthing Anty Lynch!--is it Barry? 4917 Regretting?
4917Schaming, is it, Meg? 4917 Selina, what do you think your father tells me?"
4917Sha n''t I? 4917 Shall we be such friends, then?"
4917She does n''t mean to make any will, then?
4917She went down of her own accord, though?
4917She''s of age now, is n''t she? 4917 Shure how can I, Mr Lambert, when I''ve been and guv my word to Mr Larry?"
4917Shure, you know, did n''t I ask her often enough?
4917So he is: how on earth can you undertake that I shall leave the house?
4917So they did, the false ruffians: but what harum''ll that do? 4917 So you''re determined to go to- morrow, Mat?"
4917So, Anty, you would n''t come to mass?
4917So, you''re my fool, Jack, are ye?
4917Spake?--why, what would you have me spake?
4917Suppose he denies himself to us?
4917That brother- in- law of yours is a most unmitigated blackguard, is n''t he, Martin?
4917That is to say, that, for one year, you are to possess one half of whatever value the horses may be?
4917That''s all very well; but what can you do?
4917That''s true, for what need she mind Barry, now? 4917 That''s true; but how could your father owe such a sum as that, and no one know it?
4917The match is n''t off-- is it?
4917The time is out, Mr Lynch: will you go?
4917Then it''s merely a matter of feeling with you, and not of affection? 4917 Then what are you losing your time for, man?
4917Then what the devil''s the use of talking about it so long?
4917Then why do you talk about what you can afford to do?
4917Then why do you want my advice, if you''ve made up your mind to that? 4917 Then why were you weak enough to reject him?"
4917Then you think, my lord, I''d betther do it at once?
4917Then you''ll promise not to be angry?
4917Then, Fanny, we are to be friends-- true, loving, trusting friends?
4917There was a regular plan then, eh, Daly? 4917 There''d be a great crowd in chapel, I suppose?"
4917There''s no doubt as to what you''d better do; the question is what you''d rather do?
4917There''s something in that,said Frank;"but the question is, what is Doctor Colligan to do?
4917To tell the truth, my lord, I''ve a good deal that I wish to say: will it trouble you to listen to me?
4917Too forrard, is it, my lord? 4917 Warn''t that a knock at the hall- door, Sally?"
4917Was he, then? 4917 Was he?
4917Was it a demonstration of joy or of grief?
4917Was n''t Miss Wyndham engaged to some one?
4917Was there an unmarried young man among them at all?
4917We hope not, Anty; but it''s all with God now-- isn''t it? 4917 We''ll have you at the inn, then, I suppose, Mr Daly?"
4917Welcome back, Ballindine-- better late than never; but why did you stay away so long?
4917Well then; are you going to marry her, or rather, is she going to marry you, or is she not?
4917Well, Adolphus?
4917Well, Doctor Colligan, what do you say?
4917Well, Fanny, how are you now?
4917Well, Fanny, what can I do for you? 4917 Well, Fanny, you ca n''t say but that it was a good portrait; and after that, will you pretend to say you call Miss O''Joscelyn your friend?"
4917Well, Frank, how does Brien go to- day? 4917 Well, Frank,"said Blake, as soon as the door was closed,"and have you got the money you wanted?"
4917Well, I''ll go Monday fortnight; that''ll do, wo n''t it?
4917Well, Jerry, how do the new articles fit?
4917Well, Kelly,said Lord Ballindine,"how does Dublin agree with you?"
4917Well, Lambert,said Lord Ballindine, across the table, to the stingy gentleman with the squint,"are you going to ride hard to- day?"
4917Well, Martin-- what was it she wanted?
4917Well, Miss Lynch, am I to tell your brother that you are willing to oblige him in this matter?
4917Well, Mr Barry, what is it?
4917Well, Mr Lynch,said Daly,"will you let me spake to Kelly about this, or would you rather sleep on the matther?"
4917Well, doctor, is she dying yet?
4917Well, doctor,she said, as Doctor Colligan crept into her room, after the termination of his embassy to Barry;"will he come?"
4917Well, he''d see me to- morrow, would n''t he?
4917Well, her lover?
4917Well, mamma, what else did papa say?
4917Well, mamma,said Lady Selina, as undisturbed and calm as ever, and as resolved to do her duty without flinching,"shall we go on?"
4917Well, that''s kind of him, is n''t it, Frank? 4917 Well, then, you''ll be here at six?"
4917Well, you do n''t expect me to get up while you''re there, I suppose?
4917Well, you remember the night of the scrimmage?
4917Well-- suppose they are?
4917Well-- you must see, there can be no objection on the score of Lord Ballindine?
4917Well; did n''t he try to do as bad before?
4917Well;said Colligan, who was now really interested,"what''s the figure?"
4917Well?
4917Were you going to have him out, Grady?
4917Were you wanting me, Barry?
4917Were you wanting me, this evening?
4917What Kellys?
4917What about?
4917What ails her;--and why d''you come here? 4917 What are we to do, Griffiths?
4917What are we to do, my dear? 4917 What can you expect,"said Bingham,"when such fellows as that come into a field?
4917What d''ye mean, you ruffian?
4917What do you stand there for, with the door open?
4917What do you think, Mr Armstrong?
4917What for would you not open it? 4917 What is it, Fanny?
4917What is it, mamma?
4917What is your ambition then? 4917 What o''clock was it when I went to bed?"
4917What schame, Barry?
4917What the d---- are you saying about Miss Lynch?
4917What the d----l''s the matter?--he''s not lame, is he?
4917What the d----l, then, am I to do with the confounded ideot?
4917What the deuce was it you did say, then?
4917What the devil are you going to drag me down to the Court- house for, gentlemen?
4917What truth, my lord?
4917What''d you be sorry for-- an''t it the best place for you?
4917What''ll I do, Mrs Kelly?
4917What''ll he be spaking to me about? 4917 What''s the time, Terry?"
4917What, Martin Kelly? 4917 What, Savy, with the whiskers?"
4917What, and let her marry and have that young blackguard brought up to Dunmore under my very nose?
4917What, from London, my lady?
4917What, not as to the waltzing, resignation, and worthless young men? 4917 What, sir?"
4917What, stay at Grey Abbey all May and June?
4917What, the widow, that keeps the inn?
4917What, to Ballindine?
4917What, you think there''s something between her and Lord Kilcullen?
4917What?
4917When is it to be, Frank? 4917 Where should a man live thin, Mrs Costelloe, when he gets married, but jist in his own house?
4917Where the d----l''s she gone, Terry?
4917Where''s your evidence?--where''s your evidence? 4917 Which of us, Fanny, might n''t, with truth, say the same of ourselves?"
4917Whither have_ you_ taken yourself all the day, rather, that you had not a moment to come and look after us? 4917 Who asked you?"
4917Who could have a business to think for you, if not your guardian?
4917Who crossed the dogs?
4917Who iver knew any good of a Lynch-- barring Miss Anty herself?
4917Who saw anything of Lambert Brown?
4917Who says I object to see anybody? 4917 Who says I''m afther doing any sich thing, Mr Daly?"
4917Who should be a brother to you, if I am not? 4917 Who talked of murdering you?
4917Who the deuce was Paddy Rea?
4917Who then? 4917 Who told you, you fool?"
4917Who tould you all this, Biddy? 4917 Who''s talking of dhriving him out?
4917Who''s that?
4917Who''s that?
4917Who''s that?
4917Who''s the old beau?
4917Who''s there? 4917 Who''s to receive my rents?
4917Who, then, do you expect will pay them? 4917 Who?--what?--Brien Boru?
4917Why did n''t he think so then, before he encouraged me to receive him? 4917 Why did they let that priest escape them?"
4917Why not?
4917Why wo n''t you talk to me then, in the spirit in which I am talking to you? 4917 Why, Anty,"said Martin,"you an''t fool enough to believe what Daly''s been saying?
4917Why, Dot-- how can you go on so? 4917 Why, Frank,"said their mother, now excited into absolute animation;"his fortune was more than double hers, was n''t it?--who''ll have it now?"
4917Why, I did n''t say so,said the doctor, looking at the widow;"but I suppose there''ll be no harm-- eh, Mrs Kelly?"
4917Why, I suppose the fact is, the debts are all your own, eh?
4917Why, I suppose there''s no immediate hurry?
4917Why, did you hear anything?
4917Why, drat it, man; was n''t Dr Colligan with you less than an hour ago, telling you you must come here, av you wanted to see her?
4917Why, perhaps, just at present, you are too weak to move; only would n''t it be more comfortable for you to be in your own house? 4917 Why, was there any schaming betwixt you?"
4917Why, what the devil did I say?
4917Why; wo n''t Mr Martin? 4917 Will he be at home, Kelly, do you think?"
4917Will you give fourteen to one against Brien Boru?
4917Will you see your mother before you go, Adolphus?
4917Will you take twelve to one?
4917With matrimony as the winning- post?
4917With the pistols again?
4917Wo n''t he be always dhrunk now?
4917Wo n''t to- morrow morning do?
4917Would n''t it be the best plan, Dot, to carry her off?
4917Would you not buy them yourself, Blake?
4917Would you put them into the gorse at once then?
4917Yes, to you, Martin Kelly: is n''t that quare?
4917You ai n''t in earnest, are you, about his going to- day?
4917You and Kilcullen do n''t hit it off together-- eh, Ballindine?
4917You did n''t know, I suppose,said the successful viscount,"that Dot Blake has bought Brien Boru?"
4917You did n''t see that, Biddy?
4917You did n''t tell mother what you''re afther, did you?
4917You did not suffer much, then, except the anxiety, Mr O''Joscelyn?
4917You do n''t mean that the people made any attack on the parsonage?
4917You do n''t mean to say that Miss Lynch-- my sister-- is in this inn, and that you intend to prevent my seeing her? 4917 You do n''t mean you''ve really been staying with Lady Sarah?"
4917You do n''t say my father?
4917You do n''t think Barry Lynch''ll stay at Dunmore afther you''ve married his sisther?
4917You have made up your difference, then, with Miss Wyndham?
4917You have n''t promised that?
4917You have n''t quarrelled, have you, Frank?
4917You know Savarius O''Leary,said Morris, anxious to tell his story,"eh, Tierney?"
4917You know him, do n''t you, Lord Ballindine?
4917You know the bishop christened him, do n''t you?
4917You mean that you love him?
4917You will go then, immediately?
4917You wo n''t come before me and Mr Brew, then?
4917You would n''t believe what Mat Tierney would say? 4917 You''ll be rewarded hereafther, mother; shure wo n''t it all go for charity?"
4917You''ll have plenty always to talk to now-- eh, Anty?
4917You''ll not be long, I suppose?
4917You''re not getting so fond of the turf, I hope, as to be giving up the field for it? 4917 You''re not going to give me up?
4917You''re not regretting the throuble Anty is to you, mother?
4917You''re prepared for squalls with Barry, I suppose?
4917You''re quite sure you knocked him down?
4917You''ve given over all thoughts then, about Lynch''s offer-- eh, Martin?--I suppose you''ve done with all that, now?
4917You''ve told Mrs Kelly, have n''t you, that I''m to see Barry alone?
4917_ I_ have him turned out, mamma? 4917 ''Howard the Dane,''said Mahon,''how the duce did any of the Howards become Danes?'' 4917 ''Is it my friend in black, you mane?'' 4917 ''Well, av''it should come to pass that you do marry her-- of course you''d expect to have the money settled on herself?'' 4917 ''Well,--why do n''t you answer me? 4917 ''Why not?'' 4917 --Hang him!--and had he really given any one the power to speak to him in such language as that? 4917 After such an engagement, sir, you come to me and talk about a girl loving another? 4917 Afther I''m dead and gone-- long long after I''m in my cold grave, will you do that for me, Martin?.
4917Afther all''s said and done, is n''t he the best frind you''ve got?"
4917Ai n''t I a Protestant, Mr Armstrong, and ai n''t you a Protestant clergyman?
4917Am I to offer him half the property on condition he''ll consent to marry my sister?
4917And Fanny, too-- could Fanny have agreed, so soon, to give her hand to another?
4917And are you going to wait for what he likes?"
4917And do you think I can raise such a sum as that at a week''s warning?"
4917And how do you help me?
4917And if she sent none, what notice ought she to take of it?
4917And is Fanny much cut up?"
4917And now does n''t she love a convert and hate a Puseyite?"
4917And now, do you choose to hear my professional advice, and behave to me as you ought and shall do?
4917And now, tell me at once, what''s this I hear about you and the Kellys?"
4917And shall I call on you to- morrow, my lord?
4917And that I lay in bed all day, devising iniquity in my dreams?
4917And thin, did n''t he thry and do for herself with his own hands?
4917And what brought her here?
4917And what is it I can do for you?"
4917And what is it your misthress is wishing to do now?
4917And what were Fanny''s thoughts about her cousin?
4917And when that was obtained, why should the care for any one?
4917And who comes next?"
4917And why would n''t you tell me what was going on between you?"
4917And will I go up, and be bringing Miss Anty down, ma''am?"
4917And will that sum set you completely free in the world?"
4917And yet, if she had to see him now, could she reject him?
4917And you''ll be over in an hour then?
4917And,"I hope I see your lordship well, my lord?"
4917Anty, get up!--get up, will you!--What ails you?"
4917Are the horses disposed of yet, Kilcullen?"
4917Are they to stay ten days?
4917Are you aware that you kept your mother and myself two hours waiting for dinner yesterday?"
4917Are you aware what your income is?"
4917Are you going to answer me, Anty?"
4917Are you going to take the cart and horses clean away from me?
4917As for Kilcullen, if he interferes with me or my name in any way, I''ll--""You''ll what?--thrash him?"
4917As to refusing you, it''s not at all likely: where would she look for a better offer?"
4917As you''re so fond of accomplishments, perhaps you''ll take me yourself by- and- by?"
4917At length Martin said,"Av''you''ve got another of them notices to give my mother, Mr Daly, why do n''t you do it?"
4917Barry gave a long sigh--"Wouldn''t he give six hundred, Daly?
4917Barry?"
4917Besides, could she give him up now?
4917Besides, what''s ten years between man and wife?"
4917Besides, why do n''t you spake to her?"
4917But as to the wife-- why, the less said the better-- eh, Martin?
4917But did he not ask to see me?"
4917But did he railly sthrike you in arnest?"
4917But has your sister refused to pay the half?
4917But how could Lord Ballindine have the face to own it?
4917But how should she receive her lover?
4917But is it thrue, Mrs Kelly, that Martin will live up in the big house yonder?"
4917But it''s very easy to find fault; what have you done, yourself, for their amusement?"
4917But look here, my dear; Fanny is of age, is n''t she?"
4917But still the same question recurred,--what was to be done?
4917But still-- I suppose there''s no objection to Mr Armstrong hearing what you have to say?"
4917But tell me-- all this''ll be costing money, wo n''t, it?
4917But that''s quite a separate affair; you do n''t expect Martin Kelly to pay your debts, I suppose?"
4917But then, why was it so sudden?
4917But was he contented?
4917But we should be dreadfully put about, eh, Griffiths?"
4917But what can we do, my dear?
4917But what makes you stick up for them?
4917But what the deuce made him say, so publicly, that your match was off, Ballindine?
4917But what was she to do?
4917But what were you going to say you''d do?"
4917But where''ll you live, Martin?
4917But whom was he to send?
4917But, surely, if I am not wrong in asking, the match between you and Miss Wyndham is broken off?"
4917By the bye, could n''t you go to Anty first, so that we wo n''t be disturbed over our punch?"
4917Can all your sorrow again restore him to his friends?
4917Can such doings, Kilcullen, give me any hopes for the future?
4917Can the possession of her brother''s money have made so vile a change in her character?
4917Can you let me have it?"
4917Can you really think he meant Colligan to murder his sister?"
4917Can--""My lord-- I am extremely sorry for the dinner: what can I say more?
4917Come what come may to him, will you be his frind?
4917Come, Anty, dear, what''s the good of losing time?
4917Come, Doctor Colligan, speak man-- isn''t that the truth?
4917Come, are they not exactly her traits?
4917Come, girls, av''ye''ve anything to tell, why do n''t you out wid it and have done?
4917Could Barry have heard of his engagement?
4917Could I ever bring my lips to own affection for another, without being overwhelmed with shame and disgrace?
4917Could all your tears bring him back to you?
4917Could any conduct be worse than that?--any disgrace deeper?
4917Could he not send somebody else?
4917Could n''t yer honer call agin about four or five o''clock?
4917Could n''t you make her understand that she''d be all right if she''d come to the house again?"
4917Could she be the same Fanny who had so entirely belonged to him, who had certainly loved him truly once?
4917Could she bear that she should be subjected to the construction which would fairly be put upon her conduct, if she acted in this manner?
4917Could you yourself, now, positively swear that she was out of her mind?"
4917Dear Frank, One cries out,"what are you at?"
4917Dearest, dearest Fanny, will you, can you, return my love?"
4917Did I ask you for your precious time, or anything else?
4917Did he appear as if he wished to see me again?"
4917Did he appear to think that he had been badly treated?"
4917Did he send any message to me?"
4917Did n''t you imagine, now, that I habitually sat up all night, gambling, and drinking buckets of champagne and brandy- and- water?
4917Did she quarrel with Barry, Meg?"
4917Did she tell you she wanted to come here?".
4917Did she tell you to come to me?"
4917Did you ever hear of Martin Kelly?
4917Did you not authorise me to do so?"
4917Did you not do so spontaneously, and of your own accord?"
4917Did you not refuse Lord Ballindine?"
4917Do n''t you dread it, Fanny?"
4917Do n''t you know Barry thinks himself one of the raal gentry now?
4917Do n''t you know that such men as he will tell any lie; will do any dirty job?
4917Do n''t you see?"
4917Do n''t you think she would?"
4917Do they know that you have repented of the refusal you gave Lord Ballindine?"
4917Do you agree to this?"
4917Do you give your friendship so easily?"
4917Do you mean to comply with my request?"
4917Do you mean to say there''s nothing to prevent an idiot like that from marrying?"
4917Do you remember anything about it?"
4917Do you remember that you have engaged to repay me these sums?--do you remember that, or have such trifles escaped your recollection?"
4917Do you remember the way he rode a- top of that poor bitch of mine the other day-- Goneaway, you know; the best bitch in the pack?"
4917Do you remember what a show we made of Peter Simple at Kilrue?"
4917Do you remember, Barry; it''s but a week or two ago and you threatened to kill me for the sake of our father''s money?
4917Do you think I can look back on your conduct with satisfaction or content?
4917Do you think I would stoop to flatter you?
4917Do you think, Selina, the O''Joscelyns would mind coming again without any notice?
4917Does she waltz?"
4917Ellison?"
4917Fanny Wyndham, who cared so little for the prosy admonitions of her uncle, a few months since, can she have altered her disposition so completely?
4917General Bourke?
4917Had Anty repented of her bargain, during his short absence?
4917Had n''t he heard of it over and over again?
4917Had not you better at once become her guardian yourself, sir, and manage the matter in your own way?"
4917Had she gone off with Martin?
4917Had she gone to a magistrate, to swear against him?
4917Had she run away from him?
4917Had that old reptile Moylan, played him false, and spoilt his game?
4917Has there been anything between you?
4917Have I not given him my solemn word?
4917Have I not pledged myself to him as his wife?
4917Have I not suffered those caresses which would have been disgraceful had I not looked on myself as almost already his bride?
4917Have I not sworn to him a hundred times that my heart was all his own?
4917Have I too much of the taint of the wicked world to be the friend of so pure a creature as you?"
4917Have there been any words between you and Lord Cashel?
4917Have you seen crucifixes in the rooms of Church of England clergymen?
4917Have you, or have you not, made up your mind to marry Anty?"
4917He came round then, did he, eh, Daly?"
4917He felt that Handicap Lodge was no place for him; and besides, why should he bear Dot''s disagreeable sarcasms?
4917He merely asked the name of the"blackguard"whom Miss Anty meant to marry?
4917He wanted to ask a hundred questions;--how the poor lad had died?
4917He''d been drinking, Mr Armstrong-- drinking a good deal that night-- isn''t that true, Doctor Colligan?
4917He''s as bright as a star, is n''t he?"
4917He''s at his lies again, I suppose?
4917How can you go on that way?"
4917How can you think I would joke on such a subject?
4917How could he bear his honours with more dignity, or grace his high position with more decorum?
4917How could he change for the better?
4917How do you know Colligan wo n''t be repating all them things to him?"
4917How long do you think he stayed at Glare Abbey?"
4917How long will you allow yourself to go on in this sad manner?"
4917How many Protestants did you say you have, Mr Armstrong?"
4917How the deuce could they have got the will drawn?"
4917How then would you have paid your debts?"
4917How was I to help it?"
4917How''s the ould lady?"
4917However, by degrees, I asked her plump, whether she''d any mind to be Mrs. Kelly?
4917However, very little seemed to do for him, for he soon roused himself, and said,"I wonder how the devil, Dot, you do without borrowing?
4917I am going to leave you to- morrow, perhaps for ever; and you will not listen to the last word I wish to speak to you?"
4917I believe I mentioned to you Mr Lynch was looking out for someone to act as agent over his portion of the Dunmore property?"
4917I hope you''ve made a good morning''s work of it?"
4917I know she''ll recover, and then what shall I do?
4917I mean, I''m sure Kilcullen said it, and in the most public manner he could; and now, the question is, what had I better do?"
4917I promised his aunt to be civil to him: ca n''t you ask him down?"
4917I suppose I can go into the bed- room, at any rate?"
4917I suppose I''ll lose a good tenant any way?"
4917I suppose he does n''t like me a bit too well; but you''re not weak enough to be afraid to say that you''ve been at Handicap Lodge?"
4917I suppose my word''s as good as Colligan''s, gentlemen?
4917I suppose she''s alone?"
4917I suppose the bishop is in Dublin at present?"
4917I suppose we can throw him overboard afterwards, ca n''t we?"
4917I suppose you are aware that there is a great deal to be talked over between us?"
4917I suppose you''re not afraid of him?"
4917I suppose, dear, you''ll go abroad the first thing?"
4917I suppose, gentlemen, I''m not to be condemned on the word of such a man as that?"
4917I suppose, if the priest were out, and he told you to run the dogs through the gooseberry- bushes, you''d do it?"
4917I think I''ll do now, wo n''t I?"
4917I thought Blake always did his business?"
4917I thought they made him out guilty?"
4917I trust, then, I may have the pleasure of feeling that Lord Ballindine attributes to me no personal unkindness?"
4917I was screwed last night; eh, Terry?"
4917I wonder is Mr Blake standing much on him, my lord?"
4917I wonder what steps the Government will take now?
4917I wonder whether they''ll go to London this season?"
4917I wonder, Selina, if I were to write to my sister, whether she could send me over anything that would answer?"
4917I wondher what he''s to get for swearing agin us?"
4917I''d like to know where some of their ancesthers wor, when the Kellys of ould wor ruling the whole counthry?"
4917I''m no politician myself, but the only question seems to be, whether they have n''t gone a step too far?"
4917I''m quite sure she''ll make a will if I beg her; they ca n''t hinder me seeing my own, only, dying sister; can they, Daly?
4917I''m sure I do n''t know-- I would not for the world treat Lord Ballindine shabbily; but what can I do, my dear?"
4917I''m sure he must have been sorry-- I''m sure he''d feel it"--and she paused, and sobbed again--"He had heard of Harry''s death, then?"
4917I''m sure we shall like her; come, Frank, do tell us-- when are we to see Lady Ballindine?"
4917I''ve now given you my best advice; if your mind''s not yet made up, perhaps you''ll have the goodness to let me hear from you when it is?"
4917If I understand you, you are afraid that you should be thought to have treated Lord Ballindine badly?"
4917If he were a prisoner, how did he manage to tell us all what he did at the Hall yesterday?"
4917If he were gone past all redemption, you would not have me encourage you while I love another?"
4917If he were to write, what security was there that his letter would be allowed to reach Fanny?
4917If the mother and child could n''t have the best of minding here, where could they?"
4917If there is anyone in fault it is Adolphus; but, as you say, what shall we do to prevent further misunderstanding?
4917If you''ve nothing else to say; why do n''t you go?
4917In the course of the fortnight, she made up her mind that all Lord Cashel had said to Lord Ballindine should be unsaid;--but who was to do it?
4917In this room, was n''t it, doctor?"
4917Is it Miss Judith O''Joscelyn?
4917Is it a secret?"
4917Is it about poor Harry?
4917Is it wise, is it decorous, is it maidenly in you, to indulge any longer in so vain a passion?
4917Is n''t Anty to the fore herself to say who''s robbed her?
4917Is n''t it because you''re afraid of him?
4917Is n''t that hard, Mr Daly?"
4917Is n''t that what you want?"
4917Is sixty thousand pounds in one year, and more than double within three or four, indifference?
4917Is that it?"
4917Is that plain?"
4917Is that to be your answer, and all I''m to get from you?"
4917Is that what you mean?"
4917Is there an honest man in Connaught at all, I wonder?"
4917Is there anything you''d wish me to give to any person?"
4917Is there anything, Mr Armstrong, in which I can assist either you or his lordship?"
4917Is there people in both the rooms?
4917Is they to ax Barry Lynch, or is they to let it alone, and put the sisther into the sod without a word said to him about it?
4917Is this true?"
4917Is your sister at the inn now?"
4917It was I made you bring Anty down here, was n''t it?
4917It was a regular planned scheme among them?"
4917It was however only what he had expected, and calculated upon; and what should he care for the Dunmore people?
4917It was only this morning I had a long_ tête- à- tête_--""What, with Mr Hill?"
4917It was yesterday you came here?"
4917It will be nothing to you, Barry, out of the whole; but see and pay it at once, will you?"
4917It would have been betther so, eh Martin?"
4917It would n''t be easy to beat Barry, would it, Kelly?"
4917It''s too late now, I suppose?"
4917Jane answered, in the same voice, from the parlour upstairs,"Shure, mother, ai n''t I getting Anty her tay?"
4917Joseph Armstrong?
4917Let''s see, what''s the day she runs?"
4917Martin looked rather stupid all this time, but he plucked up courage and said,"Who''s going to quarrel?
4917May I tell him not to despair?"
4917May I trouble you to make yourself scarce?
4917Meanwhile, the less said about it the better; remember that, girls, will you?"
4917Miss Lynch is nothing to me, mind; how should she be?
4917Mr Armstrong, what do you go and say that for?"
4917Mr Barry wo n''t be stirring yet?"
4917Mr Daly wo n''t expect, I suppose, but what you should stay and hear what it is he has to say?"
4917My dear Fanny, who ever heard of amusing a bishop?
4917My dear Fanny, why do n''t you do something?--why do n''t you occupy yourself?
4917Not but what I did hear, as how could I help it?
4917Now is n''t that sufficiently like for a portrait?"
4917Of course you heard the rumour, last week, of his heels being cracked?
4917Of course you know all about his will?"
4917Of course you''ll take the doctor''s information?"
4917Oh, if you knew him as well--""Did n''t you hear Ballindine say he was his next door neighbour in Mayo?"
4917Or, do you want me to beat my breast and tear my hair?"
4917Papa could n''t have said that Fanny had accepted Adolphus?"
4917Poor Harry!--did you see much of him during his illness?"
4917Pray who is the lady?"
4917Prijean?"
4917Put yourself in my place, I say; and tell me fairly what your own wishes would be?"
4917Rheumatism, I suppose?"
4917Shall I do anything for you here about Brien?
4917Shall I say for a week or ten days?"
4917She could n''t write to her lover and ask him to come back to her!--Whither could she go?
4917She had lost her brother; could she afford also to lose her lover?
4917She merely said, in a voice which seemed to him to be anything but promising,"Well, sir?"
4917She then gave a long sigh, and repeated that difficult question--"Who is they to ax to the wake?"
4917She''s entirely off with Ballindine, is n''t she?"
4917Shure would n''t I say as much to Barry Lynch himself?
4917Shure, he''ll niver be afther coming upstairs, will he, Meg?"
4917So yer honer''s been down to the widdy''s?
4917Some one who could not be refused admittance to Fanny, and who might at any rate learn what her wishes and feelings were?
4917Something wrong about Fanny, I suppose?"
4917Suppose we get into our saddles?"
4917Supposing me, as I wish I were, fathoms deep below the earth, what would you do?
4917Supposing you''d had younger brothers, Lord Kilcullen-- supposing that I had had six or eight sons instead of only one; what would you have done?
4917Sure, an''t they as good as man and wife-- all as one?"
4917Surely you wo n''t refuse to listen to reason?
4917Surely, Frank, you must have heard her speak about worsted- work?"
4917Surely, he could not have killed her?
4917Surely, if you are to have half the profits, you should at any rate pay half the expenses?"
4917Surely, your uncle means to act for your own happiness; and do n''t you know Lord Ballindine has those horrid horses?"
4917Tell me, at once, will you-- is it true, that you''ve promised to marry him?"
4917That is, I''m just going to bed; what is it you want?"
4917That''s being a brother and a guardian, is it, Masther Barry?
4917The docthor says maybe she''ll not go this time; but he''s much in dread of a re- claps--""Relapse, Mrs Kelly, I suppose?"
4917The people are not attacking you, I suppose, because he''s let loose?"
4917The same thing has been the case in all your other amusements and pursuits--""Well, my lord, I confess it all; is n''t that enough?"
4917There''s a large string of his at Murphy''s now, is n''t there, Dot?"
4917There''s not more friendship, I suppose, between you and Barry Lynch now, than there used to be?"
4917These words fell cold upon Fanny''s ears,"Did he leave any-- any message for me?"
4917This last was too much for the father, and he again roared out,"Well, sir, what are you standing there for?
4917Undher these circumstances, would n''t he be the best tenant you could find for Dunmore?
4917Was he ever out before?"
4917Was he waiting to be asked?
4917Was it on this subject, Mr Lynch, you were good enough to send for me?"
4917Was she so ignorant of her own nature as to suppose it possible that she should ever entertain anybody?
4917Was she to send an answer, and if so, what answer?
4917Was you talking to Moylan about Anty and her fortune?"
4917We''re friends now, are we not?--Everything''s forgiven and forgotten, is n''t it, Barry?"
4917Well, Martin, is the bone broken?"
4917Well, after a little, the ould chap came to me one morning, and asked me all manner of questions-- whether I knew Anty Lynch?
4917Well, how''s Anty to- night?"
4917Well, will you take a glass of wine?"
4917Well; it''s a great triumph to beat those English lads on their own ground, is n''t it?
4917Well?"
4917Were you coming into the inn?"
4917Were you ever in Conciliation Hall yet, Morris?"
4917What ails Miss Anty?"
4917What ails you?"
4917What am I to do now?"
4917What am I to do, Griffiths, about that horrid woman?"
4917What am I to get by such a plan as that?"
4917What am I to say to him?
4917What are you to do?
4917What can I say more?
4917What can I say to you, Kilcullen, to make you look on your own conduct in the proper light?"
4917What crotchet have you got in your head now?
4917What did it matter what people said?
4917What do you mean to eat and drink?"
4917What do you say to this?
4917What do you say, Morris?"
4917What do you think of him, now that you have seen more of him than you ever did before?"
4917What does the man mean by''conspiracy,''eh, Martin?"
4917What does your mother say about the money part of the business?"
4917What else could you expect?"
4917What has a lone woman like me, Father Pat, to do wid sthrangers like them?
4917What is it then you think of doing?"
4917What is it to you what Lord Cashel likes?
4917What is it you''re going to do?"
4917What is it you''re wanting?"
4917What is there to delay you?"
4917What put it into your head?"
4917What right had she to be angry because he kept horses?
4917What should he now do with himself?
4917What the d----l shall I do now?
4917What the deuce was he to do?
4917What the dickens could they be at there so long?
4917What was he to do?
4917What was he to say to Miss Wyndham?--how was he to commence?
4917What would she become if she married Lord Ballindine?"
4917What''d your lordship advise me to do?"
4917What''ll Mrs O''Kelly say of my coming in this way, without notice?"
4917What''s her love to me, sir?
4917What''s she afeard of, that she should n''t hear what anyone has to say to her?"
4917What''s that you''re saying, Mary?"
4917What''s the good of your all coming here with such a story as that?
4917What''s the matter with you, you fool; d''ye think I''d tell you a lie about it?"
4917What''s the matter, Mr Daly?"
4917What''s the news at Dunmore?"
4917What''s this you''re going to do?''
4917What, Fanny, what are your hopes?
4917Whatever troubles he''s in, will you lend him your hand?
4917When Barry would say,"Well, doctor, how is she to- day?"
4917When I''m gone, will you be a frind to him?"
4917When did Miss Lynch leave the house?"
4917When did the police ever take any of Father Flannery''s own people?"
4917When last we were here together why did you not tell me the whole truth?"
4917When she got to the door, she turned round, and said,"And is there a notice, as you calls it, to be sarved on Miss Lynch?"
4917When will you be able to start?"
4917Where am I to raise that, sir?
4917Where''d she be going thin out of this?"
4917Where''s your evidence?"
4917Wherever he may go, or whatever he may do, you wo n''t forget he was my brother; will you, Martin?
4917Who are you, I say; and what d''you want?"
4917Who does n''t know Savy?"
4917Who is it you mean to ask?"
4917Who is the Riverind Augustus?"
4917Who was it made it for you?"
4917Who''ll believe such a drunken ruffian as that Colligan, I''d like to know?
4917Who''ll get all her money?"
4917Who''s put themselves in the power of Moylan?"
4917Whose house are you going to, Mr Daly, av''it''s not impertinent asking?"
4917Why did he not dare to answer her?
4917Why did he so slowly sip that third glass of wine?
4917Why did he stay there so long?
4917Why do n''t you go to Doctor Colligan, av''she''s ill; and not come knocking here?"
4917Why do n''t you tell me, Frank, when you know how anxious I am?"
4917Why do n''t you tell me, Frank?"
4917Why do you believe him, when you wo n''t believe me?
4917Why for should he not live there?"
4917Why should I be dhriving him out of his own house?
4917Why would n''t he come here and vindicate himself?
4917Why would you go out on the wet grass?--Is there none of the black currant jam left?"
4917Why, Kilcullen, what have you done with it?"
4917Why, Kilcullen, what have you done with it?--where has it gone?
4917Why, at any rate, did you take pains to make me think them so much less than they really are?"
4917Why, d''you think you''re to marry whom you please, without even telling me of it?
4917Why, she''s six hundred a year, has n''t she?"
4917Why, shure, wo n''t there be rashions of ating and lashings of dhrinking?
4917Why, that must be four or five thousand pounds?"
4917Will her loving another pay your debts?"
4917Will she go, do you think?"
4917Will you be plazed to take a chair?"
4917Will you do all this, for my sake?"
4917Will you do me the favour to inform me what your present plans are?"
4917Will you go with me?"
4917Will you not rather strive to forget him who has forgotten you?"
4917Will you swear you''ll marry no one without my leave?"
4917Will you take that?"
4917Will you tell me, Fanny, what was the object in asking Mat Tierney to meet such a party?"
4917Will you, my lord, allow me to see Miss Wyndham?
4917Will your lordship see the mare out to- day?"
4917Wo n''t Miss Lynch agree to pay the half herself?"
4917Would n''t it be better, Fanny, if you were to go to him yourself?"
4917Would n''t that be a fine schame?"
4917Would the servants swear that?
4917Would they allow her to be alone with him, if only for a moment, at their first meeting?
4917Would you rob your own father?"
4917Write to a man, and beg him to accept you?
4917Yes; Daly had been sorry to hear that Miss Lynch was very ill."What shall I do,"continued Barry,"if they say that she''s left a will?"
4917You ca n''t but come together; you''ll be the executhor in the will; wo n''t you, Martin?
4917You do n''t mean to say there is n''t a law to prevent that?"
4917You do n''t suppose I''d have dreamed of letting him off, if the law could have touched him?
4917You do n''t think me impertinent, do you, to talk about yourself?"
4917You do n''t think, do you, that he objects to our being at Kelly''s Court?
4917You have n''t much land in your own hands, have you?"
4917You knew my father, I believe, Mr Daly?"
4917You know Lord Kilcullen''s come home, Lady George?"
4917You know that, by the will, my sister Anty gets from four to five hundred a year?"
4917You know when old Sim died, my lord?"
4917You know, he would keep those horrid horses, and all that kind of thing; and what more could you do than just let Lord Cashel settle it?"
4917You see, Anty''s got this money, and-- You know, do n''t you, Mr Daly, poor Anty''s not just like other people?"
4917You surely will not willingly continue to indulge a hopeless passion?"
4917You will not object, my lord, to my seeing Miss Wyndham?"
4917You would n''t take it ill of him, would you, Frank?"
4917You''ll be marrying soon, I suppose?"
4917You''ll not go to him?"
4917You''re not going to marry the daughter, are you?"
4917You''re not going to run off to London again?"
4917Your few words will last nearly till dinner, I suppose?"
4917Your--""Did you want me to crawl here on my hands and knees?"
4917[ FOOTNOTE 28: bon gré--(French) with the consent of]"But what ought I to do?
4917[ FOOTNOTE 32: amende honorable--(French) apology]"Will you authorise me to see Martin Kelly, and to treat with him?
4917[ FOOTNOTE 35: meering-- a well- marked boundary, such as a ditch or fence, between farms, fields, bogs, etc]"How far''ll you go yourself, Armstrong?
4917along with Barry-- when I and Anty''s married?
4917and Martin drew a little nearer to her--"who''s talking of fighting?
4917and as he spoke the doctor seized him by the throat, and shook him violently in his strong grasp--"who told you I was a fit person for such a plan?
4917and at what time?"
4917and where are you going?"
4917and who has it now?
4917and why should n''t you let me tell Martin all?
4917and wo n''t it be a great thing for Miss Anty, to be sib to a lord?
4917at last he said--"did he say anything about-- about Fanny?"
4917because he threatened and frightened you?
4917but I do-- why not?"
4917call on Kilcullen for an explanation?"
4917could she tell him that all the vows that had been made between them were to be as nothing?
4917did he though?"
4917do n''t be saying such things,"said Martin;"what business is that of our''n?
4917exclaimed Martin,"and are ye niver going to opin them big doors?"
4917exclaimed the other, jumping from his recumbent position on the sofa,"You do n''t mean to tell me you''re going to marry Anty Lynch?"
4917for would n''t Mr Martin make her a tidy, dacent, good husband?"
4917he called out loudly;"what do you want?"
4917how can you speak in that manner now?--how can you speak in that wicked, thoughtless, reckless manner?"
4917is it a stranger?"
4917is n''t it Bingham?
4917now that she was rich?
4917or candles on the altar- steps of English churches?"
4917or is the Reverend Mr Hill one of those to whom you give that sweetest of all names?"
4917or will you go out of this and look out for another attorney?
4917replied her brother,"d''you think I want the servants to hear what I''ve got to say?"
4917said Anty;"he must be very hungry, afther his ride-- and wo n''t you see your mother afther your journey, Mr Martin?
4917said Barry, with a hoarse and croaking voice--"isn''t she dying as she is?--and is n''t she better dead than alive?
4917said Blake,"or, rather, next barrack neighbour; for they dispense with doors in Mayo-- eh, Frank?
4917said Blake--''and why not?
4917said Colligan, apparently not understanding him,"a lease for perpetuity at how much an acre?"
4917said Guss,"you did not take the man away from his dead wife?"
4917said Martin,"what for will you be talking?"
4917said Martin;"why, what should you do-- but just wish Mr Daly good morning, and stay where you are, snug and comfortable?"
4917said Meg;"how can you iver be frinds with the like of him?
4917said he to himself--"is it possible she should be so servile and so mean?
4917said he;"is n''t your business over yet, Ballindine?
4917said he;"or, after all, am I too bad?
4917said the widow;"an''what notice is it at all, you''re going to serve on a poor lone woman like me?"
4917says I,''and is n''t the best way for her to marry?
4917screamed her ladyship;"no allowance?--how is the poor boy to live?"
4917she continued;"and ai n''t we all frinds here?
4917shouted Armstrong;"to poison his sister?"
4917the other,"what are you after?"
4917to be locked into the parlour agin-- and be nigh murdhered?
4917was he again to be reduced to poverty, to want, to despair, by her whom he so hated?
4917was he ready, willing, to be bought?
4917was it herself?"
4917was she so grieved that she was forced to part from him?
4917what am I to do, Mrs Kelly?"
4917what can he be writing about?
4917what do you mean?
4917what for should she promise Barry Lynch whom she will marry, or whom she wo n''t?"
4917what is it you wish or intend?
4917what kind and style of life would you choose to live?
4917what promises of amendment do you afford?
4917what regret do you show?
4917what''ll I do at all?
4917whether he had been long ill?--whether it had been expected?
4917whether we did n''t used to be great friends?
4917who told you I would sell my soul for your paltry land?"
4917who told you to come to me for such a deed?
4917who, at any rate, should you look on as a friend, if not on me?
4917why should you suppose that I am not so?
4917you''re a fool,"exclaimed Martin:"why ca n''t you let the man go on?--ain''t he paid for saying it?