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
28791All this time?
28791Can_ you_ shingle?
28791Did n''t I warn you?
28791Do we really_ see_ the ocean?
28791Do you need another hand?
28791Do you want some skilled help?
28791Have I been wrong?
28791Have times changed? 28791 Have you got it yet?"
28791How can I go east? 28791 How can so many people find a living in one place?"
28791How can we share our good fortune with her and with sister Jessie?
28791How could I do that? 28791 How do I look?"
28791How long did you_ think_ you''d slept-- two days?
28791How will he receive me? 28791 I hope to be able to work into a professorship in literature some day.--What do you intend to do?"
28791If the city is miles across, how am I to get from the railway station to my hotel without being assaulted?
28791Is n''t it the next day?
28791Is that thee, friend Richard?
28791Is the workman in America, as in the old world, coming to be a man despised?
28791Richard, is that you?
28791Shall I give up my career at this point? 28791 So you are Dick''s boy?
28791Well, Dick,Grandad began,"so ye''re plannin''to go west, air ye?"
28791Well, Garland,said he,"what are you going to do after you graduate this June?"
28791What am I to do?
28791What are you going to do with it?
28791What are you going to do?
28791What did you gain by this disagreeable habit of early rising?
28791What do you mean by such a performance?
28791What does it all mean?
28791What is it, mother?
28791What is it, my boy?
28791What is that?
28791What is the matter?
28791What is the use of laying up a store of goods against the early destruction of the world?
28791What is there for me to do out here?
28791What is this about?
28791What would he do there? 28791 What''s that?
28791What''s the matter?
28791What''s the meaning of all this?
28791When can you move?
28791Where did you get all that fruit?
28791Where have you been?
28791Where will we stay?
28791Why, mother!--what is the matter?
28791Wo n''t you be seated?
28791Wo n''t you come and see your poor old father when he comes home from the war?
28791Yes, but where are your tools?
28791You think it not quite like me? 28791 You will write to me, wo n''t you?"
28791Your father is suffering sharply, is he?
28791_ It''s the next day!_"We''ve slept twenty- four hours!--What will the landlady think of us?
28791***** As I was leaving next day for Chicago, I said,"Mother, what shall I bring you from the city?"
28791Addison wants you to spend the winter with him, and mother wants to see David once more-- why not go?
28791At last on the door- step she turned and said,"Wo n''t you come in again?"
28791At the end of a long talk he said,"Why do n''t you come to Boston and take a special course at the University?
28791At this point David came in, and everybody shouted,"Did you stop them?"
28791Beckie, where are you going to put these children?"
28791Ca n''t you borrow a little?"
28791Can any other country on earth surpass the United States in the ruthless broadcast dispersion of its families?
28791Can you keep me all night?"
28791Can you wonder therefore that I trembled with joyous excitement as I paced the platform next morning waiting for the chariot of my romance?
28791Could any other land furnish a more incredible momentary re- assembling of scattered units?
28791Cross?"
28791David, looking toward the kitchen, said,"Is n''t there some way to keep her from working?"
28791Do you wonder that when I left Boston a week or two later, I did so with elation-- with a sense of conquest?
28791Does n''t the whole migration of the Garlands and McClintocks seem a madness?"
28791Father was inclined to ask,"What''s the good of it?"
28791For the glance of eyes undimmed of tears, for the hair untouched with gray?
28791For thirty years you''ve carried mother on a ceaseless journey-- to what end?
28791Grandmother was cheerful in the midst of her toil and discomfort, for what other mother had such a family of noble boys and handsome girls?
28791Grandmother was waiting for us and our places were ready, so what did it matter?
28791Has a spirit of unrest and complaining developed in the American farmer?"
28791Have you spoken to the Librarian about it?"
28791He honors bright colors, for has he not set the rainbow in the heavens and made water to reflect the moon?
28791He never failed to ask of a morning,"Well, when are you going back to shingling?"
28791He performed each habitual act with most minute care, till I, impatient of his silence, his seeming indifference, repeated,"Do n''t you understand?
28791His big shoulders began to shake and a chuckle preceded his irritating joke--"Going back to shingling?"
28791How can I best serve my mother?"
28791How can I carry out such a plan?"
28791How could I help it?
28791How could I sneak back with empty pockets?"
28791How could I?
28791How could he?
28791How could people stay all their lives in one place?
28791How is Dick getting along?"
28791How will he look?
28791How''s Belle?"
28791I asked myself,"Why have these stern facts never been put into our literature as they have been used in Russia and in England?
28791I knew that I was physically on the down- grade, but what could I do?
28791I passed on to bay Kittie whose bright eyes seemed to inquire,"What is the matter?"
28791In a meek, husky voice I asked,"Is Mr. Howells in?"
28791Is there not something wrong in our social scheme when the unremitting toiler remains poor?"
28791Is this the''fairy land''in which we were all to''reign like kings''?
28791It''s in a rich and sheltered valley and is filled with associations of your youth.--Haven''t you had enough of pioneering?
28791It''s perfectly legitimate material for a novel, as picturesque in its way as_ The Rise of the Vendà © e_--Can''t you make use of it?"
28791Kirkland had read some of my western sketches and in the midst of his praise of them suddenly asked,"Why do n''t you write fiction?"
28791Like Millet, I asked,"Why should all of a man''s waking hours be spent in an effort to feed and clothe his family?
28791Lonely like a withered tree, What is all the world to me?
28791Made his pile, I s''pose?"
28791Nevertheless I hoped, and in that hope I repeated,"You will write to me, wo n''t you?"
28791Not knowing precisely how to retreat, I faltered out,"Have you a bed for us?"
28791Of what avail this constant quest of gold, beneath the far horizon''s rim?
28791One day, early in''91, as I was calling upon him in his office, he suddenly said,"Garland, why ca n''t you write a serial story for us?
28791One that shall deal with this revolt of the farmers?
28791Should we wear white ties and white vests, or white ties and black vests?
28791Sometimes he would ask,"Do n''t you think the horses ought to have a rest as well as yourselves?"
28791The Doctor understood this feeling and asked,"How much are you paying now?"
28791The scene became too painful for me at last, and I fled away from it-- out into the fields, bitterly asking,"Why should this suffering be?
28791Then there was the famous passage,"Did ye not hear it?"
28791Then, bending down, he asked of me,"What is your name and occupation?"
28791They were at once familiar and mysterious-- mysterious with my new question,"Is this life worth living?"
28791This pleased him greatly, but he asked,"Do you think you can stand it?"
28791Timid souls began to inquire,"Are all Dakota summers like this?"
28791Two hours passed swiftly in this way and as the interview was about to end he asked,"Where do you live?"
28791W''at ye doin''down there?"
28791Want it?
28791Was it only a useless obsession on the part of my pioneer dad?
28791Was she never to enjoy a roomy and comfortable dwelling?
28791Well, what are you doing on the road a night like this?
28791What is it all about, anyhow, this life of ours?
28791What right had I to share in this splendor?
28791What shall I say to him?"
28791What were we to do when our schooling ended?
28791What would you think of such a plot?"
28791What''s the matter?"
28791Where are the''woods and prairie lands''of our song?
28791Who is the writer of it?"
28791Who was she?
28791Why Concord, do you ask?
28791Why could n''t we have slept till six, or even seven?
28791Why do n''t you board with me?
28791Why do n''t you come and stay with me?
28791Why has this land no story- tellers like those who have made Massachusetts and New Hampshire illustrious?"
28791Why not go back and be sheltered by the hills and trees for the rest of your lives?
28791Why rise before the sun?
28791Why should children cry for food in our cities whilst fruits rotted on the vines and wheat had no value to the harvester?
28791Why should mother be wrenched from all her dearest friends and forced to move away to a strange land?"
28791Why should our great new land fall into this slough of discouragement?
28791Why was she there?
21876And that?
21876And what about Tom Linnet?
21876And what do they prove?
21876And you fear they will let the matter drop?
21876Any what?
21876Are any of these agents or detectives working on this case?
21876Are the shells loaded, Joe?
21876Are there many of them?
21876Are these men experienced detectives?
21876Are we too late, Miss O''Gorman?
21876But the other printing office?
21876But what''s it all about? 21876 But who''s to train us, and how could we manage to train others?"
21876But why did you ship the thing to Washington, if it is likely to prove a valuable clue?
21876But why do you attach so much importance to this matter?
21876Did he get any?
21876Did he kick on the bonds?
21876Did he say that?
21876Did n''t you hear?
21876Did you go to the fire, Josie?
21876Do I? 21876 Do n''t you get discouraged, dear, at times?"
21876Do n''t you like the war, then?
21876Do you ever sell any?
21876Do you know Abe Kauffman?
21876Do you know anyone else at the Mansion House?
21876Do you sit up all night?
21876Do you suppose the freight office in Washington would deliver the box to me, on your order?
21876Do you think it right for us to take advantage of the woman''s ignorance?
21876Do you think those are rain clouds, Mary Louise? 21876 Do-- do you think we can make people buy bonds?"
21876Does Tom still do the printing?
21876Does n''t that shame you, sir?
21876Does n''t your secret service badge give you authority?
21876Have n''t you slept well, Gran''pa?
21876Have the Dyers really bought the Dudley- Markham place?
21876Have you gone any farther, Josie?
21876Have you learned anything about the German spy plot?
21876Have you made any discoveries?
21876How about the agents of the department of justice?
21876How about your boasted department of justice, and the secret service?
21876How did it happen, Gran''pa Jim?
21876How did it happen?
21876How did you learn all that, Josie?
21876How did you lose track of Dyer?
21876How did you manage that?
21876How do you know?
21876How old is Annie?
21876How well do you know him personally, madam?
21876How''d you know?
21876How, Irene?
21876How, my dear?
21876I believe that is true, and it proves what a free country this is-- does it not? 21876 I wonder what this means?"
21876I wonder who prints your bills- of- fare?
21876I wonder why he did it?
21876If you please, miss,said Kauffman,"may I put down my arms?
21876Is Mr. Colton here?
21876Is Mr. Kasker in?
21876Is n''t he the only German in town who has denounced our going into the European war?
21876Is n''t his position a political appointment?
21876Is n''t it the duty of every patriotic person to denounce a traitor?
21876Is n''t that carrying consideration too far?
21876Is n''t the Professor rich?
21876Is that as far as you''ve gone?
21876Joe,said Josie impressively,"you know who I am, do n''t you?"
21876Joe,she said earnestly, drawing him aside,"are you going to be busy this evening?"
21876Know anybody here?
21876Like it?
21876Linnet? 21876 May I ask who you are, Miss, and how you came to be in my office?"
21876May I keep this--_thing? 21876 Mrs. Charleworth?
21876No one here knows you,whispered Mary Louise,"wo n''t you speak to me, Josie?"
21876No; one was our supervisor, Andrew Duncan--"And the other man?
21876Oh, so you are aware of that interview?
21876Oh; are you an''Tom friends?
21876Oh; the clothing man? 21876 Ought n''t we to finish with Kasker, first?"
21876Really, it looks like foreign handwriting; does n''t it?
21876Risk? 21876 Sell any brains yet?"
21876Shine, miss?
21876So Mr. Colton is still the head of the company?
21876Suspenders? 21876 The proposition sounds interesting, Irene, and if carried through would doubtless be valuable, but is it practical?"
21876Then how did it get printed?
21876Then it was not an accident?
21876Then neither of the three had purchased any bonds until then?
21876Was he properly qualified?
21876Was n''t New York good enough for you?
21876Was n''t there any plot, then?
21876Was such secrecy necessary?
21876Well, do you know why? 21876 Well, here''s the desk,"said Chief Farnum,"but where are those important papers, Miss O''Gorman?"
21876Well, then, ca n''t this demon be arrested and punished?
21876Well, what about it?
21876Well, what will it cost to fix it up?
21876Well, where''d he get the aunt? 21876 Well, who else did you find disloyal?"
21876Were they clerks, or grocers-- customers?
21876What arguments can you use that we have disregarded?
21876What connection do you suspect?
21876What connection with your enterprise has Tom Linnet?
21876What did you do that for?
21876What did you think of Jake Kasker''s kind of patriotism?
21876What has that old desk to do with-- with--"The German spy plot? 21876 What is it, Gran''pa Jim?"
21876What is it? 21876 What is it?"
21876What is the business of John O''Gorman, your father?
21876What is wrong? 21876 What line is that, Josie?"
21876What''s the matter, dear?
21876What''s the meaning of all the flags, Jake?
21876What''s up?
21876What, only one string to your bow of distrust? 21876 What, then, would you suggest?"
21876When did he intend to go to Washington?
21876Where are they stored?
21876Where are you from?
21876Where are you stopping? 21876 Where?"
21876Who is he?
21876Who is it, and what was he doing?
21876Who is little Annie Boyle?
21876Who likes war, then? 21876 Who?"
21876Why ask questions that I ca n''t answer? 21876 Why did he not show you the projectile before?"
21876Why do n''t you start a hotel of your own?
21876Why do you wonder that?
21876Why not?
21876Why should I give something for nothing?
21876Will you please order your man to get the projectile?
21876Wo n''t it be better to let the authorities deal with him?
21876Would three thousand satisfy you?
21876You did?
21876You fear they will not be able to apprehend the criminal?
21876You mean that you_ wo n''t_ help us, I suppose?
21876You say your father is away from home at present?
21876You selling something?
21876You think I wrote it?
21876You think that, sir?
21876You think you''re kiddin''me, do n''t you? 21876 You wo n''t tell me?"
21876You, child?
21876You? 21876 You?
21876And if he don''t-- if those cursed Germans put an end to him-- then folks will say,''See Jake Kasker over there?
21876And the Professor?"
21876And why?"
21876Are you ill?"
21876Are you quite sure?"
21876Are you sure, Josie?"
21876But perhaps it is something I can do?"
21876But suppose we redeem a few of them, is n''t it worth while?
21876But what becomes of the money, finally?
21876But-- has he really gone?
21876But-- think, girls!--who is known to be against the war, and pro- German?
21876But-- what else has he been paid for?"
21876But_ himmel!_ We do n''t let our kiddies freeze for lack of clothes, do we?
21876Ca n''t one of the clerks attend to you?
21876Ca n''t someone think of something?"
21876Ca n''t you come home, to- night, and have a good talk with me?
21876Ca n''t you guess how I dream of those poor devils I sent to their death in the airplane job?
21876Can we be too careful in these days of espionage?
21876Can you figure that out, Abe Kauffman?
21876Did Jake Kasker buy any of you?"
21876Did n''t I say two different people addressed the circulars in disguised handwriting?
21876Do I, Jake?
21876Do n''t my Jakie''s blood put my name on America''s honor roll?
21876Do n''t you remember how many times I''ve foozled?"
21876Do you mind my having it-- and the envelope?"
21876Do you think that would be right?"
21876Do you think the days of graft are past and gone?
21876Do you wonder they forgot he was once a milk- man, or that every resident of Dorfield swelled with pride at the very sight of him?
21876Does humanity, which bears the burden?
21876Dyer?"
21876Finally she asked:"Do the police know?"
21876Go on, Josie; what happened next?"
21876Ha, ha; pretty good, eh?"
21876Had he been warned of Linnet''s defection?
21876Had he means of communicating with Dyer unknown to Josie?
21876Have politicians become honest now that they are handling untold sums?
21876Have you attended the trial of those suspected of the bomb outrage?"
21876He could n''t afford it, could he?"
21876He looked up, swept her with a glance and replied:"What''s the matter?
21876He saw the point and answered with a broad smile:"Is that the alternative, young lady?
21876He was very bitter in his remarks, but in his office were two other men who remonstrated with him and--""What were the two men doing there?"
21876Herring if he knew him to be disloyal in this, our country''s greatest crisis?
21876Herring?"
21876How are you getting along on the case?"
21876How do I know you do n''t get a run on suspenders some time?
21876How far are you from the hub, Josie?"
21876How much did the supervisor invest in bonds?"
21876How much did they subscribe last night?"
21876How''s the suspender stock?"
21876I may not accomplish anything, but you''d like me to try, would n''t you?"
21876I said, did n''t I, that it wo n''t hurt my pocket?
21876I suppose you can pay in advance?"
21876I wonder if he knows anything at all, or if I could pump it out of him if he does?
21876If there''s an aunt, she''s some relation to the rest of the family, so why did n''t she leave them some money, as well as Tom?"
21876Is 43 taken, also?"
21876Is it just luck, I wonder, or has fate taken a hand in the game?
21876Is it not so?"
21876Is it not so?"
21876Is n''t he like most of the rabble, thinking what he''s told to think and saying what he''s told to say?"
21876Is n''t it better to lose a little now, for the sake of future winnings, than to sacrifice the past and future and be reduced to poverty?
21876Is n''t that true, Gran''pa Jim?"
21876Is n''t this Miss Annie Boyle?"
21876It would be an awful thing to accuse one unjustly of such a dastardly act, would n''t it?
21876Josie was thoughtful for a time, and after the colonel had resumed his book, she asked Mary Louise:"Who was Mrs. Dyer, before her marriage?"
21876Looking at him musingly, she asked:"Are they making munitions now, at the steel works?"
21876May we depend upon your bank to fulfill your promises, and carry those bond buyers who wish to make time payments?"
21876McGill?"
21876Must one or the other happen?
21876No disloyal words from the Professor or the supervisor?"
21876Now, if Dyer is on his way to Washington, what did last night''s secret meeting mean?
21876Now, then, how does my idea strike you?"
21876Presently Josie approached Mary Louise and asked:"What will you take for the pedestal- desk-- just as it stands?"
21876Query: Who staked Tom?
21876Stop it?
21876That would be worth while, would n''t it?"
21876To equip a regiment with the articles you mention would cost a mint of money, and where''s the money coming from, and how are we to get it?"
21876Was this meeting, on which they had so greatly depended, destined to prove a failure, after all?
21876What I know frightens me-- even_ me!_ Ca n''t you wait and-- trust me?"
21876What are you doing, girl?"
21876What are you doing?
21876What could you do with the clumsy thing?"
21876What did he do?"
21876What''s the matter?"
21876When you were selling Liberty Bonds, did you meet with no objectors?"
21876Who would refuse a group of young girls-- earnest and enthusiastic girls?
21876Who''s this, Jake?
21876Why do n''t you do the job yourself?"
21876Will our millionaire government contractors become billionaires when the money-- our money-- is spent?
21876Will you please tell me, Mrs. Charleworth, what connection you have with Mr. Kauffman, or with his-- projectile?"
21876Will you tell me, Mrs. Charleworth, what you know about that man?"
21876Your daughter?"
21876and so-- what is there to do but hold up our hands?"
21876exclaimed Lucile Neal,"and what could the person hope to gain by it?"
21876exclaimed Mary Louise, with ready sympathy;"I hope he-- he is n''t dead?"
21876he exclaimed,"who saved you?"
21876she cried exultantly, and the old colonel''s eyes sparkled as he replied:"That makes our great mass- meeting look pretty small; does n''t it, my dear?
29128A farmer?
29128A woman, David?
29128Afraidments?
29128All of it?
29128And do you remember nothing more about that day?
29128And he''s your brother?
29128And that is what makes you look so-- cheered?
29128And then?
29128And what do you like to do besides that?
29128And what else?
29128And where is Janey?
29128And why, David, did you wait until to- day?
29128And will you take me to this wonderful person to- morrow?
29128And you licked?
29128And you never guessed?
29128And you''ll fight fair? 29128 And, David, tell me what mother said that day after the parade?"
29128Are you visiting in the city? 29128 Aunt M''ri,"a little note of wistfulness chasing the bantering look from his eyes,"you are n''t going to leave us now?"
29128But afterwards,she asked wistfully,"you did n''t think of me as an imaginary person, did you?"
29128But does she care?
29128Ca n''t I read them at all?
29128Ca n''t you remember when you first laid eyes on me?
29128Carey,asked her mother softly, when they were alone that night,"did David tell you what a cozy little luncheon we had?"
29128Catch anything?
29128Could any one begin it and not finish it? 29128 Crossed, David?
29128Davey,she asked in an awed whisper,"does it feel nice to be wicked?"
29128David Dunne,demanded Little Teacher,"did you bring that mouse to school?"
29128David, where did you read that story?
29128David, will you always be good-- will you grow up to be as good a man as I want you to be?
29128David,asked the Judge abruptly,"did Miss Brumble tell you to give me those roses?"
29128David,she asked directly,"why did you refuse our invitation to dine to- night?"
29128David,she asked, after one glance into his eyes,"what has changed you?
29128David,she asked, looking up with a winning smile,"will you tell me why you did n''t want to go to school?"
29128David,she asked,"did you think I was ignorant of your early life until I read those banners last night?"
29128David,spoke the Judge from the other end of the room,"did n''t these roses grow on a bush by the west porch?"
29128Did Janey tell you?
29128Did n''t M''ri look perfeckly beyewtiful?
29128Did she tell you,asked the tall man, gazing very hard at the landscape without the open window,"to give these flowers to some one who needed them?"
29128Did you see Janey and Joe?
29128Did you see Jud and Janey?
29128Did you, David?
29128Did you,he asked slowly, holding her eyes in spite of her desire to lower them,"read the dedication?"
29128Do n''t you think the only thing for the boy to do is to go back with me? 29128 Do n''t you want to go back with me to the ranch, David?
29128Do you like to play with little girls, David?
29128Do you live in it all the time?
29128Do you remember that other-- that first day we came here?
29128Do you remember the story of the Snow Princess?
29128Does n''t she keep company with some lucky man?
29128Eaten too much already?
29128Governor,he asked, with impudent directness,"are you going to pardon Jud Bramble?"
29128Hain''t you he d enough of law, Dave? 29128 Has she promised to be that already?
29128Have you been waiting long, and are you dressed quite warmly?
29128Have you come to carriages?
29128How are you, governor?
29128How did he come to mention your father to you?
29128How did you come to take such a case?
29128How did you know?
29128How good do you want me to be?
29128I can see that Uncle Larimy has a fishing rod, but what do you suppose he has sent Rhody?
29128I want to say good night,he said quietly,"and--""Will you come here to- morrow at eleven?"
29128I''d like it, but would-- Jud?
29128Is it important?
29128Is n''t there a way to win him over?
29128Is this really the place where we came and you told me stories?
29128Judge Thorne? 29128 Kidnap him?"
29128M''ri ai n''t a- goin''to hev another dress so soon, is she?
29128M''ri,said Barnabas, in a voice vibrating with reproach,"do you want Jud to go to prison?"
29128May I put them on now?
29128May I wear them?
29128May we go down to the woods-- the big woods?
29128Miss Rhody,he asked after a long meditation on life in general,"why did n''t you ever marry?"
29128Mr. Brumble from Lafferton?
29128Mrs. Winthrop,he asked earnestly,"may I speak to you quite openly and honestly?"
29128Must I say I am sorry now?
29128No, there is no pension-- I--"Judge Thorne will get you one,he said optimistically, as he rose, ready for action,"and how much is the mortgage?"
29128Not goodygood, David; but will you always be honest, and brave, and kind, as you are now?
29128Oh, a hunter?
29128Oh, is Joe here?
29128Oh, you are a yarner, are you?
29128Oh, you know Wilder?
29128Sha''n''t I take Dave back to stay to- night?
29128She is like a little doll, is n''t she, David?
29128So that''s how I am known around here, is it? 29128 That you know what?"
29128Then you read it?
29128Uncle Barnabas,said David thoughtfully,"what is your religion?"
29128Wal, Dave, I''ll allow I wuz skeered to tell Penny, and it tuk a hull lot of bracin''to do it, and what do you suppose she sed? 29128 Wanter try yer luck, Dave?"
29128Well, you do n''t suppose I''m a- goin''to lick Dave fer defendin''his parents, do you? 29128 What are you going to hev Dave do to help, M''ri?"
29128What can I do for you?
29128What did he say to you?
29128What did my father do?
29128What did you run away for?
29128What fer? 29128 What have you been doing for amusement these last six months, Dunne?"
29128What in the world is that, Uncle Barnabas?
29128What is it?
29128What is it?
29128What is the matter? 29128 What is your name?"
29128What on airth kin you do about a washin'', Dave?
29128What shall I do with them?
29128What will we do now, David?
29128What wuz you fighting fer, anyway?
29128What''ll you bet? 29128 What''s that, Dave?"
29128What''s the matter, Dave?
29128What''s the matter? 29128 What''s the matter?"
29128What''s the trouble, Barnabas?
29128What? 29128 What?"
29128What?
29128When we come back--"Will you be gone long?
29128When will Jud and Janey get their dinner?
29128When?
29128Where do you live?
29128Where is Carey?
29128Where is Gilbert?
29128Where''ll you go?
29128Where''s M''ri?
29128Which do you believe the right way, Carey?
29128Which one?
29128Which one?
29128Which was your regiment, Uncle Barnabas?
29128Who can make a sentence and use that word correctly?
29128Who is it that was afraid to go into the big woods, and thought it was a forest filled with wild beasts and scary things?
29128Who is it, David?
29128Who?
29128Whom would you suggest for manager of my campaign, Uncle Barnabas?
29128Why did he wish you to take the case?
29128Why do you offer me these flowers, David?
29128Why not you, Miss Rhody?
29128Why, Dave,said the old man in shocked tones,"you did n''t go fer to think fer a minute I''d ask you to let him out cause he wuz my son?
29128Why, what in the world did she want to leave for?
29128Why, what is it, Uncle Barnabas?
29128Why?
29128Will you tell me,asked David earnestly,"about my father?
29128Wo n''t you dine here with us to- night?
29128Would n''t you like to go through the capitol?
29128Would you like these roses, Judge Thorne?
29128Would you mind,asked David in an embarrassed manner as he wistfully eyed the coveted luxury,"if I took my dishful home?"
29128Yes; you were hardly a reality until--"Until the convention?
29128You are quite a bureau of information, and,in a consciously casual tone,"will you take a note to your aunt?
29128You are sorry, are n''t you, David?
29128You have heard about Janey-- and Joe?
29128You''ll come in for a little while, wo n''t you?
29128You''re a good provider, David; but tell me where you have been for so long, and where did you see Joe?
29128Your ma ai n''t sick, is she?
29128Your mortgage will be paid to- morrow, and-- Don''t you draw a pension for your son?
29128Your name?
29128Your trunks air goin''out to the farm, Dave, ai n''t they?
29128*****"When, David,"she asked him,"did you know that you loved, not the little princess, but me, Carey?"
29128Ai n''t Jud got a mean look?
29128Ai n''t she a- glarin''and a- sniffin''at me, though?
29128And Uncle Larimy-- is he uncle to the whole community?
29128And she did read the book and she did know-- didn''t she?"
29128And what might that be?"
29128Are n''t you going to dedicate it?"
29128At supper, M''ri asked him suddenly:"To whom did you give the flowers, David?"
29128Brumble?"
29128Brumble?"
29128But do you suppose he has enough to eat?
29128But what will Penny think about some one stepping in?"
29128But with whom are you living?"
29128CHAPTER VII"Whar wuz you, Dave, all the time we wuz in town?"
29128Dave, do you still want to fight him?"
29128David made no reply, and she continued:"You are going home the day before election?"
29128David, can you show me where there is good fishing?"
29128Did you tell him, Dave?"
29128Do n''t little Janey look like an angel in white, and them lovely beads Joe give her?
29128Do you remember?"
29128Does she still live alone?
29128Half a dollar?"
29128Have you been here all the evening?"
29128He smiled as he wrote on a piece of paper:"To T. L. P.""The initials of your sweetheart?"
29128Here''s the bundle, and do n''t you want a nutcake, David?"
29128How comes it you ai n''t to school, Dave?"
29128How did he know?
29128How many yards does it take, I wonder?"
29128How''s your mother getting along?"
29128I suppose they''ve got it in for me because I ran away?"
29128Is Joe coming home?
29128Is he going to stay?"
29128Is it any one I know?"
29128Is n''t she married yet?"
29128It is time for another senator, and who do you suppose is plugging for it, and opening hogsheads of money?
29128It''s been a purty hard test, but you wo n''t let it spile your life?"
29128Jest to punish-- with no thought of killin''?"
29128Jud was cleared_"158"_ It was a relief to find Carey alone_"224"_''Carey, will you make the dream a reality?
29128Knowles?"
29128Let me think-- where did you come from just now?"
29128May I guess, Uncle Barnabas-- Miss Rhody?"
29128May I tell you at two o''clock in the afternoon, the day after election?"
29128Maybe you would like to go?"
29128More warmin''than my old coat, I reckon, but say, Dave, what do you s''pose I hev got in that air telescope?"
29128Remember, do n''t you, David?"
29128Say, David, have you forgotten that you are running for governor?"
29128So Barnabas never married again?"
29128Suddenly he heard some one say:"Mr. Speaker, may I congratulate you?"
29128Suppose the four of us go down to the river and have supper on board?"
29128Then he suggested encouragingly:"Miss Rhody, did you know that there was a paper that gets you acquainted with men?
29128What did he do to make you so mad?"
29128What fer?"
29128What have you got in your pail?"
29128What is it?"
29128What is your name?"
29128What is yours?"
29128What was it he did?
29128What was it she said?"
29128What will it be?"
29128What''s in this envylope?
29128When I see the time''s ripe fer pickin''in politics, will you come back?"
29128When did you first love me?"
29128When they were alone she said to him, with troubled eyes:"Davey, is Carey going to be your sweetheart?"
29128Which one have you really enjoyed the most?"
29128Who holds the mortgage?"
29128Why do you think she does n''t want one?"
29128Why not come up, too, if you can spare the time?"
29128Will you be here long?"
29128Will you come?"
29128Will you make the dream a reality?"
29128Will you sell it to me, David?
29128Will you?"
29128Wo n''t she hev the time of her life cleanin''up after this weddin''?
29128Would the governor do his duty and see that law and order were maintained, or would he sacrifice the people to his personal obligations?
29128Would you rather have found me still a dreamer?"
29128Would you rather walk, really?"
29128You did n''t make up that story yourself?"
29128You say you do n''t dream any more, but it was n''t so very long ago that you did, else how could you have written that wonderful book?"
29128[ Illustration:"_ With proudly protective air, David walked beside the stiffly starched little girl_"]"Going to school, children?"
29128[ Illustration:"_''Carey, will you make the dream a reality?
45728''Why do n''t you stay in a small town?'' 45728 Ah, Captain, you here too?"
45728And I-- I can not even see her?
45728And for--?
45728And have you spoken to her?
45728And it would n''t matter much if we were poor?
45728And leave Macochee?
45728And she--?
45728And she--?
45728And that''s all?
45728And what are you doing now, or proposing to do?
45728And what did I say?
45728And what did she say?
45728And will you be happy in that big city, away from every one you know, as the wife of a newspaper man?
45728And you are happy?
45728And you have nothing, you know of nothing?
45728And you think we can?
45728And you''re going to get out of it?
45728And your father?
45728Anything been going wrong lately? 45728 Are n''t you leaving out the best parts?"
45728Are you Preacher Marley''s son?
45728Are you going to?
45728Are you happy?
45728Are you so very much older now?
45728Are you too cool?
45728Beautiful?
45728Been to college?
45728But I thought there was to be no engagement?
45728But could n''t I ride in beside you?
45728But could n''t you?
45728But do you know, dear, that I never liked it before? 45728 But is n''t he cruel?"
45728But the devil of it is how''re you going to live? 45728 But what am I going to do?
45728But what did you work at? 45728 But what for?"
45728But what of papa?
45728But what will you do?
45728But where''ll I go?
45728But where?
45728But would n''t that make it look as if we were taking too much notice of it?
45728But would n''t that--?
45728But, Glenn, what about his drinking?
45728By the way,he asked, as if the thought had just come to him,"how did Selah Dudley make his money?"
45728Ca n''t we, dear?
45728Ca n''t we?
45728Ca n''t you be serious a moment?
45728Ca n''t you tell mama now?
45728Can you be happy in a little flat, without knowing anybody, and without being anybody?
45728Chief deputy?
45728Cigarettes?
45728Connie?
45728Could we?
45728Could you?
45728Did I hurt you?
45728Did my little girl think her father had deserted her?
45728Did n''t you talk to her about it when you were away?
45728Did you ever read,he wrote,"Turgenieff''s_ Fathers and Sons_?
45728Did you go riding this afternoon?
45728Did you? 45728 Did you?"
45728Do n''t you know,he went on,"ca n''t you see, that I love you?"
45728Do n''t you know?
45728Do n''t you like newspaper work?
45728Do n''t you make any entry-- any memorandum?
45728Do n''t you regret leaving it?
45728Do n''t you remember?
45728Do n''t you remember?
45728Do n''t you see-- don''t you see that-- I love you?
45728Do n''t you see?
45728Do you have to board the threshers?
45728Do you know where the well is?
45728Do you know,he said,"that I could n''t remember what color your eyes were?"
45728Do you remember that day?
45728Do you think him capable of such baseness?
45728Do you think it will ever be?
45728Do you think that is so?
45728Do you think we''d better have Doctor Pierce see her?
45728Do you think we''re going to do all the work? 45728 Does he like Chicago?"
45728Does he?
45728Does n''t he say anything about you?
45728Gathered it? 45728 Glenn?"
45728Got any money?
45728Guess you''re glad now I did n''t give you that job, eh?
45728Had father entered the ministry yet?
45728Had n''t you better take my coat?
45728Has she been over there?
45728Have you ever read any law?
45728Have you noticed Lavinia?
45728Have you seen him?
45728Have you talked with her about it?
45728He did n''t? 45728 He was n''t in the army, was he?"
45728He''s in the office of Wade Powell-- I suppose he is the one, is n''t he?
45728Here-- in my office?
45728Here?
45728How are you all? 45728 How are you, anyway?"
45728How did you know anything was?
45728How do you know?
45728How does he know me?
45728How is she?
45728How long has it been?
45728How long have we been gone?
45728How long have you and Lavinia known each other?
45728How long was you there?
45728How old was father when you were married, mother?
45728How old?
45728How shall you like living in Chicago?
45728How''d you know?
45728How?
45728How_ do_ young men get a start in places like Macochee?
45728I considered that, and still, it might seem more so if I did n''t, do n''t you see?
45728I mean,Lavinia said correctively,"is n''t he kind of sarcastic?"
45728I suppose you know what I came for?
45728I wonder if that is n''t the young man who visited them summer before last?
45728I''ve loved you ever since that first night-- do you remember? 45728 I?"
45728If you go?
45728In all the essentials they are, are n''t they?
45728Is it really true?
45728Is it too late?
45728Is n''t it a perfect night?
45728Is n''t it all beautiful?
45728Is n''t it wonderful?
45728Is n''t it?
45728Is n''t she well?
45728Is n''t that enough?
45728Is n''t this just the worst place for gossip you ever heard of?
45728Is she gloomy?
45728Is that Blackstone over there on the top shelf?
45728Is that all?
45728Is that all?
45728Is that what they call them?
45728Is that-- all?
45728Is there anything I can do for you?
45728Is there anything wrong in personal injury cases?
45728It should, should n''t it, mama?
45728It sounds just like him when he''s discussing some book none of us has read, does n''t it, Lavinia?
45728It was different with us, was n''t it, dear?
45728It was funny, was n''t it?
45728It''ll be three years before I can be admitted, wo n''t it?
45728It''s warm this afternoon, is n''t it?
45728It''s warm, is n''t it?
45728It_ was_ love at first sight, was n''t it?
45728Lavinia Blair?
45728Leave?
45728May I have a word with you?
45728May I?
45728May be it will be, who knows?
45728Mayme''s home, ai n''t she?
45728My, Lavinia, you do n''t intend to read all that, do you?
45728No, why?
45728Nothing much, only--"Only what?
45728Now what do you think of that? 45728 Of what?"
45728Oh, everybody knows about that,Lawrence replied with a light air that added to Marley''s gloom;"but what of it?
45728Right away?
45728Say, Glenn, what''s the matter with you?
45728Second volume, eh? 45728 See?"
45728Slightly; why?
45728Smoke?
45728So you want my advice, eh?
45728So you''ve been to him, have you?
45728Taking out her curl papers, eh?
45728Tell me, wo n''t you? 45728 That with your influence you might reform him-- out of his liking for you, do n''t you know?"
45728Then how did he get it?
45728Things_ are_ changing in these days, ai n''t they? 45728 Think there''s any sign of rain?"
45728Tonight? 45728 Victorias?"
45728Want to go? 45728 Was n''t it over there?"
45728We would be old?
45728Well, I suppose you know, do n''t you,he said,"that such cases are taken on contingent fees?"
45728Well, Jake, what do you say?
45728Well, Lavinia,said Lawrence, almost as soon as they were seated in the parlor,"what''s the news about Glenn?
45728Well, ca n''t you find a comfortable seat?
45728Well, how are you?
45728Well, it takes time, anyway,said Marley,"and then there''s the practice after that-- how long will that take?"
45728Well, little old Macochee''s good enough for us, eh, Wade?
45728Well, then, what makes you think she is n''t?
45728Well, what do you want?
45728Well, what of it?
45728Well?
45728Well?
45728What about?
45728What are you thinking of?
45728What as?
45728What clerkship was that?
45728What color are they?
45728What could it have been that so distressed her?
45728What did you say?
45728What did you think then?
45728What do you know about this business between Lavinia and that young Marley?
45728What do you mean?
45728What do you think? 45728 What do you want?"
45728What does it mean?
45728What for?
45728What has happened?
45728What is it, Glenn?
45728What is it, sweetheart?
45728What is it?
45728What is it?
45728What is the matter?
45728What is troubling my little girl?
45728What job?
45728What will my hours be?
45728What''d he say?
45728What''s he been doing this time?
45728What''s he? 45728 What''s it to you?"
45728What''s on your mind, young man?
45728What''s that, Lavinia?
45728What''s the matter, in love?
45728What''s the matter? 45728 What''s the matter?"
45728What''s the use of waiting?
45728What, for instance?
45728What?
45728When we picked out our farm-- where was it?
45728When?
45728Where''s Vinie?
45728Who could help it?
45728Who with?
45728Who with?
45728Who''d you understand it from, me or Wade Powell?
45728Why do n''t you play fair?
45728Why do n''t you read that? 45728 Why do n''t you settle it?"
45728Why not? 45728 Why, Glenn, how can you say that?
45728Why, Jack, I did n''t say anything, did I?
45728Why, Lavinia,he cried,"you are n''t homesick?"
45728Why, do n''t you know? 45728 Why, do n''t you see?"
45728Why, surely you have n''t forgotten-- that day out at the fair- grounds, when Mr. Powell introduced me to you? 45728 Why, what did I say that hinted at it, even?"
45728Why?
45728Why?
45728Why?
45728Why?
45728Will he--?
45728Will it?
45728Will you bring out another chair, dear, or would you prefer to go indoors?
45728Will you tell him?
45728Will you?
45728Wo n''t you get your feet wet?
45728Wo n''t you take cold?
45728Would you care?
45728Would you like to keep it?
45728Would you like to think of_ your_ daughter as fickle, and forgetting a young man who was eating his heart out for her far away in a big city?
45728Would you never care to come back if it were not for me?
45728Would you?
45728Y-- es,said Mrs. Marley,"but then--""But then, what?"
45728Yes, I know, but what if he gets the notion he ought to help them by quitting too?
45728Yes, do n''t you know? 45728 Yes,"Miss Winters replied,"almost too warm to dance, do n''t you think?"
45728You ai n''t fretting over that job, are you?
45728You ai n''t sick, are you?
45728You are reading with a preceptor, I take it?
45728You did n''t mention it to her?
45728You do n''t mean to say he connects our names?
45728You do n''t? 45728 You have completed your education?"
45728You have?
45728You have?
45728You have?
45728You know, dear, we can''t--The tears were brimming in her blue eyes, and he left his sentence uncompleted to go on:"So you''re homesick, eh?
45728You said you knew his father, did n''t you?
45728You say you got the idea from something I said out at the fair- grounds?
45728You say you understood you was to have a job under me as chief clerk?
45728You think a great deal of Mr. Weston, do n''t you?
45728You think he''d risk his hide in the army? 45728 You''ll write?"
45728You''re not thinking of getting married, are you, Glenn?
45728Your hours?
45728''Why?''
45728A boy who writes like that to his mother--""How did you get to see a letter he wrote his mother?"
45728And does Hank Delphy still go down- town in his shirt- sleeves?
45728And has Charlie Fouly had any fits in the Square lately?
45728And then he asked:"Did he have any money?"
45728And then his fear returned at Lavinia''s sinister,"But--""But what?"
45728And, father, has mother got a girl yet?
45728Are n''t you having a good time?
45728As they approached the veranda, Lawrence''s voice called out of the darkness:"Well, where have you young folks been stealing away to?"
45728As they pulled up and Marley sprang out of the boat to the landing stage, Lawrence said:"Well, where have you babes been?"
45728But after a while the judge spoke:"Did Lavinia go to the picnic with young Marley?"
45728But he blinked a moment, and then cautiously asked:"What about?"
45728But how?
45728But what of Lavinia?
45728By breaking the engagement?
45728By going away quietly, silently, without a word?
45728By keeping her waiting, year after year, until he could find a foothold in the world?
45728CHAPTER XXV LETTERS HOME"How does she seem since he went away?"
45728Can you row?"
45728Carman?"
45728Connie was eating savagely, but she whirled on Chad, speaking with difficulty because her mouth was filled with food:"You shut up, will you?"
45728Did he inherit it?"
45728Did you ask me?"
45728Did you get Foose all right?"
45728Do n''t see the first around anywhere, do you?"
45728Do n''t you care to dance this evening?"
45728Do n''t you feel well?"
45728Do n''t you remember?"
45728Do you see?"
45728Do you think I ca n''t wait anyhow?
45728Do you think I cared for that?
45728Do you think I could n''t have waited?
45728Does Smith Johnson still clap his hands at his dog every evening as he comes home, and does the dog run out to meet him as joyously as of yore?
45728For mama, and Connie?"
45728Has any one got a pitcher concealed about his person?
45728Has it been that long?"
45728Has she heard from him?"
45728Has the young man been here much?"
45728He could not, however, evince an entire approval, and so seeming to desert the subject he hastened on:"What''s your name?"
45728He paused, and then:"Do you use tobacco?"
45728He smoked on a moment, ruminating on his lost youth; then, bringing himself around to business again, he said:"How''d you happen to come to me?"
45728His eyes became small, mere inflamed slits beneath his hairless brows, and he said:"I thought you said you wanted advice?"
45728How am I to begin?"
45728How is Dolly?
45728How long would it be before he could sit there beside her, as her husband?
45728How many years, Marley was thinking, would they have to wait now?
45728How old did you say you were when we were married?"
45728How''s he getting along?"
45728I know-- I know I''m not good enough, but ca n''t you-- can''t I-- love you?"
45728Is n''t our future assured now?"
45728Lavinia admitted that it did sound like Halliday, and Mayme returned to her attack on Lawrence by saying:"What do you know about writing, anyway?"
45728Lawrence?"
45728Marley told him that he had just that summer been graduated and when he mentioned the name of the college Powell said:"The Methodists, eh?"
45728Marley?"
45728Marley?"
45728Ought he to ask her to wait any longer?
45728Presently he inquired, as if by way of getting a basis to start on:"You been to college, ai n''t you?"
45728Raining in London?"
45728Seeming to recognize this he hastened to say:"Well, how''s the world using you, Vinie?"
45728So soon?"
45728Take it to water your horse?"
45728Tell me-- what is it?"
45728The moral environment there is certainly not one for a young man--""Is he really an_ infidel_?"
45728The young man went on with an anxious smile:"This is Judge Blair, I presume?
45728Then he added as if the thought had just come to him:"Say, can you run a typewriter?"
45728Then he said:"''How''d you like to break into newspaper business?''
45728This afternoon he came around to the office again, and the first thing he said was:"''Did you see your story this morning?''
45728We''ll do when you ca n''t find anybody else to put up with you, eh?"
45728Well, he had nerve, did n''t he?
45728Weston?"
45728What can I get here in Macochee, I''d like to know?"
45728What did you do with the pitcher, Glenn?
45728What do they do?
45728What do you think of that?"
45728What does anything matter, so long as we have each other?"
45728What does it matter?
45728What does your own mother think of it?"
45728What had you when you proposed to mama?
45728What right had he to ask her to marry him?
45728What right had he to place her in the position he had?
45728What''d you run for?"
45728What''s the matter?"
45728When did you hear it?"
45728When she had done so, she dropped her sewing suddenly into her lap, and looking up, said:"He thinks everything of you, does n''t he?"
45728When they had gone and were strolling toward the Carters'', Lawrence grumbled at Mayme:"What did you want to give it all away to Lavinia for?"
45728When you came into the room, I knew that--""What?"
45728Where are they all going, and how do they get a place to stand on?
45728Who else?"
45728Why ca n''t you?"
45728Why?"
45728Will you?"
45728Would Lavinia be lost with all the rest?
45728Would n''t it make Wade Powell mad to know that?
45728You did n''t leave your music at home, did you?"
45728You do n''t want to keep Lavinia housed up there, away from all the fun that''s going on, do you?
45728he said presently,"this love of ours?
45728he sneered;"so he sympathizes with unionism, does he?
29561''Martha''? 29561 Amà © lie?"
29561And lose me my job?
29561And the handsome lady is his wife, perhaps?
29561And what did I say?
29561And what had Shelby done?
29561And why not?
29561Are you going?
29561Arrange what?
29561Aw, Professor, what''s the dif? 29561 Aw, what''s it your business?"
29561But how am I going to cook the meals?
29561But she''s been East and in Europe, and-- where''s the harm of it, anyway? 29561 But supposing it was our boy, Paw?"
29561But what''d he say? 29561 Den I hear man''s voice says,''Oozie- voozie, mezie- vezie--''Must I got to tell it all?"
29561Did anybody see you, Steve?
29561Did he move away?
29561Did n''t you dahnce with her?
29561Did n''t you notice how affected she is?
29561Did n''t you think it was splendid?
29561Did you git it?
29561Did you hear that?
29561Do I get my diploma?
29561Do you mean a motto?
29561Do you think I''ll let my mother carry on like that? 29561 Evidently not; but have you heard her?"
29561Expectin''a letter from the boy?
29561Going out, my dear? 29561 Had have what?"
29561Have a heart, ca n''t you?
29561How could I be angry with you, Marg-- er-- Martha?
29561How do I know that you''ll keep yours?
29561How do I know,Litton moaned,"how do I know that you will keep your word?"
29561How do you know?
29561How is it done? 29561 How much?"
29561How was the show last night, Miss Bessett?
29561I ca n''t find the words-- can you? 29561 I know,"she said;"but what happened?"
29561I thought you were saying--"Why ca n''t you ever once get me right? 29561 I wonder what kind of green goods he sells?"
29561If they charge twenty- five dollars an hour in New York, what ought to be the price in Carthage?
29561In Carthage? 29561 Is n''t that the new dance I''ve been reading about, that''s making a sensation in New York?"
29561Is n''t that your name, deah?
29561Is n''t this Miss Phoebe Carew?
29561It gets awful hot in town, do n''t it?
29561It''s your name, is n''t it?
29561Let you off, T- Teed?
29561Mail come yet, Maw?
29561May I come in?
29561Oh yes,she said;"they moved away some years ago, did n''t they?"
29561Oh, Mrs. Teed, would you mind mailing these letters as you go out?
29561Oh, Prue, ai n''t it wonderful? 29561 Oh, cahn''t I?"
29561Oh, it''s terrible, of course, Maw, but we''ve got to have laws to hold the world together, ai n''t we? 29561 Oh, will I?
29561Oh, would they now? 29561 Say, Prof, did you ever hear of the dictagraph?"
29561See those lights off there-- the big lights with the name of that woman in electric letters? 29561 She says''dahnce,''does n''t she?"
29561So he gave up his house and moved away?
29561So he moved away?
29561Then there''s a woman in it?
29561Then why do n''t you call me Margy- wargleums?
29561To my house?
29561Well, Margy- wargy, zoo and Stookie- tookie is dust like old Dean Swiffikins, is n''t we?
29561Well, have n''t you?
29561Well, what of it? 29561 What are the flowers you are wearing, may I ask?"
29561What are we coming to? 29561 What did he do, Paw?"
29561What did n''t you like about it?
29561What did n''t you understand? 29561 What does who do?"
29561What in the name of-- of all that''s sensible is that for?
29561What line do you carry? 29561 What makes you think so?"
29561What of it? 29561 What on earth you doing there?"
29561What ought it to be?
29561What right you got to go shootin''wild birds, anyway?
29561What scoundrel taught my poor child such-- such-- Who taught her, I say?
29561What should it be?
29561What was wrong with that?
29561What will become of us all?
29561What will become of us?
29561What you doin'', Maw?
29561What you got against Uncle Loren''s money? 29561 What you talkin''about, Paw?"
29561What''d you do if you found it?
29561What''s clearer than that?
29561What''s dancing got to do with it? 29561 What''s happened, Steve?
29561What''s that toon she''s dancing to?
29561What''s that?
29561What''s that?
29561What''s the matter, honey?
29561What''s the name again?
29561What-- what has he done?
29561What?
29561Where can he go, Paw? 29561 Where''s Prue?"
29561Who gave it to you?
29561Who knows of this infamy besides you?
29561Why blame yourself and call yourself a criminal? 29561 Why do n''t I?"
29561Why do n''t you ever empty the bowl then?
29561Why do n''t you say''potahto''?
29561Why do n''t you teach school?
29561Why not persuade Jake Meyer to clear a space in his rest''runt like they do in Chicawgo?
29561Why should you be afraid of a little gossip or a few jokes or a little abuse from a few hypocrites? 29561 Why, Judge, what''s Ollie done?
29561Why, you''ve been cryin'', have n''t you? 29561 Why?
29561Why?
29561Why?
29561With her? 29561 Yet girls do go wrong, do n''t they?"
29561You ai n''t been lookin''for it, have you?
29561You do n''t remember me?
29561You goin''gallivantin''round the country with that Maugans idiot and that young Hippisley scoundrel? 29561 You going to join the class, poppa?"
29561You got rhubob pie for dinner to- day?
29561You''ll be a what?
29561''Do you do the Innovation?''
29561''Do you drop on the front knee or the hind?''
29561''Is it the inside foot or the outside you start on?''
29561''Oh, what did you do then?''
29561''Prue, is this right?''
29561''What do you mean?''
29561A WOMAN''S VOICE Dear God in heaven, what shall I do?
29561A weight about her father''s neck till he could shift her to the neck of some unhappy husband?
29561After all, what if he failed?
29561Ai n''t it a beauty?"
29561Ai n''t the Lord good to us?"
29561Ai n''t we got each other?''
29561Ai n''t you glad to see your Maw-- and me?"
29561Alice would have been coming home from boarding- school to- day if-- July fourth?
29561Alone, I hope?
29561Also, what would be the probable cost of a desirable site for the factory?
29561Am I going mad, or do I hear Thy voice telling me to act?
29561And Consuelo, who was preparing for Vassar, added under her breath,"Mère, ca n''t you steal up on him and swipe that already- tied tie?"
29561And I said:''Is that so?
29561And as for old maid, he cried in a curious blending of puerility and scholasticism:"Old maid, do you say?
29561And has my little Margy- wargles forgotten what Sappho said of an old maid?
29561And how was he to think of taking another wife?
29561And if we do n''t enforce''em, what''s the use of havin''''em?"
29561And now her daughter was to work in that hateful Anastasia Hippisley''s old fool of a husband''s office?
29561And now what''s going to happen?"
29561And the Countess of-- What''s- her- name?
29561And then a little girl came along and said:''What''s the matter, Eddie?
29561And what could she do to correct the oversight?
29561And what is my affectation?"
29561And who ever remembers that violets were suddenly abroad on the hills last April, too?
29561And whose home is this?"
29561And yet what difference would it make?
29561And yet, is it entirely desirable that men should ever grow unmindful of the tears of old mothers?
29561And you says,''Did it miss its stupid old Stookie?''
29561At first he played"Girls, Run Along"so that it could hardly be told from"Where Is My Wandering Boy To- night?"
29561At last he said, with a poor effort at gruffness:"Well, for the Lord''s sake, why do n''t you go?
29561At some dimly distant time papa woke with a start and inquired,"Huh?"
29561Barstow called out:"Whose place is that?"
29561Besides, the strawb''ry fest''val''s for charity, is n''t it?"
29561But how could he fight without rest?
29561But how could he tear himself from Prue?
29561But they-- did they?
29561But what has that to do with Miss Terriberry?"
29561But where had his courage been hiding that it left him whimpering alone?
29561But you have n''t any money, have you, my dear?
29561But_ Mère_ groaned again:"Can you wonder that I get depressed?
29561Ca n''t they change it?
29561Ca n''t you come on over''safternoon?
29561Convinced?
29561Could I rent that at a reasonable figure, do you suppose?"
29561Could anything be clearer than this?
29561Could he not pick himself up and climb again?
29561Could n''t they do without that?
29561Could you make it six bits by wholesale?"
29561Could you?
29561Crosson felt the guilt of Cain, but when Irene moaned,"What you goin''to do?"
29561December twenty- third?
29561Did n''t Christ take the Magdalen into His own company and His mother''s?
29561Did you git it?"
29561Do n''t you s''pose you could spare me a kiss?"
29561Do n''t you suppose you could afford a little one?
29561Do n''t you think so?"
29561Do n''t you think so?"
29561Do n''t you wish you''d taken me instead of that thing you''ve hitched up with for life?"
29561Do you approve of the tango?"
29561Do you know what?
29561Do you mean to tell me that my daughter does that sort of thing?"
29561Do you remember that, Pheeny?"
29561Do you remember who that little girl was?"
29561Do you suppose she''d make up and-- and come over to our house to dinner Sunday?"
29561Do you suppose you could?
29561Do you want to wake Orton?"
29561Drury spoke up quickly:"You did n''t kill him?"
29561Ever hear of him?
29561Everybody said to him,"Have you seen Emma?"
29561Everybody says,''Have you heard her?''"
29561Father will find some way of making everything all right, wo n''t you, Paw?
29561Finally Orton sighed:"What in Heaven''s name is goin''to become of us?
29561For what''s the use''t o''goin''on like this?
29561For who ever believed that May would emerge from March this year?
29561Give him to me, wo n''t you?
29561Give me a glimpse of her, will you?
29561Had not that fierce satirist created a dialect of his own for his everlastingly mysterious love affairs?
29561He asked You why You had deserted Him, and You did n''t answer, did You?"
29561He asked one more question:"But if you citizens did n''t help Mr. Shelby, how did he manage all these-- improvements, if I may use the word?"
29561He asked,"How good?"
29561He asked:"Did it hurt''em much to die?"
29561He did not ask,"How much?"
29561He groaned in suffocation:"Do you dare to ask me to put false marks on examination- papers, sir?"
29561He growled:"Good Lord, ai n''t that dog hung yet?"
29561He heard them say, just about as always:"What you been doin'', Paw?"
29561He laughed bitterly:"It''s the first time we''ve danced together in a long time, eh?"
29561He laughed like an overgrown cub as he cried:"Why do n''t I call you Margy- wargleums?
29561He petted her tenderly and kissed her hair and her eyelids and murmured:"Did I wake you, honey?"
29561He seized Newt Elkey by the arm and said,"What does she do?"
29561He stammered:"We- well, Teed?"
29561He tiptoed to his room, and when mamma appeared to announce with triumph,"I guess Prue has n''t gone to the bad yet,"papa said:"Who said she had?
29561He took the paper, but did not open it, turning instead to ask,"What does the boy say?"
29561He waited till his loneliness for her was unendurable, then he breathed, softly:"Are you asleep, honey?"
29561He was aching all over and he was angry, and he snarled as he stood at the wash- stand:"Have you finished with this water?"
29561He was making her life a--""Her life?"
29561He''s big, ai n''t he?''
29561His father took him by the shoulders and said:"Why, what''s the matter, boy?
29561His mind retraced his words, and he repeated:"What are the fleeting torments of this tenement of clay, mere bone and flesh, to the soul''s despair?
29561How am I going to meet the pay- roll?
29561How can your Pet Chickie live the eternity until he claspeths thee again this evening?
29561How much would it be, d''you s''pose?
29561How much would you charge?
29561I ca n''t climb to you; so you''re going to drop into my arms-- aren''t you?"
29561I do n''t think they ought to put off the strawb''ry fest''val, though, just for that, do you?
29561If it''s all right for me to put on a pretty gown and weah my haiah the most becoming way, why cahn''t I improve my name, too?
29561If you had, you would n''t be here in the dark alone, would you?
29561If you were dead and asleep in your grave with your poor little one at your breast, all your troubles would be over then, would n''t they?
29561In a sorrowful voice he mumbled,"Is anybody home?"
29561In a strangled tone the father croaked,"You dance it, then?"
29561Is education an affectation?"
29561Is he there, perhaps?"
29561Is it a sin to change?"
29561Is n''t it simply glorious?"
29561Is n''t she fast enough?"
29561Is n''t that best, O Lord-- to kill them both-- to kill her, anyway?
29561Is that her makin''all that noise?
29561Is that how she looks?"
29561Is your-- your car anywhere near?"
29561It ai n''t a disease, is it?
29561It meant money in the pocket of every doctor, lawyer, merchant, clothier, boarding- house- keeper, saloon- keeper, soda- water- vender-- whom not?
29561It was childish of her to behave so spitefully, but what could he do except repay her in kind?
29561It''s not ketchin'', is it?"
29561Like the corpse in Ben King''s poem, Judge Hippisley sat up at the news and said:"What''s that?"
29561Luella answered,"What on earth can she see in him?"
29561Luella heard some one say,"What on earth can he see in her?"
29561Mamma jumped and gasped,"Who?"
29561May I see whether we can find the words there?"
29561Mrs. Judge Hippisley strolled up and demanded,"What''s all this whispering about?"
29561Must loo mimitate Pdfr., pay?
29561Never would be any fun if we stopped for every funeral, would there?
29561Nobody else will want you for a wife, you poor child; you know that, do n''t you?
29561O God, if You have any mercy in Your heart-- but no, no-- no, no, You let Your own Son hang on the cross, did n''t You?
29561O God, why hast Thou persecuted me so fiercely always?
29561Oh, what is there to do?"
29561Oh, what''s that old tradition got to do with it?
29561Or could you?"
29561Or even if he could not recover, how many better men than he had failed?
29561Or what do you think?"
29561Papa was used to fighting with mamma, and he roared with fine leoninity:"Are you defending your daughter''s shamelessness?
29561Peck when they met in Bostwick''s dry- goods store, at the linen counter:"Too bad about Martha Rudd, is n''t it?
29561Persuaded?
29561Pettibone, the practical chairman, silenced the gossip with a brisk,"What is the pleasure of the meeting as regards answering it?"
29561Post 8vo WHAT WILL PEOPLE SAY?
29561Prue put down the following spoonful and turned to her mother:"What ails poppa, momma?
29561Prue rose and said, quietly:"Ollie, would you mind packing my things for me?
29561Remember when we used to drive eleven mile to get the_ Weekly Tribune_, Maw?"
29561Remember, Marthy?"
29561Reny honey, Reny?
29561Shall we dahnce, Ahthuh?''
29561She even added, to clinch it,"What on earth can they see in each other?"
29561She finally found voice to murmur:"How much you gettin''for the lessons you give?"
29561She repeated:"What did n''t you like about it?"
29561She said to Crosson:"Your gun-- where is it?"
29561She took so much blame on herself; though how was she to blame for herself?
29561She was reported as calling a hat a"hot,"a rat a"rot,"of teaching her little sister to read from the primer,"Is the cot on the mot?"
29561Silence and a far- away look on the wrinkled face resting on the wrinkled hand and then a quiet question:"Suppose it was our Steve?"
29561So he''s come back to beautify his old home, eh?
29561Suddenly Prue put her head in at the door and gasped:"What in Heaven''s name are you and poppa up to?
29561Suddenly she challenged him:"Who do you kiss when you kiss me?"
29561That''s what we''ll say, wo n''t we, Paw?"
29561The janitor, blushing at what he remembered, pleaded:"You do n''t vant I should say it exectly vat I heered?"
29561The man you loved has deserted you, has n''t he?
29561The next day he remembered how Marthy had sung out,"Why do n''t you smoke your pipe any more, Will?"
29561Then she says:''Did it have a mis''ble day in hateful old class- room?
29561Then the cook pounded on the door and called through in a voice that threatened to warp the panels:"Ai n''t you folks ever comin''down to dinner?
29561Then why was she persecuted?
29561They''re dancing the tango in our home town?"
29561Think you''re at the Worldoff?"
29561This startled him, and he gasped:"Why, what''s the matter, honey?
29561Triumphantly he said,"Had n''t we better announce our engagement?"
29561Tudie began at once,"Well, have you found out?"
29561Understand, Steve?"
29561Was he a little girl afraid of the dark, or was he a man?
29561Was n''t that the same swaybacked horse dozing at the hitching- post?
29561Was she condemned to be altogether useless, shiftless, unprofitable?
29561Were not the merchant princes of the earth sweating blood?
29561What ailed the girl?
29561What are the fleeting torments of this tenement of clay, mere bone and flesh, to the soul''s despair?
29561What are the fleeting torments of this tenement of clay, mere bone and flesh, to the soul''s despair?
29561What can I do?
29561What can he see in me to love?
29561What could the girl have said?
29561What do I say when he says,''Do you take this woman for your''--The pay- roll?
29561What do you want me to suffer for, honey?
29561What harm is it the honest oaks do, that Heaven hates them so and its lightnings search them out with such peculiar frenzy?
29561What if he was in trouble?
29561What is it like?"
29561What is it?
29561What made You hate me so?
29561What shall he tell Susan?
29561What under the sun does she say?"
29561What was a wife for but to be a helpmeet?
29561What was it?
29561What would Will and me have done without you?
29561What would become of them when their father broke down and was turned out of his factory and out of his home?
29561What would become of this family if Pop were not there?
29561What you been doin'', Maw?"
29561What you been doin'', Paw?"
29561What you cryin''for?''
29561What you goin''to do, Prue?
29561What you got to say about that, ye scribes of Carthage?"
29561What you turning up about now?"
29561What''ll become of the children?
29561What''s Miss Terriberry''s?"
29561What''s been goin''on?"
29561What''s the matter?
29561What''s the upshot?"
29561What''s your objection to the soft''a''?"
29561When can I come over to your house?"
29561When can your Brownie- wownie call you all his ownest only one?
29561When he required the best two rooms in the hotel, and a bath at that, the clerk looked suspicious:"Any baggage?"
29561When they were so poor and the future so dour, how could she keep from earning a little money?
29561Where can you go?"
29561Where did she learn?"
29561Where''s my clothes at?"
29561Where''s the best place for him to go?
29561Which, please, is the correct statement?"
29561Who can prove it was n''t?
29561Who ever convinced a woman?
29561Who had not failed?
29561Who is she, anyway, that she should say''dahnce''and''cahn''t''and''chahmed''?"
29561Why did Shelby close up his Paradise Powder factory and move away?"
29561Why did You make me beautiful and weak and trusting?
29561Why did You throw me into the snares of those vile men?
29561Why did n''t You give me a decent home as a child?
29561Why did n''t You make me ugly and suspicious and hateful so that I could be good?
29561Why do n''t you kiss me?"
29561Why do n''t you say''rather''to rhyme with it?"
29561Why had she avoided them?
29561Why must he send her here, alone?
29561Why should n''t I talk the same way?
29561Why should she expect a man to kill himself for her sake and leave her a wealthy widow to buy some other man?
29561Why should they not be paid handsomely?
29561Why, honey-- why did n''t you tell me?"
29561Why, how do you do?"
29561Will you use the sample- room?"
29561William, bitter with disappointment, snapped:"What do you mean?
29561With Miss Terriberry, you mean?"
29561Wo n''t we, Paw?
29561XIV"Who do I kiss when I kiss you?
29561Yet what had she done for them?
29561You are n''t mad at me, are you, Stookie?"
29561You come to me and tried to smile; and you said:"''Well, honey, how are you now?''
29561You could n''t find work and keep the baby with you, could you?
29561You do n''t want me just to suffer-- just to suffer, do you-- you do n''t, do you?
29561You go there and tell Susan-- what shall he tell Susan, father?
29561You remember it, no doubt?"
29561You''re not going to be so foolish as to lug that baby along?
29561Your own translation, you say?"
29561and when he said"Yes,"everybody demanded,"Have you heard her?"
29561as if they had not heard it right, or they laughed and said,"Honestly?"
29561he growled, and viciously tilted the contents into the-- must I say the awful word?--the slop- jar-- what other word is there?
29561so you call the rest of us uneducated?"
29561what do you think I am?
10429''See,he said,"how long have they been married?"
10429A civil wedding? 10429 Ai n''t it nice with nobody home?"
10429Ai n''t you been to that big hotel in Savannah, Georgia?
10429An inheritance-- really? 10429 And Bobby Larkin?"
10429And get turned out of this house, as you would be?
10429And what instruments do you play?
10429And what of that? 10429 Anything about Lulu?"
10429Are you going to take Jenny and Bobby too?
10429Are you serious, Nin?
10429Bedtime,his wife elucidated, and added:"Lulu, will you take her to bed?
10429Bobby,said Di,"are you going to let her lead you home?"
10429But if we do n''t tell, what''ll they think then?
10429But is it him?
10429But then how can you tell what songs to order?
10429But why not?
10429But you''re not so very used----Oh, was n''t he?
10429But, Dwight-- is it_ nice?_from his Ina.
10429But, Lulu, do n''t you think it might be better to keep, well-- out of sight for a few days?
10429Ca n''t I make her a little milk toast?
10429Ca n''t you get mother to come out?
10429Ca n''t you remember?
10429Ca n''t you understand anything?
10429Can I sell you an upright?
10429Can we?
10429Can you imagine how such a ridiculous report started?
10429Could you give me the address of Mr. Ninian Deacon?
10429Could you risk it with me?
10429Could you tell me,she said timidly,"the name of the principal hotel in Millton?"
10429Di,she said,"if you and Bobby want to get married, why not let us get you up a nice wedding at home?"
10429Did n''t I just tell you?
10429Did n''t he write to you?
10429Did n''t it occur to you,said Dwight,"that he might have told you that because he did n''t want to have to go on with it?"
10429Do n''t I?
10429Do n''t I?
10429Do n''t you like ragtime?
10429Do you know of any job that I could get me? 10429 Do you know something?"
10429Do you know why you think that? 10429 Do you need this?"
10429Do you think I want everybody to know my brother did a thing like that?
10429Do you think you could possibly stay here with me?
10429Dwight darling, are you sure there''s no danger?
10429Dwight-- I thought if you would n''t mind if I opened it--"Opened it?
10429Eh, Lulu?
10429Filling teeth?
10429For pity sakes,she said,"do n''t you know how to do anything?"
10429Gave you your choice?
10429Had it up in the city, on expense?
10429Had n''t we all better get the four- thirty to Warbleton?
10429Have good weather?
10429Have you been buying flowers?
10429Her satchel?
10429How I do what?
10429How did you know?
10429How does it?
10429How long till another train?
10429How much is salmon the can now?
10429How the dickens did you think of pianos for a line?
10429How would it hurt Di?
10429How''s that, Lulu-- what are_ you_ wearing a bridal robe for-- eh?
10429Hungry_ now?_Mrs. Bett was hungry now.
10429I do n''t think you ought to-- holy things----what''s the_ matter_, Dwightie?
10429I?
10429If everything is over between you, why should you?
10429If there was anything I could do at any time, you''d let me know, would n''t you?
10429Ina,said Lulu,"first ca n''t we hear something about your visit?
10429Is he coming?
10429Is it Miss Lulu Bett?
10429Is it about getting work?
10429Is n''t he here? 10429 Is n''t he?"
10429Is n''t it a pretty city?
10429Is n''t it understood that my mail ca n''t wait like this?
10429Is n''t she coming to her supper?
10429Is n''t that like a woman?
10429Is that all you can think of?
10429Is that what it is, papa?
10429Is that why you made fun of me all the time?
10429It would mean running away, would n''t it?
10429It''s Ina, is n''t it?
10429It''s nothing to you that we have a brother who''s a bigamist?
10429Just a little? 10429 Last night?"
10429Leave your mother? 10429 Let''s see-- you mean Dwight Deacon, I guess?"
10429Letters-- documents of any sort? 10429 Look here,"Dwight went on persuasively,"had n''t you and he had some little tiff when he told you?"
10429Look here,said Dwight Herbert,"who is it sits home and has_ ice_ cream put in her lap, like a queen?"
10429Look here,said Ninian,"are n''t you going?"
10429Lulie, was your husband married?
10429Lulie,she said,"was his other wife-- was she_ there_?"
10429Lulu sing? 10429 Lulu,"said Dwight,"on Di''s account will you promise us to let this thing rest with us three?"
10429Lulu,said Dwight,"really?
10429Lulu?
10429Mamma,Di whispered then, like escaping steam,"is n''t Uncle Ninian coming too?"
10429Married?
10429Marrying folks, then?
10429Me too?
10429Me?
10429Mother,said Lulu,"when Di went away just now, was she carrying a satchel?"
10429My dear Lulu, now why revive anything? 10429 Nice?
10429Nothing else?
10429Nothing whatever?
10429Of course,said Lulu,"of course you won''t-- you wouldn''t--""Say anything?"
10429Oh, Bobby, will you pump while I hold this?
10429Oh, how''d you get along last night?
10429Oh,she said,"what will mamma say?"
10429Or Mrs.?
10429Proofs?
10429Really, darling?
10429See that? 10429 See them to talk to?"
10429See-- where were they then?
10429See? 10429 Shall I wait for the butter- woman or get some creamery?"
10429Should you, Miss Lulu?
10429So I can come in, ca n''t I?
10429Sue him? 10429 Suitors?"
10429Sure you liked it, Miss Lulu?
10429Sure?
10429That is very nearly salmoney, is n''t it?
10429That your apology?
10429Then what are you going to do?
10429Then you care nothing for our feelings in this matter?
10429They were?
10429They''re so-- so--"You have n''t had but two, have you?
10429To have a thing like that in the family? 10429 To the city?"
10429Truly, Lulu,said Ina,"would n''t that be best?
10429Vanilly or chocolate?
10429Was he-- about the letter, you know?
10429Was n''t she married when she thought she was?
10429Was n''t you expecting anybody to meet you?
10429Was there anything to prevent your speaking of that before?
10429Well then, what are you doing here?
10429Well, but he''s here with you, is n''t he?
10429Well, but mercy,said Ina,"could n''t he find out now?"
10429Well, ca n''t I tell Bobby and Jenny she''s here?
10429Well, then, why did n''t he say so here?
10429Well, what have we on the festive board to- night?
10429Well, where have_ you_ been?
10429Well, why do n''t you say what for?
10429Well,said Ina practically,"what does he say?"
10429Well--"I mean, did Ninian give you any money?
10429Well?
10429What about_ my_ pride?
10429What are you two whispering about? 10429 What can anybody be thinking of to call just at meal- time?"
10429What did they say?
10429What did you think it was? 10429 What did you wish to see me about?"
10429What difference does it make what they think?.
10429What do I think of him? 10429 What do people say to people,"she wondered,"when it''s like this?"
10429What do you mean?
10429What do you think I came for to- night?
10429What do you think I have to tell you?
10429What else?
10429What excuse have you to offer?
10429What if I brought him up to- night?
10429What if it was Di?
10429What is it, Lulu?
10429What made him conclude, by then, that you ought to be told?
10429What may we expect?
10429What next do you say?
10429What on earth did you do it for?
10429What say?
10429What time did you get home?
10429What would the folks think of me, going on so?
10429What would you have me do?
10429What you talking?
10429What''d he say?
10429What''s that to you?
10429What''s that?
10429What''s the use of finding fault with Inie? 10429 What''s them?"
10429What''s this?
10429What''s this?
10429What''s this?
10429What''s your name?
10429What?
10429Where did you get a wheel- chair, for mercy sakes?
10429Where did you go?
10429Where is little daughter to- night?
10429Where were you two-- since you make such a mystery?
10429Where you been mostly?
10429Where''d you have it?
10429Where''s Di?
10429Where''s Lulie?
10429Where''s my beautiful straw hat? 10429 Where''s your mother, Ina?"
10429Where?
10429Where?
10429Which kind of a Mr. are you?
10429Who said he''s here?
10429Who said we wanted to be married?
10429Who, me?
10429Who?
10429Whom did you see?
10429Whose Bert?
10429Why could n''t I have said that?
10429Why did he tell you at all, then?
10429Why did you do it?
10429Why do n''t she?
10429Why do n''t she?
10429Why not all walk down? 10429 Why not say the wedding service?"
10429Why not?
10429Why not?
10429Why set people wondering till we have to?
10429Why should I have anything to do about Lulu?
10429Why, Di,she said,"do you feel that way too?"
10429Why, not till you tell me I can,said Cornish,"but wo n''t everybody know now?"
10429Why, what would they think?
10429Why?
10429Why?
10429Will you be more careful of your grammar or shall I speak to you again?
10429Wo n''t you please write it down for me?
10429Would it, Ina? 10429 Would n''t it be fun to elope and surprise the whole school?"
10429Would you have done that?
10429Would you?
10429Yes, but, Dwight, what do you think of him?
10429Yes, but, Dwight, where has she gone? 10429 Yes-- well, what did he_ say_?"
10429You certainly did not so far forget us, Lulu, as to go on the street in that dress?
10429You do n''t mean just the cooking?
10429You do n''t? 10429 You dress for me; Ina, are n''t you jealous?
10429You folks expect me?
10429You know that, do n''t you?
10429You like sacred music?
10429You opened the letter?
10429You sure?
10429You tell me this: Do they know? 10429 You think that?"
10429You want me to promise what?
10429You were with her-- where in the world had you been? 10429 You will?"
10429You will?
10429You wo n''t give it to me?
10429You''ll be all right, mother?
10429You_ bought_ it?
10429You_ picked_ the flower on the plant?
10429Your feeling?
10429Your new one?
10429_ Di?_He had Lulu''s eyes now.
10429_ No_ salmon?
10429_ What''s_ this?
10429_ Where_ are you going?
10429***** When Di and Monona had been excused, Dwight asked:"Nothing new from the bride and groom?"
10429A very little?"
10429After waitin''so long?"
10429Ai n''t this Ina?"
10429And Ina?"
10429And Nin into-- say, Nin, what are you, anyway?"
10429And before they left Lulu said:"Dwight-- you ca n''t tell how long you''ll be gone?"
10429And he had n''t seen Dwight?
10429And how should she deal?
10429And of course I said,''What?''
10429And on hearing that Lulu had an errand, added still more sisterly;"Well, but mercy, what you so dressed up for?"
10429And some one"made up a likely story to soothe her own pride-- you know how they do that?"
10429And then cried rudely:"What are you here for?"
10429And was he not a magistrate?
10429And what did Lulu care what Ina liked?
10429And where did he really hope to get?
10429And whose disgrace is it, pray?"
10429And,"Whose dog?"
10429Any sort of assurance that he was speaking the truth?"
10429Are n''t_ you_ going to sing?"
10429Are you a little girl or are you our grown- up young lady?"
10429Assistant justice or assistant dentist-- which?
10429At length she was obliged to say,"Like me to- day?"
10429Bobby now first spoke:"Who''s glum?"
10429But I did n''t think--""You did n''t think what?"
10429But Ina said tensely:"_ Is_ it nonsense?
10429But at length she did say:"Why does n''t Di come?
10429But what else could I do?"
10429But what was she to_ do_?
10429But when all this had spent itself, what was she herself to do?
10429But why not let Dwight do it in his own way?
10429But_ how_ did she do that?"
10429Ca n''t we have a secret if we want one?"
10429Ca n''t you run up and slip on another dress?"
10429Come on and hear my prayers, why do n''t you?"
10429Cornish cried warmly,"then everything_ was n''t_ all right last night?"
10429Could Dwight and Ina come to her while she was still able to visit?
10429Could anything be more pleasant?"
10429Di had no answer save her furious flush, and Mrs. Bett went on:"Did n''t I tell you?
10429Did Di Deacon take that train?"
10429Did Mr. Cornish come to see you?"
10429Did he give you any proofs?"
10429Do n''t you ever go anywheres?"
10429Do n''t you think mamma knows best?"
10429Do n''t you want to?
10429Do you have to work like this all the time?
10429Do you like me?"
10429Do you?"
10429Dwight''s eyes narrowed:"My dear Lulu,"he said,"are you_ sure_ of that?"
10429Have n''t I been trying and trying to find out where the black satchel went?
10429Have n''t you noticed that?"
10429Have you no delicacy?"
10429He had found the house all right?
10429He said he thought about telling us right there in the restaurant, but of course that''d been hard-- wouldn''t it?
10429Her and Di?
10429Her first question was:"Who''s going to do your work?"
10429Her"Could you leave me another bottle of milk this morning?"
10429His whole manner was a mute testimony to his participation in the eternal query: How did I get into it?
10429How long was it?
10429How much, Dwight?"
10429How should I tell?"
10429How was she to go on?
10429I ca n''t....""You''d rather they''d know he fooled you, when he had another wife?"
10429I mean about your going after her?"
10429I mean that I''d know how to do?
10429I s''pose because I''m most thirty- four and new things ai n''t so easy any more-- but what have I got or what''ll I ever have?
10429I take it you do n''t intend to sue Ninian?"
10429I''ve often watched you there--""You have?"
10429III JUNE On a June morning Dwight Herbert Deacon looked at the sky, and said with his manner of originating it:"How about a picnic this afternoon?"
10429If it was Dwight-- and they did n''t know whether he had another wife, or not, and you wanted to ask him-- oh, do n''t you see?
10429If_ this_ was why Di was leaving home...."But, Di,"she cried,"do you love Bobby Larkin?"
10429In October he might be heard asking:"Where''s my beautiful fall coat?"
10429Ina''s conception of hostess- ship was definite: A volley of questions-- was his train on time?
10429Ina, with her blank, upward look, exclaimed:"To-_day?_""First class day, it looks like to me."
10429Is he?"
10429Is it all right?"
10429Is n''t everybody?"
10429Is n''t it?"
10429Is there anything to this absurd tale?"
10429It was as if the sound shattered a thousand filaments-- where?
10429Know what?"
10429Lulu said:"I thought it was Di that you--""Miss Di?
10429Lulu was thinking:"What shall I say?
10429Nature''s tonic-- eh?
10429Ninian made a great show of selecting a table, changed once, called the waiter"my man"and rubbed soft hands on"What do you say?
10429No good can come by--""But why should n''t I have his address?"
10429Oh, but wo n''t he bring up some songs some evening, for them to try over?
10429Oh, could he?
10429Oh, would Ina like that?
10429Or were her own eyes new?
10429Or,"W- well, it_ is n''t_ Lulu Bett any more, is it?
10429Say, why do n''t you send it to his brother?
10429Say, why in time do n''t you come in the other room?"
10429See?"
10429Shall it be lobster?"
10429She caught his speculative look-- he had heard a tale or two concerning her return, as who in Warbleton had not heard?
10429She cut a fresh cake, filled a plate, called to Di, saying:"Take some out to that Bobby Larkin, why do n''t you?"
10429She had been there but once, years ago-- how could she ever find anybody?
10429She heard Dwight''s concerned"Is that so?"
10429She put it to her sister fairly: Now, no matter what Dwight''s way was, would n''t that be better?
10429So at last Dwight said tentatively at lunch:"What if I brought that Neil Cornish up for supper, one of these nights?"
10429So that after all it was a relief to Lulu to hear Dwight ask casually:"By the way, Lulu, have n''t I got some mail somewhere about?"
10429Take off your hat, why do n''t you?"
10429Teasing her about him, were they?
10429The dog- kennel part-- wasn''t that the queerest thing?
10429The evening had been to her a light from heaven-- how could she find anything to say?
10429The less you say about it the better, for all our sakes--_you_ see that, do n''t you?"
10429Their progeny will not eat?
10429Then he found himself looking off the page, stabbed by a reflection which always stabbed him anew: Was he really getting anywhere with his law?
10429There, by Jove, now have we entertained you, or have n''t we?"
10429These details Dwight interrupted: Could n''t Lulu remember that he liked sage on the chops?
10429To Lulu he said kindly,"Do n''t you play, Miss--?"
10429To every one with whom they spoke in the aisle after church, Ina announced their news: Had they heard?
10429Was he not taking her to the city?
10429Was it possible that Di was suffering in the air of that home as she herself suffered?
10429We_ did n''t_ elope, did we?"
10429Well, but whom has she got to blame for it?"
10429Well, ca n''t you see how it''d hurt her?"
10429Well, what are you doing here?
10429Well, where you hiding that handsome husband of yours?
10429Well, why ca n''t they know the truth?"
10429Well, you are a funny....""You wanted me to lie?"
10429What am I going to do?"
10429What can be supplied?
10429What did it mean?
10429What do you s''pose?
10429What do you say, Ina-- considering Di and all?"
10429What has she done?"
10429What have you got that for?"
10429What is this?
10429What was one to think?
10429What was she going to do?
10429What was this, was their progeny hurt?
10429What you going to say to that?"
10429When Dwight inquired playfully,"Do n''t we look like company?"
10429When only strange names and strange writing presented themselves there, he said:"Tried the parlour?"
10429When they had gone on,"What do you mean by my having to put up with you?"
10429When was he coming and what was he coming for?
10429Where could she go?
10429Where had she gone, with whom had she talked, what had she told?
10429Where had you and Aunt Lulu been with mamma''s new bag?"
10429Where is he?"
10429Where were you both?"
10429Where were you?"
10429Where''d you been if she had n''t married?"
10429Which way did she go?"
10429Who was it that had lived in a boat throughout youth if not he?
10429Who would have thought it of her?
10429Why did n''t you tell them you''re not?"
10429Why do n''t I send her over a baked apple?
10429Why indeed?"
10429Why not be sensible and leave this alone?
10429Why, do n''t the disgrace--""What disgrace?"
10429Would Bobby consider taking charge of the grass?
10429Would it hurt Di?"
10429Would n''t that be better?"
10429Would she be adult if she were let alone?
10429Yes, it made a man feel a certain confidence...."_ Do n''t_ it?"
10429You ai n''t been and got married twice, have you?
10429You came to see me?"
10429You have it, have n''t you, Dwight?"
10429You hear him?
10429You know the kind of girl?"
10429You said I must n''t tell the truth till I had the proofs...""Tell who?"
10429You see that, do n''t you?"
10429You think the disgrace of bigamy in this family is something the whole town will have to know about?"
10429You wo n''t?
10429You would n''t mind if I did open it?"
10429You''d like that, would n''t you-- going South?"
10429You''ll be sure,"she added,"not to say anything about what was in the letter?"
10429You_ will_ have to tell now, wo n''t you?
10429_ Lulu_?"
10429_ To- night_?
62478''Give every man his deserts and who should''scape hanging?'' 62478 ''We''?"
62478Ah, that was a loss, a great loss-- I remember her, a strong woman, impressive.... And your father-- he goes on with his work?
62478Am I-- rough?
62478And are you sure you do?
62478And he''s gone?
62478And how about you, Mary? 62478 And how was it, that you ceased to be sure?"
62478And nobody else? 62478 And now you''ve got it-- you would n''t say now, as many do, that it''s vanity and vexation of spirit?"
62478And shall I find you here when I come down?
62478And then-- are you going away?
62478And there''s no one else you care about?
62478And were you riding from eight o''clock till three?
62478And what would he get for that?
62478And what''s that?
62478And you did n''t know my mother was dead, either-- or what had become of me?
62478And you have n''t changed your mind at all, in those four years? 62478 And you have n''t thought of marrying any one else?"
62478And you think that''s good-- not to forgive?
62478And you used to feel sure?
62478Are n''t they in it? 62478 Are n''t you too confident?
62478Are you? 62478 Are you?"
62478Because it''s a promise, or because you want to marry him anyway and would, if you had n''t promised? 62478 Better?"
62478Breakfast''s ready-- aren''t you coming down?
62478But supposing you_ ca n''t_?
62478But you''re not, eh?
62478But, why? 62478 But... how can I go back there?"
62478Ca n''t I go with you?
62478Ca n''t you see I''m about to cry?
62478Can you tell me, Mary, why it is that you feel so strongly about this place?... 62478 Coming back to me, Laurence?"
62478Could I see him?... 62478 Defend that man?
62478Did you go to see the children today?
62478Did you hear the wind? 62478 Did you hear what I said?"
62478Do n''t you think I ought to leave him?
62478Do n''t you think that a promise is binding?
62478Do n''t you think you need a change?
62478Do we? 62478 Do you call the children tiresome things?"
62478Do you feel contented to stay here, after all?
62478Do you hear?
62478Do you mean me by that?
62478Do you mind if I smoke?
62478Do you think I do that?
62478Do you think it is right for a lawyer to defend a man he knows to be guilty?
62478Do you think so, Dad?
62478Do you?
62478Does it? 62478 Down there-- in that crowd?
62478Ever run a creamery?
62478Father, are n''t you awfully lonely here in the evenings?
62478For what?
62478Gone over? 62478 Has he shown any interest that way?
62478Have a drink?
62478Have a glass of lemonade, Mary? 62478 Have you talked to him about your marriage?"
62478He did?
62478He makes us look like a couple of scarred old logs, does n''t he?
62478He''s presentable, really?... 62478 Here we all are, you see-- the two nurses and me, and there''ll be special cooking, and-- Well, how will she manage?
62478Here?
62478Hotel? 62478 How a different world?
62478How are you getting on with it?
62478How can you say that? 62478 How could you be my friend?
62478How did Laurence take it?
62478How did you get that?
62478How do you know that-- that I do n''t forgive?
62478How is she gone-- where?
62478How long has he been crying?
62478How long has he been ill?
62478How long has he been like this?
62478How long have you lived here?
62478How, wrong?
62478How? 62478 How?"
62478I hope so, I--"Do you think you''re strong enough to help another?
62478I must hurry back-- can I have a bite to eat now?
62478I never knew that-- I mean, that she was concerned in it.... And you were awfully angry?
62478I promised the boys a game of billiards-- come on up, will you?
62478I shut him out?
62478I suppose so.... You know her, do n''t you, pretty well?
62478I wish you felt as I do-- that you''d do anything rather than have trouble between us--"Trouble? 62478 I wrote you from the hospital, do n''t you remember?"
62478Is he-- very bad?
62478Is it indeed?
62478Is it the work-- the wages?
62478Is it? 62478 Is n''t it?"
62478Is n''t she pretty now?... 62478 Is n''t there something I can get for you, something you need?"
62478Is that woman in the house?
62478Is your baggage there? 62478 It was n''t a life for my mother, either, was it?"
62478It''s about Nora--"Nora? 62478 Judge, how can I take anything more from you?
62478Just so you take it soon-- will you?
62478Laurence tell you?
62478Look, Father, can you see any likeness among us three?
62478Mary, are you sure you''re doing right?
62478Mary, for heaven''s sake, ca n''t you tell me what has happened?
62478Mary, you''re wet through.... Do n''t you want me to speak to Mrs. Lewis, get you some dry clothes?
62478Maybe.... That was n''t what made you want to get inside, though, was it, Larry?
62478Mrs. Carlin, why do you dislike me?
62478My mother is so unhappy, and she makes me unhappy.... Do you think I''m wrong, to marry against her wish?
62478No, I do n''t think so, they''ve gone out to the stable.... Did Father say when he''d be home?
62478No, Larry, no-- how could I?
62478No, is he really?
62478Nora, have you been in to see Laurence?
62478Nora, how long has-- has he been ill exactly, do you know?
62478Not Chicago?... 62478 Not to go back?
62478Nothing-- the heat--"Do n''t you want the lemonade? 62478 Now why should I be ashamed?"
62478Now, Mother, who told you Laurence''s ancestors trotted in bogs? 62478 Now, how do you know there is n''t?
62478Oh, I could n''t think of discommoding you--"Discommoding? 62478 Oh, I do n''t mean what you do, I mean your feeling, do n''t you see?"
62478Oh, Mrs. Hansen, is n''t Father home yet?
62478Oh, do n''t we?
62478Oh, has he?
62478Oh, what is, in your opinion?
62478Perhaps I can help?
62478Perhaps-- you think she does n''t care enough about me-- is that it?
62478Pleasure?
62478Right?
62478Shall I get you a wrap?
62478Shall I play to you a little, first?
62478Should what?
62478Splendid?
62478That''s my coat you''ve got.... Where''s my cap?... 62478 The old gentleman?
62478Then how did you get all this?
62478Then you think-- really--?
62478There is n''t anything the matter, is there? 62478 Timothy?"
62478To stay...?
62478To think he''s willing to face public disapproval, take all sorts of risks, just to stand by that poor hunted beast-- run into danger--"Danger?
62478Us? 62478 Wait?
62478Wants to see...?
62478Well, I should think you might have stayed at home, then-- where were you?
62478Well, shall we go up?
62478Well, since we went in, but--"Why did n''t some one let me know?
62478Well, what''s the trouble now?
62478Well, what?
62478Well, what_ is_ wrong?
62478Well, why do n''t_ you_ come in? 62478 Well?
62478What ails him?
62478What did you do with him?
62478What do you believe in?
62478What does it matter to you?... 62478 What friend?"
62478What is it, Mary? 62478 What is it-- have I said anything to bother you?"
62478What is it? 62478 What is it?"
62478What is sin? 62478 What shall I do?"
62478What''s bothering you now?
62478What''s that for?
62478What''s that for?
62478What''s the matter, Mary?
62478What''s the matter? 62478 What''s the matter?"
62478What, Father?
62478What? 62478 What?
62478When did you notice this change?
62478Where have you been? 62478 Where is Father?"
62478Where is he? 62478 Where were you all last night?"
62478Where you going?
62478Where? 62478 Who does n''t?"
62478Who says I do n''t like Laurence?
62478Why did you do that?
62478Why do n''t you do something about it?
62478Why do n''t you stay in bed?
62478Why not here?... 62478 Why should I look for an easy life?
62478Why, Mary, do you want the man hanged?
62478Why? 62478 Why?"
62478Why?
62478Will you take your own responsibility? 62478 Wo n''t any of the boys go with you?"
62478Wo n''t you have some?
62478Wo n''t you sit here and talk to me a little?... 62478 Work?
62478Would n''t you like some supper?
62478Would you like that? 62478 Wrong?
62478Yes, a long time.... And you really have, all the time?
62478Yes, but what things? 62478 You did n''t exactly want him, then, but you did n''t want to lose him either?...
62478You do n''t mind talking a little this way, do you?
62478You do n''t talk about worldly affairs, then-- is that it? 62478 You do?
62478You do?
62478You feel a little better, do n''t you?
62478You hate sinners, do n''t you, Mary? 62478 You mean he can be defended?"
62478You mean,he said tenderly,"that you have n''t any reason_ not_ to keep it?"
62478You must go now, Mary-- I''m busy.... You did not come to me because you''re in doubt yourself as to what you ought to do, or want to do?
62478You saw?
62478You shut me out, then?... 62478 You think I do n''t work?...
62478You will not?... 62478 You will, Mary?"
62478You''d like to see him tomorrow, would n''t you, if he keeps as well as today?
62478You''re for a class- war, then?
62478You''re going back then?
62478You''re not afraid of death?
62478You''re not against her marrying me, are you?
62478You''ve known me for two years.... How long does it take you to make up your mind?
62478***** Could a wrong done ever be atoned for?
62478A middle- aged butterfly, a mere sensualist-- isn''t that it?"
62478A woman?
62478And how did she reconcile her pride in that seal with her pride in the grandfather who had fought in the Revolution?
62478And really now, what could she do about this situation?
62478And she had not trained them in the way they should go... how could she, when since the early days she had ceased to believe in any definite way?
62478And the comments of her little world, how could she bear those, she who had always stood so proudly above criticism?
62478And what would Lavery, with his glossy freshness of apparel and man- of- the- world air, think of a shabby parent, suddenly produced?
62478And you do, do n''t you?
62478Are n''t you going to unhitch?"
62478Are they living?"
62478Are we free of blame for that sin?
62478Are we not... our brother''s keeper?"
62478Are you going to marry him just because you promised?"
62478Are you very tired?"
62478As he carved the leathery beef he made a point of asking each person,"Will you have it well- done, or rare?"
62478As she came in, she asked with surprise,"Where''s Laurence?"
62478As they turned in through the gates he said,"Do n''t you think I''d better go with you?
62478Been to some grand blowout?"
62478Beyond that curtain of sullen mist, who knows what is brewing?
62478But Mary said with icy calmness:"You did n''t expect me to stay here, did you?"
62478But do you know why I changed my mind?
62478But he did have something on his side, she did n''t treat him well--?"
62478But he is something like a spiritual director, is n''t he, now?"
62478But his strength was gone-- eaten up by that burning fire.... Was he drifting away, calm, without pain, like this, had he gone too far to come back?
62478But if he is n''t, it wo n''t hurt him if I just stand at the door for a minute.... That''s all I want, and I wo n''t come again.... Wo n''t you see?
62478But just to look at him for a minute?"
62478But now-- what could she do?
62478But of course he had his answer, we were not to do evil that good might come.... Shall we walk on?
62478But was that a reason for losing her faith in God?
62478But what are you going to do?"
62478But what good is it?
62478But where shall I go?"
62478But who would hear?...
62478But why?
62478But you did n''t want to leave Laurence?"
62478But-- but--""I''m glad of it-- I''m proud of you-- and that you were promoted for bravery--""Oh, Mary, are you?...
62478But_ why_ did she?
62478Ca n''t you have supper with me?"
62478Can I stay?
62478Can we stand aside, and condemn?...
62478Carlin?...
62478Confound it, who took my rubbers?..."
62478Deceit, treachery-- could she phrase such things, even to herself?
62478Did n''t_ your_ ancestors come over from England?"
62478Did you pray for him?
62478Did you want to see Judge Carlin?"
62478Do n''t interfere with me-- guess I can do what I like in my own house, ca n''t I?
62478Do n''t you know that I''m master here, that you''re bound to do as I say?"
62478Do n''t you know whether you do or not?...
62478Do n''t you see the cause needs a friend at court?
62478Do n''t you see?"
62478Do n''t you think there are sinful thoughts and feelings?"
62478Do n''t you think you might show a little mercy?"
62478Do n''t you want to come out with me on the lake, Mother?"
62478Do you believe in that?"
62478Do you like this bonnet?"
62478Do you mean-- divorce him?"
62478Do you really feel that?"
62478Do you see that you''ve been wrong toward me?"
62478Do you suppose he''s come back?"
62478Do you think I want to hurt you?
62478Do you think I''m not weak, sometimes?"
62478Do you think marriage not important enough to talk about?"
62478Do you think--?"
62478Do you want to be talked about?"
62478Does it pass?"
62478Does it suit you?"
62478Does n''t it mean something to you?"
62478Ever?"
62478For what?"
62478Gone over to what?"
62478Had n''t he any self- control, any...?
62478Has the doctor been?"
62478Have you ever seen anybody very sick before?"
62478Have you had any private revelation from God about it?...
62478He glanced down at Nora, and asked,"Any change since I left?
62478He still believed in them-- and surely nothing in his life had given the lie to that belief?
62478He tells you?"
62478He''s so strong....""Well, he''s sick, but we''re going to pull him through.... Now look here, are you going to help or not?
62478Her brow wrinkled as she wondered why she had n''t noticed this before-- how long had it been this way?
62478Hey, what''s the use of it?"
62478His consolations-- what use were they?
62478How about that?"
62478How can I condemn sin when I understand the sinner so well?"
62478How can I help you?"
62478How could she go to her parents and tell them that she had made a mistake, that their opposition to her marriage was justified?
62478How did she reconcile this principle of non- resistance with the fact that she imposed her own will whenever she could on all around her?
62478How do you know what it''s meant to be?
62478How is he?"
62478How make her life over again?
62478How, then, was one to deal with an unreasonable man-- must one actually submit to him when he was in the wrong?
62478How?"
62478I always knew you had it in you.... Oh, Mary, has it all gone for nothing-- all that you said you believed in for so many years?
62478I could n''t sleep-- could you?"
62478I count for nothing with you?
62478I do n''t ask anybody''s forgiveness, because what difference would it make?
62478I do n''t believe he could get a train in tonight, could he?"
62478I do n''t think I was religious at all-- because, you see, it did n''t stand the test-- I lost it--""And when was that-- that you lost it?"
62478I do n''t understand you?
62478I do n''t want it-- I expect struggle and suffering, is n''t that what life is?
62478I say, this is unreasonable.... Poor girl, you''re tired out, I know... but what d''ye suppose the coachman thinks?"
62478I suppose you have no idea where he may have picked this up?
62478I wanted life to be more interesting, richer than it was, with more pleasure in it.... Why not?
62478I''m Laurence''s friend, why ca n''t I be yours?"
62478I''ve heard of a lot of things.... Would you go away with me, Mary, go west, if--""West?"
62478If I want some new furniture, what have you got to say about it?
62478If a man loves not his brother whom he hath seen, how shall he love God whom he hath not seen?...
62478If we had been all that we should have been, would this have happened?
62478If we''re not needed?"
62478If you were so anxious to have me go the right way, why did n''t you stay and train me up?"
62478If, in addition, he succeeded in his profession, what more could he ask?
62478In the hall he put out his hand to her again and said anxiously:"Look here now, you wo n''t hate me more for this, will you?
62478In those immaculate clothes?
62478Is it now?
62478Is it you?"
62478Is n''t she now?"
62478It made no difference to her, why should it to him?
62478It seemed that some drama was moving to an obscure but deeply significant climax, but what was it all about?
62478It seemed that the wind was driving through her head, her thoughts were like whirling leaves.... Why should she be proud of her sons?
62478It was some moments before she could say, coolly:"If you think Laurence has done right, why did you ask me to''do something about it''?"
62478It was two enemy races mating when we married, eh, Father?"
62478It''s our own business, is n''t it?...
62478Killed the fatted calf, eh?...
62478Nay, it was only right, for was n''t it well known that Carlin came of gentlefolk in Ireland?
62478Near the end of their journey he asked:"Well, what do you say-- about made up your mind?"
62478Nora looked like a witch in it, with her thin face and carroty hair.... Had Nora also, perhaps, a pair of diamond earrings?...
62478Now why?
62478Of course he went on with his work, why should n''t he?...
62478Oh, I do n''t know what your actions have been, how can I know?...
62478Perhaps you want me to ask your forgiveness?"
62478Pray?
62478Refuse her?...
62478Shall I show you to your room?"
62478She had had a chance to annoy Nora and she had done it.... Was she still bound then by the limitations of that old self, which she saw so clearly?
62478She is troubled about you, she thinks you are marrying just because you gave your word, years ago, and do n''t like to break it.... Is it so, Mary?"
62478She questioned him sharply:"What did you mean by saying that when you understood the sinner you could n''t condemn sin?
62478She was waiting for him to say something, what on earth could he say?
62478Should he go and see Mary this morning?
62478Something in the way his thick grey hair grew over his forehead, his eyebrows.... Why, yes, he looked like Jim-- or was it Timothy?
62478Suit you?
62478Suppose they_ have_ got cement sidewalks and lots of trees?
62478Suppose ye_ did_ give''em a library?
62478Surely he ca n''t be taken, God would n''t take him away--""He''s too weak... he has n''t got strength to--""Do n''t say that, how do you know?
62478Take her children and go back to her parents, as Hilary suggested?
62478The Judge will be a witness, it will be all right, your parents wo n''t mind very much, will they?...
62478The horse''s name had provoked a protest, but as the doctor said, that_ was_ his name and it suited him, why change it?
62478The house was an investment-- what could be safer than that?
62478The morning was coming-- how was she to face it?
62478The wasted years.... Years that she had wasted... when he had lived his life, near her but apart, when she had held him away-- for what?...
62478Then, turning away he enquired sulkily,"Well, shall I bring up your breakfast?"
62478There-- isn''t that Father?"
62478They had been cut away from her-- or was it that she had done it, cut them away, repelled and denied them both?
62478They had just grown up themselves.... You have n''t nagged them, not very much.... Was that what her father thought of moral teaching?
62478They may have been--""Did n''t his father come over here with a bundle on his back, an_ immigrant_?"
62478They were both young-- why bury themselves in a mere daily round of work and care?
62478To be the head of a family-- what more dignified and satisfactory position could he wish, so far as his private life was concerned?
62478Tomorrow?"
62478Was he Laurence''s father or an impostor?
62478Was he getting too old to look after it, or to care?
62478Was it after all that she perhaps_ did n''t_ feel kindly to Nora,_ did n''t_ wish her well?...
62478Was it all on the surface-- the first time life comes hard to you will you throw it all away?...
62478Was it deeper than that?
62478Was it prayer-- this voiceless cry of anguish from her heart toward the unknown?
62478Was it right to take him in?
62478Was it the feeling of wrong that had caused her unhappiness-- or was it only as unhappiness grew upon her that she had begun to feel wrong?
62478Was it true, that life was over,"Daredevil Carlin"was no more, his occupation gone?
62478Was the cut on your head very bad?"
62478Well, after all, why?
62478Well, what did she expect him to do-- shut Mary up-- or disinherit her?
62478Well, where is he now?"
62478Were one''s faults and weaknesses inherent, not to be got rid of, even if one condemned them?
62478What about her?"
62478What ails you, child?"
62478What can I do?"
62478What did that mean-- that radiant face, eyes gleaming with tenderness, mouth half- opened and smiling?
62478What did those women care about Greek tragedies?...
62478What do they know about it?..."
62478What does he want?"
62478What good would anything forced from Mary do to him?
62478What have you got?"
62478What he longed for was a tender understanding-- but if she would not understand, would not be tender, what could he do but rage?
62478What more d''ye want?
62478What right has she to come here and want to see him?"
62478What trouble?"
62478What was it?
62478What woman?"
62478What would happen to him in this world of harsh and jarring contacts?...
62478What''s all this good for, that you''ve got?
62478What''s the objection?"
62478What?"
62478When Laurence came in the door, she said directly:"I went to see Mr. Robertson-- he''s ill.""You went yesterday too, did n''t you?...
62478When do they take him out?"
62478When one near to us fails... must we not feel_ we_ have failed, too?...
62478When she had laid the baby on the bed, with his bottle, she said:"You know I went out?"
62478Where are you going?"
62478Where do you get it?
62478Where else could you go?"
62478Who is it?"
62478Why bother them?
62478Why ca n''t it be?...
62478Why ca n''t you see it more as I do, Mary?
62478Why did you run off like that?"
62478Why do n''t you have a steak, Father, something substantial?"
62478Why do n''t you put on a cap and spectacles?"
62478Why go on--""Well, most of us by that time have certain ties, responsibilities, we''re necessary, or think we are--""But if we_ do n''t_ think we are?
62478Why had he come for her instead of telegraphing?...
62478Why had n''t she noticed that he was getting old?
62478Why have that long tail on it?"
62478Why must just this man, whom his judgment condemned, come back to cross the one strong personal desire of his life, his one chance of happiness?
62478Why not be honest with Mary, tell her that he could not advise her, tell her why?...
62478Why not the city?
62478Why not, where so many better men had died?
62478Why not?
62478Why not?...
62478Why pretend to be what he was not?
62478Why should I want to marry you if I do n''t love you?"
62478Why should I?"
62478Why should n''t we take Miss Mary?
62478Why should n''t we?...
62478Why should she care?
62478Why should that be?
62478Why turn aside from this safe and profitable concern with people''s purses, to meddle with the wild impulses of their hearts, so- called?
62478Why was it that she had lost the faith that in her girlhood had made her so strong and secure?...
62478Why, do n''t you think you will?"
62478Why, when everything promised well, should he so often be moody, irritable and discontented?
62478Will you see he does n''t get uncovered?
62478Will you?"
62478Would any one have taken those two for father and son?
62478Would n''t the doctor come in?
62478Would recognition that she had done it, a sincere wish to atone for it, be of any use?...
62478Yes, it''s more on your side-- yet I do n''t know--""Mary and I are different enough, eh?"
62478Yes, she would go, like that, without a word to him, without a sign.... Was she angry-- was she hurt?...
62478You are n''t sorry, are you?"
62478You coming, Judge?"
62478You do n''t think it wrong then to disturb me by your actions, not to give me your confidence--""Confidence?"
62478You do n''t understand why people sin?"
62478You have something to tell me?
62478You may believe I had a good reason-- say, Mary, are you listening?"
62478You mean I ought to have been a day- labourer?...
62478You still love Laurence, as much as ever?"
62478You told me to, did n''t you?"
62478You''ll come tomorrow night?"
62478You''ll come?
62478You''re a success, I''ve been a failure, from a social point of view--""Success?"
62478You''re not going to-- sure you feel perfectly well, Mary?"
62478You''ve always lived here, why is it you do n''t want something new?"
62478Your being there-- right there in the house-- don''t you see?
62478Your father was a carpenter-- and do n''t I work for wages?"
62478Your parents are opposed... to your marriage?"
62478_ Why_ did she want to stay here, in this one- horse town?
62478help your mother, will you?
11221About_ you_?
11221After all, can you be so very sure that she is ever''simply wild''if she never shows anything?
11221Ai n''t that just like a fire in the woods?
11221All ready?
11221Almost enough to buy you a new car a year, is n''t it?
11221Am I not to have a present myself?
11221And after the wedding?
11221And do n''t you get what- for, if you go in with all your clothes on this way?
11221And what has this little girl to do with anything?
11221And you''ll let him alone? 11221 And your father?"
11221Anything specially the matter with the predatory rich?
11221Are n''t there as many ways of being in love, as there are people?
11221Are n''t you going to the campus?
11221Are the others going?
11221Are you a clairvoyant?
11221Are you at eighteen presuming to a greater knowledge of life than I at forty?
11221Are you coming, Morrison?
11221Are you going to have any music tonight, or are n''t you?
11221Are you sure now, Sylvia, are you sure now, dead sure?
11221Are your parents still alive?
11221Arnold''s horrid, is n''t he?
11221As for keeping up only human ties, is n''t a fortnight once every five years rather slim rations?
11221Beauty?
11221Being in Capua usually referring to the fact that the Carthaginians went to pieces that winter?
11221But monomanias need no foundation in fact--He broke off abruptly to say:"Is this all another proof of your diabolical cleverness?
11221But, Sylvia, what in the world-- here, ca n''t we go up under those trees a few minutes and have a talk? 11221 But_ you_ have n''t a daughter old enough to be married?"
11221Can you give me any single reason why I should n''t?
11221Collects?
11221Could you-- do you feel like telling me about it?
11221Did Grandfather keep his end up? 11221 Did she go away?"
11221Did you ever make that remark to any other girl, I wonder?
11221Did you lose_ your_ money, too?
11221Do I understand you to say that you repudiate those''best pleasures''?
11221Do n''t you like my dress?
11221Do n''t you want one?
11221Do n''t you_ know_?
11221Do n''t_ you_ live there?
11221Do you believe it?
11221Do you get it? 11221 Do you know, Barbara Marshall, that there are times when you keep one unhappy old misanthrope from despairing of his kind?"
11221Do you live with her?
11221Do you mean to say you do n''t_ know_?
11221Do you mean to say you''ve never heard of me?
11221Do you realize that I''ve proposed marriage to you and you''ve turned me down?
11221Do you really_ know_ him at all?
11221Do you remember,he asked in a strange, high voice,"that you said you would like me for your brother?"
11221Do you suppose your sister would be willing to let me make up for the objectionable Charlie Winthrop''s deficiences?
11221Do you write, or something? 11221 Does n''t it occur to you,"broke in Morrison,"that you may be attacking something that''s a mere phase, an incident of transition?"
11221Everybody will be at dinner, wo n''t they?
11221Excuse me, Morrison, wo n''t you, if I run along?
11221Good, is n''t it?
11221Hats?
11221Have you another?
11221Hello, Momma,he said good- naturedly,"when did_ you_ gum- shoe in?"
11221Here''s where I get another one on Jerry-- what?
11221How do you happen to be in Paris?
11221How do you like your tea, dear?
11221How do you mean?
11221How do you pronounce your name?
11221How do you_ happen_ to come East just now, anyhow?
11221How do_ you_ know that I''m not fearfully jealous of you? 11221 How in the world do you mean?"
11221How much?
11221How old are you?
11221How''d you ever_ get_ it fastened,she inquired,"if you do n''t know how to unfasten it?"
11221How''d you find your way home?
11221How''d you know where it was going?
11221How''re you, Morrison?
11221I guess you all got pretty excited about this, did n''t you?
11221I hope Miss Marshall will think that Paris will be big enough for all of us?
11221I think,she said, speaking a little slowly,"I think the two go together, do n''t they?"
11221I went up to him and said,''Father, Father, what are you doing?'' 11221 I wonder how much you care for me?"
11221I would n''t be in the way,_ would_ I?
11221If I go where?
11221In the meantime, how about the cases of those who are unhappily married?
11221Is n''t it fine,remarked the civic- minded Mrs. Marshall,"to see all these little prairie towns so splendidly lighted?"
11221Is n''t it your best?
11221Is there or is there not such a thing as parental authority?
11221Is there?
11221It is customary, before going in swimming, is n''t it, Arnold, to take your watch out of your pocket and put your cuff- links in a safe- place?
11221It makes one wonder, does n''t it,she conjectured pleasantly,"to which type one belongs oneself?"
11221Judish? 11221 Judith is a trained nurse; is n''t that just the right thing for her?
11221Know what?
11221Know_ what_?
11221Luxury?
11221May I ask,she inquired,"_ what_ kind of a husband is that?
11221May I tag along?
11221Mr. Reinhardt, what are these people_ here for_?
11221No, no, child, what in the world makes you think that?
11221Now what would_ you_ do in_ my_ place?
11221Of vat use?
11221Oh, Arnold,she began, rather at random,"whatever became of Professor Saunders?
11221Oh, Judy dear, when_ are_ you going to be married? 11221 Oh, did you want to see Father?"
11221Oh, do they? 11221 Oh, he does n''t spend the winters in Paris with you?"
11221Oh, he is at school now?
11221Oh, what''s the use?
11221Oh, why do n''t you leave it off?
11221Oh, you know Morrison?
11221Oh, your mother told him? 11221 Run over to the summer- house and get my racquet, will you?
11221Say, Mother dear,she said in a quavering voice that tried to be light,"why do n''t you eat some of these cakes to keep me company?
11221Say, Mother,he went on, looking up at her with trusting eyes, searching the quiet face,"what do you suppose_ made_ the bear go away?
11221See here, Austin, why do n''t_ you_ take Sylvia home? 11221 Sha n''t I play you some Beethoven?"
11221Shall I confess why I do? 11221 Shall we take a little walk, my dear?"
11221She''s a_ very_ pretty girl, is n''t she?
11221She''s going to be a trained nurse?
11221She''s just got to the excitin''part,he said severely, and to the raconteur eagerly,"''N''_en_ what?"
11221She''s_ that_ kind of a woman, is she?
11221Something tells me I''m goin''to have a good time at this house- party, what?
11221Something that you selected expressly for me?
11221Sylvia,said Arnold, hesitating,"Sylvia, all this sounds so-- look here, are you sure you''re in_ love_ with Austin?"
11221Sylvia--_it''s all right_--isn''t it?
11221There''s nothing like a quick spin for driving the nightmares out of your mind, is there?
11221There, feelin''better?
11221To Colorado?
11221Tools?
11221Upon my word, I wonder how Molly and Morrison_ will_ manage?
11221Was it in your room?
11221Was that why you came back and told?
11221Was?
11221Was_ he_ there? 11221 Well, Miss Miller--?"
11221Well, Mr. Bristol, how would this do for a punishment? 11221 Well, Sylvia, do n''t you know your own sister?"
11221Well, how about it?
11221Well, spitfire,he said,"_ comment ça roule_, eh?"
11221Well, was n''t that_ queer_?
11221Well, what- d''you- think- o''-_that?_he commented, all in one breath.
11221Were n''t you afraid to venture out in a boat all by yourself?
11221What are you doing?
11221What are you_ talking_ about?
11221What could they add to such a Spartan lustration?
11221What did Pauline do when Aunt Victoria scolded her?
11221What did Pauline do?
11221What did you suppose, you baby? 11221 What do you mean by character?"
11221What do you mean, Judy-- what do you mean?
11221What do you want to know?
11221What does it make you think of?
11221What else can you do?
11221What happened to it?
11221What is it, Cousin Parnelia?
11221What kind of flowers does Judy like the best?
11221What made you think of throwing the things into the river?
11221What now?
11221What the dickens does she do that for?
11221What time is it?
11221What were you laughing about, so delightfully, as I came in, eh?
11221What ye want?
11221What you in here_ for_, anyhow?
11221What''s Judish?
11221What''s a porte- cochère?
11221What''s that? 11221 What''s the matter with him?"
11221What''s the matter with you, Sylvia?
11221What''s the matter with you?
11221What''s the matter?
11221What''s the matter?
11221What''s the matter?
11221What''s the use of anything, if you are going to use_ that_ argument?
11221What''s the use of going on now?
11221What''s the_ matter_ with you?
11221What''s up?
11221What?
11221What_ are_ the''sights''of La Chance, Auntie?
11221What_ are_ you, if a mere grandfather may venture to inquire?
11221What_ are_ your plans?
11221What_ can_ you do? 11221 What_ shall_ we do, Mother?"
11221What_ you_ been doing that''s so awful bad? 11221 Where are you going?"
11221Where are you going?
11221Where did you go to throw them in? 11221 Where does F. Morrison, house- furnishing- expert, come in?"
11221Where''s_ Molly_ keeping herself nowadays?
11221Where_ did_ you learn to swim so?
11221Who does n''t hope so?
11221Who is Professor Kennedy?
11221Who''s Madrina?
11221Who''s Pauline?
11221Who''s the fire- warden of this township?
11221Why could n''t Judith come on and make us a visit too? 11221 Why did n''t Pauline like him?"
11221Why in the world are you two poking along so?
11221Why in the world''wolf- hound''?
11221Why in the world, my dear, did you_ walk_ home?
11221Why not depend on himself?
11221Why not make it grizzly bear, to take in the rest of the animal kingdom?
11221Why not?
11221Why yes, beauty is n''t only a matter of line and color, is it? 11221 Why, yes, do n''t you remember, after that funny, joking talk with me, you said that was the nearest you''d ever come to proposing to any girl?"
11221Why, yes; had n''t you heard?
11221Why,_ she_ did n''t know Camilla very well, did she?
11221Why-- is_ my_ face dirty?
11221Will you be spoiled if I tell you you are very pretty?
11221Will you gratify the curiosity of the older generation once more, and tell me what you_ do_ drive a car for?
11221Wo n''t you be afraid to go down through the grounds to the trolley alone, at night?
11221Wo n''t you explain?
11221Wo n''t you-- shan''t we see you-- here--?
11221Yes, quite so, is n''t it?
11221Yes,said Aunt Victoria,"that was how it happened.... Pauline, get out the massage cream and do my face, will you?"
11221You did n''t see Victoria yesterday-- or say anything to her?
11221You have n''t a tutor for him?
11221You think I''d better give up trying to do anything with my Colorado--?
11221You''re a regular peach; do you know it?
11221You''re another, Judy,_ You''ll_ never marry a dolichocephalic blond and make him pull the chestnuts out of the fire for you, will you?
11221You''re sure you do n''t mind a little climb?
11221You''re the prompt article, are n''t you?
11221Your friend''s coming back, ai n''t he?
11221_ Everybody_ goes away?
11221_ Judith_, what makes you think so?
11221_ Now_ what?
11221_ Pauline?_ Why, she never saw him in her life! 11221 _ Should_ I?"
11221_ Well!_said Professor Marshall hotly,"of all the weak, inconclusive, modern parents-- is_ this_ what we''ve come to?"
11221_ What_?
11221A murmur, always drowned out but incessantly recurring, ran:"What about Father and Mother?
11221A young, beautiful, enormendously rich, tremendously enamored girl?
11221And how could she move until she had some sign from Felix and how could he give a sign?
11221And old Mr. Reinhardt, he''s still the same, they say... wonderful, is n''t it, at his age?"
11221And once more she threw out casually:"Do you know what I was going to do if I found out you and Felix-- if you had n''t...?
11221And why should you and Father always be so down on anybody that''s rich, or dresses decently?
11221And you take my word for it and get out while you still can..._ if_ you still can?"
11221And, anyhow, are you so very sure that in your heart you''re not so awfully hard on her because you''re envious of that very prosperity?"
11221Are you safe?"
11221Are you waiting here for that five- fifteen train to West Lydford and then are you planning to walk out to the Austin Farm?
11221Arnold, surprised, asked Judith,"''Cept for that, are you allowed to go in whenever you want?"
11221As Judith and Sylvia came near, several ran to meet them, hurling out at them like a hard- flung stone:"Say-- what d''ye think?
11221As he lingered, lighting a cigarette, she put a question in her turn,"Anything to pay?"
11221As her father said nothing more, biting his nails and looking at her uncertainly, she added in the accent which fitted the words,"Why should n''t I?"
11221As she came out of the door, he dropped his hand, threw back his head, and again sent out an agonizing cry--"_Bar- ba- ra!_ Where are you?"
11221As she looked at that tender, humorous mouth, she had been wondering what she would feel to press her lips upon it?
11221As they reached the two ladies, he burst out,"Say, Madrina, why could n''t I go on to La Chance and go to school there, and live with the Marshalls?"
11221As they sped along he bent over Sylvia fiercely and said in a low, angry tone,"You do n''t like that bounder, do you?
11221As they took the few steps he asked again,"How ever does it happen that you''re here at Lydford Junction of all awful holes?"
11221At first he could not speak, for coughing, but in a moment he found breath to ask,"Is it Victoria''s money?"
11221Austin cared too: she was sure of it; but when they had expressed their pity, what more could they do?
11221Besides, who''d be left to reform?
11221Blame_ me!_ Since I''ve been here, Aunt Victoria has left it to me-- where shall I say to have it set?"
11221But how could she tell her father of that?
11221CHAPTER XXIV ANOTHER BRAND OF MODERN TALK"Where''s Judith?"
11221CHAPTER XXVIII SYLVIA ASKS HERSELF"WHY NOT?"
11221Ca n''t any of you-- can''t you--?"
11221Can you tell me anything about trains to Chicago?"
11221Colonel Fiske to see me?
11221Could any one?
11221Could n''t he_ see_ them?
11221Could she?
11221Could"it"be coming so suddenly, in this casual, abrupt manner?
11221Did he feel now that he was as rich as Austin...?
11221Did you ever hear them?"
11221Did you know I was that base sort of a woman?
11221Did you suppose that men in love carry their sweethearts around wrapped in cotton- wool?
11221Do n''t you even know that much?
11221Do n''t you know me?
11221Do n''t you see how no one can do more for the common weal than just to live, as finely, as beautifully, as intelligently as possible?
11221Do n''t you want me to show you where the pump is?"
11221Do n''t you want to take it to your room to read?"
11221Do you know what I did?
11221Do you know what that means?
11221Do you know, by the way,"he asked, looking with a quick interrogation at the girl,"_ why_ I''m so out of favor with him?"
11221Do you remember Professor Kennedy?
11221Do you suppose he will ever be willing to take me back?--now after this long time?
11221Does she ever come to Lydford?"
11221During recess she advanced to the new- comer, saying, with a bright smile:"Are n''t you thirsty?
11221Even the teacher kept her distance, as though Judith were some dangerous little animal,"What in the world did you do that for?"
11221Evidently Aunt Victoria did not follow this sudden change of subject, for she asked blankly,"_ Who_?
11221Father came out on the veranda, saying to Mother,"Is n''t that crescendo superb?"
11221Felix-- why do n''t you come along?
11221Fiske?"
11221For some reason the man seemed quite struck with this statement and eyed her with keenness as he said:"Oh-- really?
11221Grandfather, you have your cards with you, have n''t you?
11221Had Sylvia heard that Madame La Rue was not a bit well, that old trouble with her heart, only worse?
11221Have n''t you felt him wish he could strike me dead, when Molly makes tea for me, or turns over music as I play?"
11221Have you visited that yet?''"
11221Have you?"
11221He asked now,"Did you ever think that maybe what Austin was thinking about when he chucked the money was what you''d say, how you''d take it?
11221He burst out on her,"Who_ are_ you, anyhow?"
11221He does n''t want a lot of people staring at him, do you, Buddy- baby?"
11221He frowned and said,"Oh, is Arnold...?"
11221He had a pile of papers in his hand and he said,"Barbara, are you awfully busy just now?"
11221He had asked-- it was like Lawrence''s eerie ways-- apropos of nothing at all,"What sort of a man was Aunt Victoria''s husband?"
11221He had just said,"And the rabbit_ was_ naughty, did n''t he was?"
11221He looked across the heads of the three nearest him and called to Arnold:"Smith, you''ll lend me some flannels, wo n''t you?
11221He took her hand again and continued more steadily:"Will you let me, for a little while longer, go on living near you?
11221He turned to the Principal:"How many girls were going to the picnic?"
11221Her aunt told me that my father was as drunk as a lord on his wedding night-- What did he think of_ his_ son?
11221Here, where is my share of those cakes?"
11221How about Cousin Parnelia and Mr. Reinhardt?
11221How can you blame Jerry?
11221How could her mother be dead?
11221How could she tell him of what was only a wordless radiance?
11221How could the worst be over, when there was still that whirling horror of flame and smoke beyond them?
11221How did I find things in the real world?
11221How did you dare?"
11221How ever could you have the courage?
11221How in the world could a girl of your age have the experience and intuition to feel that?
11221How old are you?"
11221How would I ever know but that it was only because he thought he ought to?
11221How_ is_ she now?"
11221I ca n''t play on more dan von fioleen at a time-- is it?
11221I could n''t make you understand-- you do n''t know-- how should you?
11221I sat up in bed and said,''What is it?''
11221I would n''t ha''gone to your darned old picnic-- an''was n''t I in the room every minute this afternoon?"
11221I''ve certainly been going_ some!_""Why do n''t you leave me here?"
11221I''ve talked to you such a lot about home and the queer people we know-- did I ever mention Cousin Parnelia?
11221If Judith and I love each other, what is it to anybody else if we get married?
11221If you think it hard for you who have only to choose-- how about the rest of us who must--?"
11221Is n''t it a bit paradoxical to say that the people who have n''t a thing are the only ones who know anything about it?"
11221Is n''t there a beauty as a possible ideal of aspiration for a race that probably never could achieve a Florentine or Japanese beauty of line?"
11221It was probably"horrid"; nothing could be done about it now; what else could they talk about that would be cheerful?
11221It''s astonishingly peaceful, is n''t it?"
11221Judish?"
11221Letters do paint personalities so, do n''t they?"
11221Luncheon is just ready-- who cares how you look?"
11221Marshall?
11221Maybe they''d be all right-- how could they be anything else with Judith for their mother?
11221Maybe you did n''t happen to notice... at the dinner- table?
11221Miss Marshall, do n''t you see how I am right?
11221Molly called over her shoulder to the men climbing on the car,"All ready there?"
11221Morrison challenged him--"all turn in and clean sewers for a living?
11221Morrison lifted long fingers from the keys and said gravely,"She came through a moment ago, saying,''_ Where''s_ Arnold?''
11221Morrison?"
11221Mrs. Marshall answered with apparent irrelevance,"You remember what Cavour said?"
11221Mrs. Marshall- Smith inquired--"or is that a secret?"
11221Mrs. Marshall- Smith said again,"Where are your parents, dear?"
11221Mrs. Marshall- Smith said, as if in answer,"Just sit down here and wait for me a minute, will you, Sylvia?"
11221Nobody made any comment on Arnold''s method of beginning journeys until Mrs. Marshall asked,"What did you do it for?"
11221Now that I''m no longer forbidden to look at you, or think about you....""Forbidden?"
11221Now you just let me talk for a few minutes, will you?
11221Of all the crazy-- why, what under the sun--?
11221Once Sylvia asked her,"But if you were a little girl there, and Mother was too,--then you and Father and she must have played together sometimes?"
11221One night I had just persuaded him to lie down, when he sat up again with that dreadful face and said very loud:''Where is my wife?
11221One of her daughters, a child about Sylvia''s age, turned a candid, blank little face up to hers,"Mother, what is a drunken reinhardt?"
11221Or do n''t you want to speak about it now, for a while?
11221Page said quietly:"You''ll excuse my not going with you to the house?
11221Perhaps it would amuse the children to go along?"
11221Rather a derogatory remark about your surroundings, eh?"
11221Sass them back, why do n''t you?"
11221Sass''em back, why do n''t you?
11221She added doubtfully,"Did n''t you think their dresses pretty, Aunt Victoria?"
11221She added,"He''s ever so good- looking, do n''t you think-- like a great Viking with his yellow hair and bright blue eyes?"
11221She answered in one imploring rush of a question,"Aunt Victoria, why should_ Father_ be so very mad at Pauline?"
11221She beckoned the man to her, and said,"Marshall- Smith?
11221She continued anxiously,"Well, it means something perfectly horrid, does n''t it?"
11221She did not notice that he shrank from her hand, because she now sprang up, crying,"But where''s Judy?
11221She felt a little shiver of frightened pleasure, and turned to Page to carry it off,"What does it make you think of?"
11221She has n''t pinned up that great long braid, has she, that used to be so handy to pull?"
11221She heard Judith asking in an astonished voice,"Why, what makes you think so?"
11221She inquired,"How old is Arnold now?"
11221She murmured weakly,"Why must any of us try to be decent?"
11221She replied with a smile,"That rather depends, does n''t it, Elliott, upon one''s idea of what constitutes a human being?"
11221She thought of Arnold with an indignant, passionate pity-- how could Judith--?
11221She told them this and,"Which one do you see most?"
11221She tried to make a little casual talk:"Do n''t you love to let it out, give it all the gas there is?"
11221She tried to say,"But, Judith dear, if Arnold is like that-- doesn''t he need you more than ever?
11221She turned to them and asked,"Do any of you speak English?"
11221She ventured to try herself further, and inquired with a bright look of interest,"What do you think of his engagement to your cousin Molly?"
11221She went on with another question,"Auntie, who was Ephraim Smith?"
11221She went on, still astonished,"But how''d you get_ here?_""Why, how does anybody in Vermont get to a forest fire?"
11221She went on, still astonished,"But how''d you get_ here?_""Why, how does anybody in Vermont get to a forest fire?"
11221She''s a Swedish old maid who does uplift work among the negroes-- isn''t that a weird combination?
11221She''s twenty years old now, what do you_ suppose_ she does with her hair?
11221So what do you suppose she did?"
11221So you take music- lessons too, besides your school?"
11221Standing by the door, Judith said in a low tone,"You did n''t notice-- anything-- about Father?"
11221Sylvia clutched at the side and asked wonderingly,"_ Why_ in the world?"
11221Sylvia opened the door a crack and asked,"Where''s Father?"
11221Sylvia, did you know anything about this?
11221Sylvia, go and make us some tea, wo n''t you?
11221Sylvia, how_ could_ you?
11221Sylvia?"
11221That had changed life for her... but what could it mean to her father?
11221The boy asked,"Any answer?"
11221The teacher turned around to Sylvia, now almost as white as her sister, and said helplessly,"Sylvia, do you know what she''s talking about?"
11221Then,"How soon will you reach home?"
11221There seems a chance for real shapeliness if the foundations are all honest-- doesn''t there?
11221There was a rush of quick footsteps and the girl asked from the other side in a muffled voice,"Who is it?"
11221There''s something... something sort of_ touching_ about Arnold, do n''t you think?
11221They are n''t any different today f- f- from what they were yesterday-- are they?
11221They are that kind; do n''t you know, when you strike a match in the evening, how a dog''s eyes glow?
11221They were never brilliant, Mrs. Marshall''s remarks-- but they were apt to have a dry humor, and almost always when she had said her brief say?
11221They''d been obliged to hire a maid-- how in the world were the La Rues going to exist on American cooking?
11221This real issue, the maenad at the wheel now held up before them in a single brutal statement--"Are you in love with Felix?
11221To the Monroe Street bridge?"
11221To which handsome tribute to La Chance''s high- lights, Professor Marshall returned with bitterness,"Good Lord, Vic, why do you come, then?"
11221Very good, is n''t it?
11221Was he so very angry?"
11221Was it because he had it, or was it because he was a very unusual person?
11221Was that what spoiled your baseball in college?
11221Well, what_ of_ it?
11221Well, why not?
11221What about their absurd, impossible, cruel, unreal, and beautiful standards?"
11221What are you going to do with yourself now?
11221What are_ they_ like?"
11221What books will be on those shelves a hundred years from now, I wonder?"
11221What could she say to him now they were together?
11221What did Austin think she meant?
11221What did it mean to have her mother dead?
11221What do you say to a change?
11221What do you think marriage_ is_?
11221What does architecture matter, for instance?"
11221What ever made you think of such a thing?
11221What for?"
11221What had she feared she would see there?
11221What had she said to make him look at her so oddly?
11221What has that to do with anything?"
11221What if she did?"
11221What kind of a man_ had_ Arnold''s father been?
11221What more could any one have done?
11221What must they be thinking of her on the Rue de Presbourg?
11221What next...?
11221What the devil did my father do for me, I''d like to know, that I should die to keep my children unborn?
11221What under the sun was her grandfather thinking of?"
11221What was she doing down there?"
11221What was that half- thought fluttering a dusky wing in the back of her mind?
11221What was the matter anyhow?"
11221What was the new status between them?
11221What was there, in that world, by which she could steady herself?
11221What word, what breath could be gentle enough, light enough not to be poison to that open sore?
11221What''s it all_ to_ us?"
11221What''s socialism?
11221What''s that?"
11221What''s the diff?
11221What''s the diff?"
11221What''s the matter with botany?
11221What''s the_ use_ of it?
11221What_ did_ they want?
11221What_ do_ you know?"
11221What_ was_ the matter with her?
11221When he spoke, his voice blended with the silence almost as harmoniously as the music...."Do you know what I wish you would do, Miss Sylvia Marshall?
11221Where is Barbara?''
11221Where was he now?
11221Where_ is_ Judy?"
11221Who cares whether Charlemagne lived in six hundred or sixteen hundred?
11221Who could have anything but nausea for poetry after such a gorge?
11221Who did n''t care for who?"
11221Who do you take me for?
11221Who ever heard before of a girl doing anything remarkable in athletics?
11221Who was there to summon whom she could endure as a spectator of her father''s condition?
11221Who_ was_ Capua, anyhow?"
11221Who_ was_ this man Capua, anyhow?
11221Why could n''t we have taken a cab?
11221Why do you suppose a man_ wants_ to marry a woman?
11221Why not, if every man was like that as soon as he dared?
11221Why not, if that was all that men wanted of women?
11221Why not, if that was the sole ghastly reality which underlay the pretty- smooth surface of life?
11221Why should I think of mine?"
11221Why should n''t Father remember they were there?
11221Why should n''t he?
11221Why should we--?"
11221Why would n''t it be an art to keep your life in drawing as well as a mural decoration?"
11221Why_ should n''t_ I?"
11221Will I do?"
11221Will you come with me and tell which men to go?"
11221Would she resist it the next time?
11221Would this change of plans alter their schedule?
11221Would you be satisfied if she took that money, divided it into fourteen parts, and took it herself in person to each of the girls?"
11221Would you rather stay here?"
11221You could n''t make them like to have her?"
11221You do call it the''best room,''do n''t you?
11221You know what planchette is, do n''t you?
11221You wo n''t, I hope, go so uncannily far in your omniscience as to pretend to know_ why_ he does n''t like you?"
11221You would n''t have him marry you unless he was in love with you, would you?
11221You would n''t think it would have anything to do with_ that_, would you?
11221You''ve been wanting to see the new low reliefs in the Terme, in Rome?"
11221You, for instance, you''d make a_ pretty_ coal- miner, would n''t you?
11221_ How_ much time have we?"
11221_ Was_ there, indeed, any air outside?
11221_ What_ are you talking about, child?"
11221asked Sylvia, seeing the talk take an intimate turn,"or are you like me, and do n''t know at all what you do believe?"
11221asked her father quietly,"that would make things any better for Camilla?
11221grim?"
11221he cried, holding up first one and then the other from contact with the hot sharp- edged pebbles of the path,"How do you_ do it_?"
11221how should I know?"
11221of startled repugnance to the topic, and said, to turn the conversation,"Oh, who is that beautiful little girl with the fur cap?"
11221or again, more iconoclastically still,--when told of golden harvests to be reaped,"And for vat den?
11221remarked his wife significantly,"that''s the trouble, is it?"
11221said Arnold, admiring his own wit so much that he could not refrain from adding,"Not so bad, what?"
11221she asked,"something with a legato passage and great solemn chords, and a silver melody binding the whole together?"
11221she said abruptly,"do you know what_ I_ was thinking about back there in the crowd on the elevated?
11221who in Lydford reads Gibbon?''
6384''Bout time he showed up, ai nt it, Jake?
6384About my preaching? 6384 About the ice cream?"
6384About the ice- cream?
6384Ai n''t you got no relations?
6384Ai nt ye''r Christianity security enough?
6384Air you sure you can do it?
6384Am dis yar de horspital fer de small- pox diseases? 6384 Amy; do n''t you see her?
6384An''whar''from?
6384And I must wait, Clara?
6384And did Udell tell you all this?
6384And do you know what I am going to do?
6384And do you still feel that you must go?
6384And do you think it is a credit to your family to be so intimate with a tramp who was kicked out of my place of business?
6384And it''s to be free to every loafer who wants to come in and use the place?
6384And may I call you that too?
6384And the past?
6384And there is no hope?
6384And what did his father do?
6384And when will that be, Doctor?
6384And where is your home?
6384And why do you cry, mother?
6384And you have forgotten your class at the Mission altogether?
6384Anybody else in trouble?
6384Anyone can see your condition; but bless your heart, our Master befriended a poor woman, and why should not we?
6384Are you a Christian?
6384Are you not glad that God is good to me? 6384 Are you sick?"
6384Are you sure he will be all right?
6384Are you the foreman of this office?
6384Are you through?
6384As how?
6384As what?
6384Be you''ns the feller what''s stoppin''at Sim''s ter hunt?
6384Because he loves you, dear, do n''t you see?
6384Been drinking?
6384But do n''t you find such things rather tiresome, you know?
6384But had this come to you, that the man must also be a Christian?
6384But has your pastor presented any definite plan for work?
6384But how am I to get them?
6384But how can I? 6384 But how does that tramp happen to have any papers of value to you?"
6384But say, those folks do n''t know me, do they?
6384But this man wanted work, did n''t he mother?
6384But was there no form of a ceremony?
6384But what do you want me to do?
6384But what is God''s law?
6384But what is he doing?
6384But what will people say when they know that my daughter is working on a farm for a living?
6384But why are you here in this miserable place? 6384 But will he give them up?"
6384But wo n''t you come back and teach them yourself?
6384But wo n''t you help me plan for the future?
6384But wo n''t you tell us of your friends?
6384But, Sir,said Dick again,"what am I to do?"
6384But,said Charlie, with a troubled look on his face,"would not such work encourage crime and idleness?"
6384Ca n''t ye give me that drink, Dicky? 6384 Can it be possible,"thought Dick,"that I have misjudged this man, and that he is grateful for the help that I have given Amy?"
6384Can you describe her?
6384Charlie,he called,"are you most through with them books?"
6384Come, come, Brethren, what shall we do about this?
6384Could it be possible that this was the poor tramp who had once gone from door to door seeking a chance to earn a crust of bread?
6384Could it be possible?
6384Could n''t the women folks do something?
6384D''ye reckon he''s a durned revenoo sure, Jake?
6384Dick!--O Dick,--whar are ye honey?
6384Dick,said Charlie,"do you believe that anything could be done here?"
6384Did Christ make a mistake when he said,''And I, if I be lifted up, will draw all men unto myself?'' 6384 Did n''t I say that he was no common tramp?
6384Did n''t I tell you that he was no common tramp?
6384Did not Christ intend His church to be a home for the homeless?
6384Did ye make hit all right?
6384Did you get a look at the lady in number sixteen, when you went up with that time- card?
6384Did you marry her?
6384Did you sleep in this straw- stack last night?
6384Did you talk with him when you were there?
6384Do I take my hat off when I go in?
6384Do infidels do any more?
6384Do n''t you see how I''m shaking? 6384 Do yo''know whar''ye air, Mister?"
6384Do you drink?
6384Do you know that I am to speak at the regular union meeting of the Young People next Sunday night?
6384Do you know, I have fancied at times, that Mr. Falkner learned something on his trip last fall, that he has not told us?
6384Do you know,she said, when they were seated,"I, too, feel as you do?"
6384Do you mean that the people here think I''m a revenue agent looking for moonshiners?
6384Do you mean that your position here is that of a common servant?
6384Do you mean to say that the church ought to furnish a lodging place for every stranger who comes to town?
6384Do you need any help? 6384 Do you really mean, Mr. Falkner, that you care at all for my friendship?"
6384Do you understand me? 6384 Does he use good language in his conversation?"
6384Fanny, what can we do for the young people of Boyd City? 6384 Folks livin''?"
6384George, what in the world does this mean?
6384Gettin''a little excited, ai n''t ye?
6384Glad?
6384Go where?
6384Good evening,said the young man, pausing in his amusement,"What can I do for you?"
6384Good, old man,said that young gentleman, in a whisper,"but where in the world did you learn all that?"
6384Got what?
6384Have n''t you met him yet?
6384Have you ever attended their meetings?
6384He is not your brother?
6384He is quite a shrewd fellow, is n''t he?
6384Help me put up the horse, ca n''t you?
6384How did he know that I had any papers?
6384How did this happen? 6384 How did you get those?"
6384How do you know so much about him then?
6384How do you know that?
6384How do you know?
6384How does it happen you are out of work?
6384How is it Brother Cameron?
6384How long been dead?
6384How much did you say?
6384How much did you steal from the old man''s safe tonight?
6384How would the superintendent and his wife be paid?
6384How would you do all this, though? 6384 How''d you happen to strike this place?"
6384How''ll you help it?
6384How?
6384Howdy Liz,said one of the men,"Seed anythin''?"
6384Hum-- m-- m, anything important?
6384I beg your pardon, madam, but can I be of any help to you?
6384I do not understand; what makes you do these things?
6384I lived--She was interrupted by a low knock at the door and a sweet voice calling gently:"May I come in, Mother Gray?"
6384I''m going to die then? 6384 I''ve always wanted_ a_ woman; have n''t I told you that often enough?"
6384If you believe that, why do you wear the badge?
6384Is Mr. Goodrich in?
6384Is all this righteousness?
6384Is he looking for work too?
6384Is n''t he handsome?
6384Is she not home?
6384Is that the way men do business in Boyd City?
6384Is that you, Brother Cameron?
6384Is there anything I can do for you, dear? 6384 Is what true?"
6384Is you de parson?
6384Land sakes alive, child, you ai nt going out to- day, be you?
6384Lookin''fer turkey, war ye Mister?
6384Lucky for you? 6384 May I have a few words privately with you?"
6384Men and brethren,cried the pastor, stretching out his arms in the earnestness of his appeal,"what shall we do?
6384Miss Goodrich, do n''t you know that you are safe with me? 6384 Miss Goodrich,"answered Dick,"can you not trust me?"
6384Miss Goodrich,he said;"can you let me talk to you plainly?"
6384Mr. Falkner, can you stop them?
6384Mr. Udell,said Dick, one Saturday night, as the latter handed him his wages for the week,"Where''s the best place to go for clothing?"
6384My father,she gasped--"coming here?"
6384No,answered Udell,"Why?"
6384Not goin'',he gasped;"Why, what''s the matter with you?"
6384Now sir, I want to know first, is it true that you were with my daughter in the Ozark Mountains this summer? 6384 Now what is it, Miss Goodrich?
6384Oh I do n''t know,replied Udell,"it''s handy to have round; good building spot, is n''t it?"
6384Oh Mr. Falkner, have you killed him?
6384Oh please sir, can I stay here all night? 6384 Oh, is that all?
6384Oh, sorry that you thought you had met me?
6384Oh, what must you think of me?
6384Oh, you need n''t get mad about it, a fellow ca n''t help but think a chap is hit when he falls down, can he?
6384Papers?
6384Ready to go, sah?
6384Right you are, George, but is it true?
6384Ruther late when ye got in las''night, warn''t it?
6384Said he was a printer from Kansas City?
6384Say, do n''t rush me way up in front, will you?
6384Say, will you suggest a plan to the Society?
6384So soon?
6384So you consider this lost time, do you?
6384So you''re one of that lot, are you? 6384 Suppose I die, then what?"
6384Suppose I should leave the church, or run away, or steal, or kill somebody, or do something real terrible?
6384Sure; this here''s the hotel whar I put up-- slept in the room jes''acrost the hall from your''n.--Whar ye goin''ter eat?
6384Tell me who sent you here?
6384That''s rather a hard word for a good Christian, is n''t it? 6384 The old gentleman?"
6384Then I am to understand that you support and encourage this unscriptural way of doing things?
6384Umph,said Godfrey;"what can_ they_ do?"
6384Umph-- Where did you work last?
6384Wanter go ter Simpson''s at the corners, do ye?
6384Was he dreaming? 6384 Well, can you tell me the way to Simpson''s?
6384Well, get out of my way,he said roughly;"ca n''t you see I want to go out?"
6384Well, has my prophecy come true?
6384Well, tell me, did those who know how I came to town, know that I would be there tonight?
6384Well, what do you think about it?
6384Well, what of it? 6384 Well, what of it?"
6384Well, what of it?
6384Well, why do n''t you read somethin''?
6384Well, ye can borrow it, ca n''t you?
6384Well,he said, as he handed George the proper papers,"that place is your''n, young man, what are ye goin''to do with it?"
6384Well,said Whitley, with an oath,"what do you want?"
6384Well,said a portly middle- aged gentleman, when he had finished dictating a letter to the young lady seated at the typewriter,"What do you want?"
6384Well,said the latter,"how about it?"
6384Well,said the little woman;"did n''t I tell you that one preacher would have a hand in whatever work was started here?
6384Whar''s yer paw?
6384What an awful wasteful habit it is to- be- sure, ai n''t it?
6384What are you doing here?
6384What can I do for you?
6384What can I do?
6384What can you do?
6384What can you do?
6384What do yon mean?
6384What do you do?
6384What do you know about it?
6384What do you mean?
6384What do you mean?
6384What do you mean?
6384What do you mean?
6384What do you take me for, Dick?
6384What do you want?
6384What do you want?
6384What do_ you_ say?
6384What fiend told you all this?
6384What girl? 6384 What good fortune brought you out so early?
6384What have you done?
6384What if I refuse to tell?
6384What in the name of all that''s decent are you doing here?
6384What in the world suggested that? 6384 What in the world?"
6384What is the will of the meeting?
6384What makes you think that?
6384What office you goin''to?
6384What on earth can you teach in the church except the Bible, and what kind of a reading room can you have in the Lord''s house I''d like to know?
6384What organization, and what plans?
6384What would you suggest?
6384What ye want, maw?
6384What you goin''to do, Doc?
6384What''d Sim say his name war?
6384What''ll ye give me?
6384What''s it to you?
6384What''s that?
6384What''s the matter here anyway?
6384What''s the matter with him, George?
6384What''s the matter with his Royal Highness, Dickie? 6384 What''s the matter with it?
6384What''s the matter, Dick?
6384What''s the matter; do n''t you know that it''s time to quit?
6384What''s the matter?
6384What''s the matter?
6384What-- How-- How do you know?
6384When I meet my father?
6384When did she get in?
6384When he sees me?
6384When was that?
6384Where am I?
6384Where are we?
6384Where are you from?
6384Where are you going now?
6384Where are you going?
6384Where did he live before he came here?
6384Where is Amy and mother? 6384 Where is he from; St. Louis, is it?"
6384Where you goin''?
6384Where''s Falkner?
6384Where''s your father?
6384Where?
6384Who are you?
6384Who are you?
6384Who is he?
6384Who is he?
6384Who is he?
6384Who is he?
6384Who is it?
6384Who is it?
6384Who is she? 6384 Who is she?"
6384Who is that stranger Charlie Bowen is seating?
6384Who is that tall, handsome man with the dark hair, talking to those girls with Nellie Graham and Will Clifton?
6384Who?
6384Why Frank, what are you doing here; and what is the matter?
6384Why are n''t you working at your trade?
6384Why did n''t you say so?
6384Why did you leave her so soon?
6384Why do n''t you get help?
6384Why do n''t you join the church and win her?
6384Why do you ask?
6384Why have n''t you been to see me, George?
6384Why is it that people are so indifferent to the suffering about them? 6384 Why not let the young folks have the room?
6384Why not?
6384Why not?
6384Why the letters?
6384Why? 6384 Why?"
6384Why?
6384Will you come to me now?
6384Will you go before the Young People''s Society at their meeting next Tuesday night, and explain your scheme?
6384Will you show me where they are?
6384Wo n''t it be fine when the church becomes a home for every wandering Willie who happens along?
6384Wo n''t you come in and eat with me?
6384Wo n''t you tell me what is best to do? 6384 Would kindling- wood be the only industry?"
6384Would not men impose on the institution by working just enough to get their food and remain idle the rest of the time?
6384Would the income be sufficient to pay all bills?
6384Would the merchants contribute boxes enough?
6384Would the people buy the kindling- wood?
6384Would we not need women to do the housework?
6384Would you receive women?
6384Yes, have you seen any?
6384Yes,chimed in another,"and is n''t that Mr. Falkner, who has charge of the rooms in the evening, a splendid fellow?
6384Yes,murmured Dick,"those things_ are_ behind, and I can do all things through Him; but may I also have the help of thinking of you as my friend?"
6384You a printer?
6384You are stopping with friends, I suppose?
6384You are very busy then?
6384You can name your own price?
6384You dare ask that after what happened the other night?
6384You do love him, do n''t you dear?
6384You hear that, Mrs. Goodrich? 6384 You here at this hour alone?
6384You mean that I must steal them?
6384You spoke of a store- room-- what for?
6384You were out late enough to discover something,returned Mrs. Wicks, with a laugh;"what is it?"
6384You wo n''t get angry if I keep it up, will you?
6384You would still value my friendship if I should do some awful wicked thing?
6384You''re right sure it''s small- pox, are you, Doc?
6384_ What_? 6384 Again Whitley sprang to his feet, and with an awful oath exclaimed,How do you know this?"
6384Ai nt got the price of er drink hev''ye?
6384Ai nt yo''skeered''?"
6384Am I right, Charlie?"
6384Am I to understand that you take her part against me?"
6384An''taint the question whether the other feller''s mean or not, but am I livin''square?
6384An''we''ll go over tother side Sandy Ridge?"
6384And Dick answered,"Did I not tell you once that nothing could make me change; that nothing you could do would make me less your friend?
6384And built some sort of a Salvation Army Rescuing Home or Mission?"
6384And does this all seem strange to you, reader, as to our friend, the traveling man?
6384And have n''t you always understood it that way, and by your manners toward me given assent?"
6384And is n''t that a beautiful patch?"
6384And it ai nt the question whether the other fellow is mean or not, but am I living square?"
6384And now, because he was safe at last and could look back upon those things, should he condemn another?
6384And so he''s got a job with you, has he?
6384And was n''t the dinner all right to- day?
6384And was not that enough to mark him as an infidel?
6384And what are they actually doing to make this place better?
6384And will he, do you think?"
6384And would you look at the people?"
6384And you propose to let an alien take charge of the Lord''s work?
6384Are you in need of any help?
6384Are you sick?
6384Beason began:"Brother Jim, what''s this about the proposed work of your young people?
6384Been out of work long?"
6384But ca n''t I get to the corners from here?"
6384But does she see much of that printer of Udell''s?"
6384But say, George, were you at our church yesterday?"
6384But tell me,"he added;"you''re not thinking of giving up your church work, are you?"
6384But there was no pain, no fear in them now; only just a shadow of trouble, as she asked in a whisper,"Where is it?"
6384But they ai n''t goin''to Heaven, be they?
6384But what about them notes?"
6384But what could she do?
6384But what of hers?
6384But what of that?
6384But what of the future?
6384But where was Dick?
6384But why should you care?
6384By her dress, she had been to a social party of some kind; what did it all mean?
6384Ca n''t I help you?"
6384Ca n''t ye set''em up jest fer old times''sake ye know?"
6384Ca n''t you hear?"
6384Ca n''t you see the selfish thing wants to be alone with her treasure?"
6384Ca n''t you trust the Lord?
6384Cameron has his mission schools; why is n''t that enough?
6384Cameron''s sermon was from the text,"What is that to thee?
6384Can you get them ready for me by two o''clock this afternoon?
6384Can you go to work now?"
6384Can you say it?"
6384Candidly, Brethren, what are we doing?
6384Could he think of taking for a wife, one whom he had seen in that house at Cleveland?
6384Could n''t Charlie come up and chat with him sometimes?
6384D''ye reckon it would make me sick again?"
6384D''ye reckon it''d make me sick?"
6384Darling, do n''t you see that we are equal?
6384Dick nodded; and the old gentleman continued carelessly, as he arose to go,"Stop fer me when you go by, will you?
6384Dick paused and one of the young people asked:"What would be the cost of the building and its furnishings?"
6384Did n''t you sleep well last night either?
6384Did you bring my papers with you?"
6384Did you have any supper last night?"
6384Do I look like a preacher?"
6384Do n''t it make ye think of the Being what''s back of all these blessin''s?
6384Do n''t ye know you ought to?"
6384Do n''t you find it beautiful?"
6384Do n''t you hear them coming?
6384Do n''t you know that I ca n''t look God in the face?
6384Do n''t you know that I want to live?
6384Do n''t you see, dear, it could n''t possibly make any difference?"
6384Do you believe in Christ as the Saviour of men?"
6384Do you feel better?
6384Do you mean that that fellow insulted you, Miss Goodrich?"
6384Do you remember that young feller what called here for a job week before last, the time I sold that Johnson property, you know?"
6384Do you remember the first time we met?"
6384Do you still value my friendship?"
6384Do you think I''d see her suffer?
6384Does Amy still take as much interest there as she did?"
6384Every man was asking his neighbor,"What next?"
6384Falkner?"
6384Falkner?"
6384Falkner?"
6384Frank was confused and made no reply, until Whitley asked:"Where does the fellow live now?"
6384Friends, do you need any more proof that these young folks are in earnest?"
6384George, why do n''t you go to church anyway?
6384Goodrich?"
6384Had he not said that he did not believe in the church?
6384Have any of you heard anything?"
6384Have n''t I told you ever since I was ten years old that I loved you, and would have no one else to be my wife?
6384Have you no mother?
6384He paused again; then in an anxious tone,"Dickie, I know it''s hard, and you''ve been putting up a great fight, but you''re not going to let go now?"
6384Henry never said no such stuff as that, did he George?"
6384How about the folks that be Christians?
6384How are the wife and babies?"
6384How came you here?"
6384How can you, when the Scriptures say, have no fellowship with such?"
6384How dare you say that this miserable vagabond is a fit associate for you, and more worthy than the guests of my house?
6384How long were you at the printing office yesterday?
6384How much did you say it would cost?"
6384I know I am not just the girl I was a year ago, but I-- do you remember our talk at the printing office?"
6384In the name of Jesus, to help the least of these, wo n''t you buy the house?"
6384Is Udell right when he says that church members, by their own teaching, prove themselves to be the biggest frauds in the world?"
6384Is it not the Christian''s duty to carry out Christ''s teaching?
6384Is n''t it a beautiful one?"
6384Is n''t it a good business town?"
6384Is n''t that someone knocking at the door?"
6384Is that the best you can do with your time?"
6384Is there anything that I can do for you?"
6384It is--""Not to teach the Bible?"
6384Men and women, in the name of Jesus of Nazareth, the Christ who died on Calvary, what will you do for the least of these, His Brethren?"
6384Must I join a company of canting hypocrites in order to get to Heaven?"
6384Must our brothers perish with cold and hunger because we close the doors of the Saviour''s church against them?
6384Of course he ai nt a Christian, but--""Not a Christian,"cried Wickham, starting to his feet again;"not a Christian?
6384Of course you''ll accept?"
6384Oh Mr. Falkner, what shall I do?
6384Oh papa, do n''t you see what a friend he has been to me?
6384Oh why was he not a Christian?
6384Oh, I know; it''s that tramp printer of Mr. Udell''s, I-- Why, what is the matter, Mr. Falkner?
6384Oh, please take me home?"
6384Oh, why did you ever come to this city?
6384Or did the thoughts of having been so generous with your property keep you awake?"
6384Or do you think one of these pills would help you?"
6384Or was it that men were lifting up themselves instead of the Master?"
6384Reckon dars any hants in dat air ol''shack?"
6384Say Maw, I done set a dead fall yester''d'', d''reckon I''ll ketch anythin''?
6384Say, ar''ye right shor''?"
6384Sha nt I fix ye some''fore dad wakes up?"
6384Shall I come at this hour to- morrow?"
6384Shall it be so this time?
6384Shall there be no place in all this city where the least of these may find help in the name of our common Master?
6384Sinking on the floor, he buried his face in his hands and moaned aloud,"My God-- What am I doing?
6384Something in his touch brought Amy to herself again and she whispered:"Do n''t you see that man standing there by the light?"
6384Surely you know that, do n''t you, Amy dear?"
6384Surely, father, Christ wants us to be helpful, does n''t he?"
6384That afternoon, the landlady came to her room, and placing a letter in her hand, asked,"Will you please be kind enough to explain that?"
6384That evening, just after dusk, she whispered to her kind nurse, who sat by the bedside,"Wo n''t you tell me your name, please?"
6384That''s what I got her for, ai n''t it?
6384The girl answered with a loving smile:"Are you so tired of me that you are going to send me out into the world again?"
6384The preacher nodded,"Well?"
6384The tramp shuffled uneasily, but replied with a knowing leer,"Ai nt ye Dicky Falkner what used ter live cross the river from Jimpson''s still- house?"
6384The young lady blushed and hung her head, and then-- but there-- what right have we to look?
6384Then he asked,"Is the church doing this?"
6384Then in desperation,"But tell me more about this printer of whom I remind you; what was his name?"
6384Then looking anxiously toward Dick, said:"How are you getting along with that stuff, old man?"
6384Then with a brutal oath,"What are ye in here for then?"
6384Then, as Dick swept the room with another anxious glance:"What is the matter, Mr. Falkner; are you looking for someone?"
6384Then, as they drew back to make room for others, he asked in a whisper,"Did they search thoroughly for letters or papers?
6384There was a painful silence and then one of the deacons asked,"But would the young folks help?"
6384There was no mark on her clothing, you say?"
6384There was silence for a moment; then the president said,"Brother Cameron, would you mind telling the Association just how your work is conducted?
6384They would travel abroad until her father had forgotten his wrath, and could she doubt that all would be well when she returned as his wife?
6384To- be- sure, the note ai nt due for sometime; but a fellow has got to look after his own interest, ai nt he?"
6384Udell?"
6384Was she not unnecessarily cruel to the friend who had shown, and was showing himself, so worthy of her love?
6384Well, I did n''t know what to do you know, but I wanted that five dollars, so I said: But wo n''t you help us a little, Brother Richman?
6384Were you at the meeting last night?"
6384Whash ze matter m''dear?"
6384What can I tell them when I go back and say that I have seen you?"
6384What can you do?
6384What could be the matter?
6384What could that mean if not,"Do not marry an infidel?"
6384What did they want, and why could n''t they let him rest?
6384What do I get for it if I give you five dollars?''
6384What do you know about a servant''s work?
6384What do you know about old times?"
6384What do you say?"
6384What does it matter?"
6384What if I should fail?"
6384What if he_ was_ out of money and hungry and ragged when he came to town?
6384What in time ailed you anyway?"
6384What influence are we throwing about our boys and girls, and upon what foundation are we building our social, business and municipal life?"
6384What is it mother used to say?
6384What makes you so late; it is nearly ten?"
6384What security can I give?"
6384What should he care for the world?
6384What should he do?
6384What woman could resist such an opportunity?
6384What would the congregation think if they should hear you?
6384What would the end be when her money was gone, she wondered; and after all, why not this?
6384What would you suggest as a remedy for the existing conditions in this city?"
6384What''ll we do, Dick?"
6384What''s his name, an''whar''ll I find him?"
6384What''s the use of you and me pretending?
6384What_ will_ Helen Mayfield say?"
6384When he had them quiet again he continued, in a matter- of- fact tone:"Suppose you fellows raise a row about this, what will you gain?"
6384Where are you stopping?"
6384Where can a fellow go to live the life, and why are you and I not living it as well as the people who have their names on the church books?
6384Where is my daughter?"
6384Where was it; here in town?"
6384Where''s Whitley?"
6384Where''s your pipe?"
6384Which would you choose?"
6384Which''ll it be?
6384Whitley replied, with an oath,"What''s the matter with you?
6384Who is that with her?
6384Who was it?
6384Who was she afraid of?
6384Who would believe you?
6384Whose thinking about her?
6384Why ca n''t he keep them out at the Mission where they belong, and not force us to associate with them?"
6384Why did I ever see you?
6384Why do n''t you fellows learn to take what you can get?
6384Why do you let me die here like a dog?
6384Why should he not shut the door upon it forever, and live only in the present and future?
6384Why should n''t I drink if I want to; whose business is it but my own?"
6384Why will you make yourself so common?"
6384Why, do n''t the church_ do_ some of the things they are always talking about?"
6384Why, what made you ask?"
6384Will she come to, do you think, Doctor, before she goes?"
6384Will you enter the ministry?"
6384Will you?"
6384Wo n''t you forget it all with me?"
6384Wo n''t you forgive me this once and let me devote my life to righting the wrong?"
6384Wo n''t you forgive us papa?"
6384Wo n''t you let me help you?
6384Wo n''t you please let me explain?"
6384Wo n''t you put your past beneath your feet as I put mine in the dust, and come to me upon the common ground of Christ''s love and forgiveness?
6384Wo n''t you reconsider it, and--""Where do you suppose Amy Goodrich is now?"
6384Would not Amy also conquer, and when she_ had_ conquered, by what right could he demand in her that which he had not in himself?
6384Would she go?
6384Would you like to talk to him?"
6384Ye must be goin''to get a wife, talking about buildin''?"
6384You know there is them that do follow the Master''s teachin''; what about their chances, heh?"
6384You saw them did you not, Frank?"
6384You would n''t have me refuse to recognize him in the church, would you?
6384asked that individual, leaning wearily against the machine;"Did he faint agin, or was he havin''a fit?"
6384do n''t you see his eyes?
6384whispered Dick, who already had his hat in his hand,"Or do I wait till after prayers?"
52194Admitting all that, though I do n''t, what harm can he do, Mary, while I am here to protect you?
52194Aha, my young friends,he said, with a pleased glance at their soiled clothes,"so you have returned?"
52194Ai n''t that a high figger?
52194Altogether?
52194And I wo n''t have to give it to Massa Bob?
52194And are you willing to undertake this, Robert? 52194 And did n''t find it?"
52194And how much am I to have?
52194And said nothing about the interest?
52194And what luck did you have, may I ask?
52194And what were you going to do with the razor?
52194And you agreed to take him?
52194And you are afraid of him?
52194And you did n''t drink this dipper full, then?
52194And you did n''t find the money?
52194And you expect to get two dollars and a quarter a bushel?
52194And you gave them to him?
52194And you pay him a large interest?
52194And you thought that, after loving such a man as Richard Burton, I would be satisfied to take such a man as you?
52194And you will wait for the other four?
52194And you wo n''t let that ugly woman take me away?
52194And you wo n''t take back the money?
52194And you, Bob?
52194And you, I suppose, are a relative of his?
52194Are the boys all right?
52194Are them your two companions?
52194Are they boys like yourself?
52194Are you Clip?
52194Are you a regular boarder?
52194Are you coming back with me?
52194Are you goin''back to bed, Massa Bob?
52194Are you goin''to stay in dat place all night?
52194Are you going to row or are you not?
52194Are you hurt, Massa Wolverton?
52194Are you in charge of this boat?
52194Are you sure there is no whisky on board?
52194Are you sure?
52194Are you the captain?
52194Are you three all that are on board-- I mean all that man the boat?
52194Are you traveling through the country?
52194Be you in charge of this boat?
52194Bound down the river?
52194Business, I suppose?
52194But do n''t it trouble you, Clip?
52194But he says, with some show of reason, if the interest was paid, why did n''t your father take a receipt?
52194But how can I get it by to- morrow night?
52194But how did it come into your pocket, Clip?
52194But in what way has he ill- treated you?
52194But suppose, Sam, I am charged with abducting you?
52194But what can I do, sir? 52194 But why should he make you work hard?"
52194But, Robert, to get into a fight with a man so much older?
52194But, ma''am, why do n''t you take passage on a river steamer?
52194By the way, Sally, have you seen a stray paper about the floor in my room?
52194By the way, have you heard anything of your nephew, Sam?
52194Ca n''t we get off down de river afore he comes, Massa Bob?
52194Ca n''t you hide me somewhere without their knowing I am on board?
52194Ca n''t you put it off till eight? 52194 Can I go, too?"
52194Can no receipt be found?
52194Can she pay?
52194Can this be true?
52194Can we carry on the ranch now that your father is gone?
52194Can you bring me a glass of water?
52194Can you row good, Clip?
52194Can you tell me the number?
52194Clip,said Bob, gravely,"has Sam Wolverton engaged passage with us?"
52194Could n''t you have sent them?
52194Dey wo n''t''sassinate us?
52194Did I not tell you so?
52194Did he do it a- purpose?
52194Did he mention having seen any suspicious party, or any man who seemed to be running away?
52194Did he mention his name?
52194Did he pay you anything in advance?
52194Did he say that?
52194Did he show you the money?
52194Did my papa send you for me?
52194Did n''t I tell you it was a cat?
52194Did n''t I tell you so?
52194Did n''t I, Massa Bob?
52194Did n''t de old man look mad, dough? 52194 Did n''t he leave any property?"
52194Did the little girl say anything in your hearing?
52194Did you ever know that Aaron Wolverton was once a suitor for my hand?
52194Did you ever mention this to your uncle, Sam?
52194Did you find this money, too?
52194Did you have the money to buy it?
52194Did you just come?
52194Did you leave no one on board?
52194Did you receive a birthday present?
52194Did you shoot them this morning, Robert?
52194Did you wish to speak to us?
52194Disappeared?
52194Do n''t you know my name?
52194Do n''t you see you are running the boat ashore?
52194Do n''t you wish you knew, old woman?
52194Do those boys sleep sound?
52194Do you carry freight, then?
52194Do you doubt my word?
52194Do you doubt my word?
52194Do you expect me to pay it to you, then?
52194Do you know my uncle?
52194Do you know of any private house where we can stay till that time? 52194 Do you know of anybody around here that wants a boat?"
52194Do you know what''s in this?
52194Do you know who I am?
52194Do you live here, sir?
52194Do you live in Rocky Creek?
52194Do you mean this, Sam?
52194Do you mean to insult me? 52194 Do you mean to say that it was not paid to you?"
52194Do you mean to say you sneezed, Clip?
52194Do you mean to tell me you found all these coins on the sidewalk?
52194Do you really think there is a chance of our succeeding?
52194Do you see that, Clip?
52194Do you still tell me that you found all this money?
52194Do you think I am made of money?
52194Do you think Mrs. Burton pretty?
52194Do you think he left any property?
52194Do you think that is kind?
52194Do you think they would take me as passenger?
52194Do you think we can get him on de boat, massa?
52194Do you want me to thrash you, too?
52194Does Mr. Wolverton ever take any notice of you, Robert?
52194Does n''t that settle it? 52194 Does that mean that you have left him?"
52194Does you, Massa Bob?
52194Ef you do, what''ll''come of you, Massa Wolverton?
52194For my own self?
52194From you?
52194Got a thousand bushels, I reckon?
52194Had n''t you better send your son out of the room? 52194 Has any steamer touched here to- day?"
52194Has anybody been here, Clip?
52194Has he been quiet?
52194Has that man any claim on you?
52194Has your uncle got a gun?
52194Have n''t I the care of the child? 52194 Have n''t you seen her?
52194Have you any idea as to the amount of your wheat crop?
52194Have you any wheat to sell? 52194 Have you been here all the time?"
52194Have you come from a distance?
52194Have you ever seen him before?
52194Have you got anything to eat on board which you can bring me by and by?
52194Have you heard any bad news of Robert?
52194Have you just found that out?
52194Have you missed any money, Aaron?
52194Have you searched your desk?
52194He said that, when he had the money in his pocket?
52194He was, hey?
52194He wo n''t die?
52194Hev you got the money about you?
52194Hi, Massa Wolverton; what''s the matter?
52194How came he to do dat?
52194How can it fail to be bad news for me?
52194How can there be? 52194 How could he walk round with a broken leg?"
52194How dare you insult me by such a charge?
52194How did I know his leg was broken?
52194How did this happen, Clip?
52194How did you come?
52194How do you expect to get your grain to market?
52194How do you know?
52194How do you make that out?
52194How do you make that out?
52194How do you, a boy, dare to talk in this impudent way to a man who has you in his power?
52194How far are we from home, Massa Bob?
52194How far do you intend going?
52194How is that?
52194How is that?
52194How is your aunt? 52194 How long do you mean to keep me here?"
52194How long have you lived with your uncle?
52194How long have you owned the boat?
52194How long will you stay, Massa Bob?
52194How many bushels now, about?
52194How many days do you think we shall need for the trip, Bob?
52194How many have you got?
52194How many have you on board?
52194How much do the steamboats charge?
52194How much do you calc''late to get?
52194How much money have you got?
52194How much more is Brown to pay you?
52194How much?
52194How old are you, Sam?
52194How old are you?
52194How on earth did this accident happen?
52194How shall we arrange to get anything? 52194 How shall we help it, Clip?"
52194How should I know? 52194 How soon will we start, Massa Bob?"
52194How then do you account for its being written?
52194How will that benefit us?
52194How will you help it?
52194How''s he coming?
52194How?
52194I cared for him and kept him from starving, and how has he rewarded me?
52194I hope you''re not going to say that you are not ready to pay your rent?
52194I say, young man, is this here boat yours?
52194I suppose Joe''s all right?
52194I suppose you do n''t want to lift the mortgage?
52194I suppose you would n''t be willing to get into a grain bin?
52194I suspect him of running away, the ungrateful young rascal? 52194 I wonder what could have been his object in representing himself to me as a grain merchant?"
52194I wonder what he sees that interests him so much?
52194I wonder whether our boat is gone?
52194If you had any other purpose, what is it?
52194If you had the receipt why did n''t you show it to me before?
52194In what did the property consist?
52194In what direction?
52194In what way?
52194Is he dead?
52194Is he so mean as that?
52194Is his uncle so severe, then?
52194Is it about the interest?
52194Is my nephew Sam on your boat?
52194Is n''t that rather a small crew?
52194Is n''t you ever goin''to bed, Massa Bob?
52194Is the boat yours?
52194Is the boy crazy?
52194Is the mortgage for a term of years?
52194Is there a man named Wolverton who lives in your town?
52194Is this gold piece yours?
52194Is this really for me?
52194Is you wet, Massa Wolverton?
52194Is your mother at home?
52194Is your mother at home?
52194Is_ he_ the captain?
52194It''s good fun, ai n''t it, Massa Wolverton?
52194May I ask your name?
52194May I play with them to- morrow?
52194My darling Maud?
52194My young cousin accompanies you to help, I suppose?
52194No; do you?
52194No; has he any business with you?
52194No; have you seen him?
52194No; what makes you ask?
52194No; why should he come? 52194 Not the receipt for the money?"
52194Now what has happened, Sam?
52194Now, Margaret, can you give us something to eat?
52194Now, may I ask your advice as to how to proceed to regain possession of the boat?
52194Now, own up, Clip, were you not looking at something on the bank, so that you did n''t notice where you were steering?
52194Now, what you want, massa?
52194Now, where is Sam?
52194Now,said Bob to the little girl, as they descended the steep and narrow staircase,"will you do as I tell you?"
52194Of whom?
52194Oh, it''s you, Bob, is it?
52194Oh, so you''re back?
52194On what street does your father live?
52194Or the little girl?
52194Sally, has the Burton boy been here this morning?
52194Sally, where is Sam?
52194Sam, what was he going to whip you for?
52194Sam,said Wolverton, sharply,"what kept you so long?
52194Shall I get you the six dollars, sir?
52194Shall I have any difficulty in managing the boat on our course down the river?
52194Shall I mention the reason?
52194Shall I show you the paper in which I saw the quotations?
52194Shall you stay at the hotel this evening?
52194So do I, but why is it any the worse for him to hold it than for any one else?
52194So you raised the money after all?
52194So you want to get quit of your aunt and me, do you?
52194Suppose he did; is he your guardian or am I?
52194Suppose the boy does n''t touch here?
52194Surely it can not cost fifty cents a bushel?
52194Tell me the truth, Clip; have you been drinking?
52194That boy?
52194That is the earliest?
52194That''s what you like best to do, Clip, is n''t it?
52194Then I may go, mother?
52194Then he does n''t live in the village?
52194Then how am I to get aboard?
52194Then make me the promise?
52194Then you ca n''t accommodate me?
52194Then you ca n''t take me, no way?
52194There ai n''t anybody but you aboard, is there?
52194Wanted to go down the river? 52194 Was Clip with you?"
52194Was he here yesterday?
52194Was it my fault that he hid himself on my boat?
52194Was n''t your cargo stolen?
52194Was there anything said about our going back?
52194Was you calc''latin''to buy, Sam?
52194Well, did you find Sam?
52194What ails you, you vicious brute?
52194What are you about, Clip?
52194What are you about?
52194What are you driving at, Dan Woods?
52194What became of the money?
52194What business had he here?
52194What business has he there, I wonder?
52194What can happen, Massa Bob? 52194 What can he be doing here?"
52194What conditions?
52194What cursed luck sent the boy to the creek to- night?
52194What did he say?
52194What did she mean?
52194What did you do with it?
52194What did you do, Sam?
52194What did you go into Locke''s store for?
52194What difference does that make?
52194What do you ask?
52194What do you call a fair price?
52194What do you hear from your son?
52194What do you mean by that?
52194What do you mean, widder?
52194What do you mean? 52194 What do you mean?"
52194What do you mean?
52194What do you propose to do if we do n''t pay?
52194What do you propose, then?
52194What do you say to that?
52194What do you think?
52194What do you want money for?
52194What does all this mean?
52194What does he mean? 52194 What does that man want?"
52194What does your aunt say?
52194What fo'', Massa Bob?
52194What fo''?
52194What for I do dat?
52194What gentleman?
52194What has happened to you? 52194 What have I to live for now?"
52194What have you been doing while we were away?
52194What have you done to Mr. Wolverton, mother?
52194What have you got on board?
52194What have you to say, Sam?
52194What house shall you deal with?
52194What if I did?
52194What interest?
52194What is a receipt, missis?
52194What is it, Bob?
52194What is it, Sam?
52194What is it?
52194What is it?
52194What is my object?
52194What is that black ape grinning about?
52194What is that?
52194What is your hurry, Clip? 52194 What is your name?"
52194What is your object in putting all these questions?
52194What is your objection?
52194What is your other name?
52194What kind of a receipt-- from whom?
52194What little girl?
52194What made Massa Bob go so far?
52194What made him attack you?
52194What made you do such a thing? 52194 What made you do this, Clip?"
52194What made you get up?
52194What made you show it to him?
52194What makes you call me massa? 52194 What makes you say that?"
52194What makes you think so?
52194What more?
52194What on airth does a boy like you want of a ferry- boat?
52194What on earth is the matter, Sam?
52194What other business can you have with me?
52194What right have you to put questions to me, you young whelp?
52194What shall I do, Bob?
52194What should I mean?
52194What sort of a paper was it?
52194What sort of a trick?
52194What then became of the money-- the hundred and fifty dollars which he carried with him?
52194What was it like?
52194What was that?
52194What was you goin''to take down de ribber, Massa Bob?
52194What worries you?
52194What would you do with it, Massa Bob?
52194What you mean, massa?
52194What''ll I do about de boat?
52194What''ll you give?
52194What''s all this?
52194What''s come of Massa Burton? 52194 What''s dat mean?"
52194What''s dat, Massa Bob?
52194What''s dat?
52194What''s dat?
52194What''s dat?
52194What''s got into Clip?
52194What''s he searchin''Massa Burton''s pockets for?
52194What''s my name, Clip?
52194What''s that?
52194What''s that?
52194What''s the matter with those confounded boys?
52194What''s the matter, Sam?
52194What''s the matter, little girl?
52194What''s the matter?
52194What''s the matter?
52194What''s the price?
52194What''s up, old woman?
52194What''s your mother''s name?
52194What, Massa Bob?
52194What, then?
52194When and where?
52194When did you come on board?
52194When did you get it?
52194When did you lose the boat?
52194When did you wake up?
52194When do they start?
52194When do you expect it to arrive?
52194When do you start?
52194When is your birthday?
52194When will you know?
52194Where are they?
52194Where are they?
52194Where are you bound?
52194Where are you, Bob?
52194Where are you, Clip?
52194Where can Clip possibly have got it?
52194Where can I put you?
52194Where can you put me?
52194Where did he get them?
52194Where did it come from?
52194Where did it come from?
52194Where did you find it?
52194Where did you get that paper?
52194Where did you take it?
52194Where else should it be?
52194Where is he now?
52194Where is he now?
52194Where is he? 52194 Where is he?"
52194Where is it, Joe?
52194Where is your ranch?
52194Where on earth can it be?
52194Where was it?
52194Where was you raised, Massa Wolverton, not to understand rowin''no better dan dat?
52194Where will we stop to- night?
52194Where''d he get it? 52194 Where''s the money?"
52194Where''s the sick man?
52194Where''s the whisky?
52194Where''s your mother?
52194Where, and when, did you find it?
52194Where?
52194Where?
52194Whereabouts, Clip?
52194Who am I? 52194 Who are you, sir?"
52194Who are you?
52194Who asked you to bring him some whisky?
52194Who brought you to her?
52194Who can it be?
52194Who could have robbed him?
52194Who has been putting this into your head, widder? 52194 Who is de little girl, Massa Bob?"
52194Who is this?
52194Who saw him?
52194Who told you, Massa Bob?
52194Who was that black boy?
52194Who would believe your unsupported assertion? 52194 Who''s to pay us?"
52194Why are you so anxious to know whether any of the Burtons have been here?
52194Why did n''t he pay it, then? 52194 Why did n''t you send him back?"
52194Why did n''t you tell me that before?
52194Why did n''t you tell me this, Clip?
52194Why did you give that dollar to him?
52194Why did you select my boat in preference to a regular passenger steamer?
52194Why do n''t he come himself?
52194Why do n''t you run away, like I did?
52194Why do you ask?
52194Why do you wish to know?
52194Why should I do it?
52194Why so? 52194 Why, then, do you make the offer?"
52194Why, you young rascal, are you afraid to trust me?
52194Will Massa Bob, as you call him; be likely to look here?
52194Will no one help me?
52194Will they do you, mister?
52194Will you promise not to use it on Sam?
52194Will you take me back to my papa, certain sure?
52194Will you take me to my papa to- morrow?
52194Will you take me to my papa?
52194Will you take me with you, Massa Bob?
52194Wo n''t I never see my papa again?
52194Wo n''t it be too much trouble, sir?
52194Wo n''t there be risk?
52194Wo n''t, hey?
52194Wo n''t, hey?
52194Would he have the right?
52194Would it not be better to sell it?
52194Would you like to accept Mr. Granger''s invitation, Sam?
52194Would you like to be there now, Clip?
52194Would you run away, Clip, if you were in my place?
52194Yes, I do, Clip; and where do you think it comes from?
52194Yes, sir; will you walk in?
52194Yes; but how can we look after the other? 52194 You actually had a quarrel with Uncle Aaron?"
52194You are sailing with Robert Burton?
52194You do n''t think the little girl was any relation to the woman, Clip?
52194You do n''t, hey? 52194 You do, hey?"
52194You expect to harvest fourteen hundred bushels?
52194You have n''t got the whole of it? 52194 You have n''t seen anything of that black imp, Clip, have you?"
52194You have run away, then?
52194You here, Clip?
52194You mean dat, Massa Sam?
52194You mean in disposing of the cargo?
52194You recovered it?
52194You remember what I told you before you started?
52194You were not that way at his age?
52194You will be paying the mortgage next year?
52194You will take me, then?
52194You wo n''t let him succeed?
52194Young gentlemen,he said,"you are strangers here, I imagine?"
52194Young man, do you know I could have you arrested for abducting my nephew?
52194_ What?_"The little gal''s gone! 52194 Ai n''t that enough?
52194And if he does,"he continued, after a pause,"why should I lament?
52194And what has he done with your property?"
52194Are you all right?"
52194Are you in a hurry to get back to your uncle?"
52194Are you in charge of the boat?"
52194Are you sleepy?"
52194Are you the boy that came yesterday?"
52194At the saloon he was asked,"Do you want this for yourself?
52194Baker?"
52194Burton?"
52194Burton?"
52194Burton?"
52194But what could have become of the receipt?
52194But where could he take refuge?
52194But where on earth did you find it?"
52194But where''s the boy?"
52194But, if so, where could it be?
52194Ca n''t you invite me aboard?"
52194Can he be following us?"
52194Can he possibly suspect me?"
52194Could he have heard anything?"
52194Could my husband have been waylaid, murdered, and robbed?"
52194Could we go there to breakfast?"
52194Did he take it hard?"
52194Did n''t I see my nephew, Sam, come out of here just now?"
52194Did she treat you badly?"
52194Did you fall and hurt yourself?"
52194Did you search his wallet when he was brought home?"
52194Did you see him anywhere?"
52194Did you steal this money?"
52194Do n''t you see we are not more than fifty feet away now?"
52194Do you know you have got us into trouble?
52194Do you know, Minton, how large and valuable a cargo there is on that old ferry- boat?"
52194Do you live with your Uncle Aaron?"
52194Do you mean to say he did not call at your office?"
52194Do you mean to tell me that he did not pay it?"
52194Do you see?"
52194Do you still accuse Sam of robbing you?"
52194Do you want the strap again?"
52194Even if he had, what did it concern Wolverton?
52194Good idea, is n''t it?"
52194Got another cigar, Minton?"
52194Has your uncle got married?"
52194Have n''t I told you it was not paid?"
52194Have n''t you sided with that upstart, the Burton boy?"
52194Have you a stout rope on the place?"
52194Have you got any whisky aboard?"
52194Have you got such a thing as a clothes- brush on board this craft?"
52194He is n''t one of your visitors, is he?"
52194How am I going to get the boat back into the stream?"
52194How long you goin''to stay?"
52194How much do you charge?
52194How much have you got?"
52194How much have you got?"
52194How should I?"
52194How''s the widder left?"
52194I ca n''t save money like you, and that brings me round to the question: For whom are you piling up all this wealth?
52194I suppose a man can make an offer?"
52194I suppose you are not in need of the money?"
52194I suppose you have n''t forgotten that?"
52194I wonder if he destroyed the receipt?"
52194If Massa Bob knew you was here--""He is not to know, do you hear?"
52194If anything''s happened to him, what''ll''come of Clip?"
52194Is it anything very bad?"
52194Is it for Sam?"
52194Is it that boy of yours?"
52194Is she any better than your uncle?"
52194Is your mamma there too?"
52194It ai n''t no secret, is it?"
52194Louis?"
52194Louis?"
52194Louis?"
52194May I ask if you do not deal in wheat?"
52194Neither Bob nor his mother answered him, but Mrs. Burton asked anxiously, after his departure:"Do you think he will do anything, Bob?"
52194Now suppose the receipt were found, what would be the inference?
52194Now where shall we put him?"
52194Of course you know that you have property, and that your Uncle Aaron is your guardian?"
52194Oh, what will we do?"
52194Sam, how far away is Carver?"
52194See?"
52194Slocum?"
52194Slocum?"
52194So you had to walk back?"
52194Suppose he did,"said Bob, not yet understanding;"why should he give you money?"
52194Then why did you give him the dollar?"
52194Then, if you did n''t steal it, how did you get it?"
52194Then, noticing the frown upon her brother''s brow, she inquired,"Is anything the matter?"
52194Think, if anything should happen to you, what would become of me?"
52194This clearly was none of the questioner''s business, and Bob replied by another question:"Do you want to buy?"
52194WAS IT THE CAT?
52194WAS IT THE CAT?
52194Was n''t he jest ravin''?
52194Was n''t your husband a good enough business man to require a receipt for money paid?"
52194Was there anybody who was responsible for its disappearance?
52194What are you afraid of?"
52194What business have you to interfere between me and my nephew?"
52194What can I do for you?"
52194What did he give it to you for?"
52194What good''s a cent to me?"
52194What have I got to do with Sam?"
52194What have you done to compare with me?"
52194What have you to say to it?"
52194What is there to laugh at?"
52194What made you tell me that it was you who sneezed?"
52194What sum would have paid you for your disappointment?"
52194What would become of me if I should lose my mother also?"
52194What would he make by proving false to us?"
52194What''s your security?"
52194Where do you sleep yourself?"
52194Where is the other?"
52194Where is the woman that put you to bed?"
52194Where''d he get it, Aaron?"
52194Which of you legs is broke?"
52194Who told you?"
52194Why ca n''t you stay to supper to- night?"
52194Why ca n''t you tell me about it?"
52194Why did not Aaron Wolverton burn the receipt, and get rid once for all of the only proof that the interest had been paid?
52194Why do n''t he say five dollars at once?"
52194Why should he be on board?"
52194Why should he have such a spite against them?"
52194Why?"
52194Will you come in?"
52194Will you take me to him?"
52194Wo n''t Mrs. Burton feel bad?"
52194Wo n''t he stay to supper?"
52194Wo n''t they be s''prised, dough?"
52194Wolverton puckered up his face, and snarled:"Why should n''t I marry if I choose?
52194Wolverton?"
52194Wolverton?"
52194Wolverton?"
52194Wolverton?"
52194Wolverton?"
52194Wolverton?"
52194Wolverton?"
52194Wolverton?"
52194Wolverton?"
52194Wolverton?"
52194Wolverton?"
52194Wolverton?"
52194Wolverton?"
52194Wolverton?"
52194Wolverton?"
52194Would his sickness be accepted as an excuse?
52194Would you have me bow down to him, and meekly yield up my rights?"
52194You admit that?"
52194You have n''t left any round?"
52194You know I hold a mortgage on it for three thousand dollars?"
52194You would n''t expect him to lend the money without security, would you?"
52194ai n''t dis fun?"
52194ejaculated Wolverton, awed in spite of himself by the sight,"who would have dreamed of this?
52194enough for you?"
52194he exclaimed, furiously, as he picked himself up,"what made you do that?"
52194was he to lose the only money of any account which he ever possessed?
30319''Tis a good fight so far-- would you have more of it?
30319''Tis less fatiguing, although a longer journey; and the time of departure?
30319''Tis regular, Monsieur?
30319''Tis your order, Monsieur?
30319''Twas my uncle who proposed--"Tut, tut, what of that?
30319A husband, Monsieur? 30319 A prisoner?"
30319A proposition, Monsieur?
30319A renegade consorting with devils of the Iroquois?
30319Adele,he whispered, tenderly,"you still fear for me in this venture?"
30319Adele,he whispered,"why is it necessary for us to keep up this masquerade?"
30319All is well, Sequitah?
30319Alone, Monsieur? 30319 Alone-- with-- with-- Monsieur Cassion?"
30319Alone? 30319 Alone?"
30319Am I a ten- year- old to be guarded every step I take? 30319 Am I not your wife?
30319Am I welcome, Monsieur?
30319Am I your wife, Monsieur, or your slave?
30319An Algonquin village?
30319An officer of La Salle''s? 30319 And Hugo Chevet, your uncle?
30319And also all that has passed since Monsieur Cassion entered?
30319And beyond Green Bay?
30319And he mentioned Cassion?
30319And how far is it?
30319And is that all?
30319And may bespeak a dance?
30319And mine also; are you too greatly wearied, Madame?
30319And no orders to clear the devils out?
30319And so you know this young cockerel, do you? 30319 And so, Mademoiselle, it did not altogether please you to be my guest at the ball?
30319And that then is why you send for me-- that I may play my part in the game?
30319And the Sieur de la Salle-- has he returned?
30319And the distance?
30319And the fort?
30319And the men?
30319And the result?
30319And the sealed orders for Chevalier de Baugis?
30319And their departure is soon?
30319And this Chevet-- what became of him?
30319And this fort, Monsieur?
30319And what is that to you, may I ask, Sieur de Artigny?
30319And what may I ask might be your business with the Commissaire Cassion?
30319And where is it, Monsieur?
30319And where is there a better? 30319 And who is this with whom you converse so privately, Adele?"
30319And whose office is that within?
30319And why not? 30319 And why not?
30319And why?
30319And will return seeking us?
30319And you actually believed I struck the blow? 30319 And you actually reached the sea-- the salt water?"
30319And you fear Cassion may follow?
30319And you found nothing more? 30319 And you know the way?
30319And you made no signal? 30319 And you made such pledge?"
30319And you pledge your word?
30319And you think that I am right in my choice? 30319 And you, Hugo Chevet?"
30319And you, Monsieur; you are unscathed?
30319And you?
30319Are you a soldier of M. de Baugis?
30319Are you sure he slept?
30319Assuredly, Monsieur; did you suspect others to be present?
30319At dusk?
30319Ay, beside the shore yonder; see you anything of Indian tepees across the stream to the left?
30319Ay, but how? 30319 Ay, but the others?"
30319Ay, listen; is there any way by which I can join you?
30319But do you know what your choice means?
30319But do you realize what it all means? 30319 But does he live, Monsieur?"
30319But he knew naught of our meeting?
30319But how came you here, then?
30319But my land, Monsieur; my niece?
30319But of what use?
30319But since?
30319But the Indian allies-- the Algonquins?
30319But they can not win? 30319 But where is the paper?"
30319But who did such deed of blood?
30319But why De Artigny, my girl? 30319 But why did you marry him, then?"
30319But why do you come? 30319 But why may I not speak him?"
30319But you explained to him?
30319But, Monsieur, who made the charges? 30319 But, Monsieur,"I questioned puzzled,"why was it not easy?
30319By Cassion?
30319Can it be true the savages hold the valley?
30319Can you doubt? 30319 Certainly; what means your interruption?"
30319Chevet,he exclaimed disgustedly"did ever you see a worse selection for wilderness travel than La Barre has given us?
30319Chevet? 30319 Choose between you?
30319Could I hope that you were even seeking me yonder?
30319Could it not be possible,I asked,"that the feather was spoil of war dropped by some Miami in flight?"
30319De Artigny, you mean? 30319 De Tonty?"
30319Dear,he whispered tenderly,"we are alone now-- you are sorry?"
30319Deep and broad?
30319Did Monsieur Cassion command that you keep in advance?
30319Did it not come this far?
30319Did not De Artigny know?
30319Did the Sieur de Artigny speak?
30319Do we-- do we go down here, Monsieur?
30319Do you blame me now that you understand his purpose in this marriage?
30319Do you deny that he had been with you?
30319Do you know whose bag it was?
30319Do you love me, Monsieur?
30319Do you really believe they survived?
30319Do you see now what I mean to do?
30319Does La Barre know?
30319Does not Callons know?
30319For an hour past; for what reason did you leave the ballroom?
30319For me? 30319 For what are they waiting, and watching?"
30319For what purpose, Monsieur?
30319For your sake? 30319 From Louis?
30319Has it been so long, Monsieur?
30319Hath the Governor grudge against me also?
30319Have I done very wrong, Monsieur?
30319Have they gone back to their own country?
30319He believes then that you feel interest in me?
30319He came here today to see you?
30319He has been here? 30319 He said that?
30319He won the King''s favor? 30319 He-- he accused me,"he asked,"of murder to win your promise?"
30319How came the page in your possession?
30319How came these savages so far to the westward?
30319How can you know all this, Monsieur? 30319 How did you attain the summit of this bluff?"
30319How far from here?
30319How far have we traveled, Monsieur?
30319How far to the west, Chief?
30319How is it this morning, Jules?
30319How know you that to be true?
30319How know you the truth of all you have said?
30319How learned you that?
30319How long have you been behind that curtain?
30319How made you the journey in so short a time?
30319How? 30319 Hugo Chevet?"
30319I do; what reason have I to feel otherwise? 30319 I know not the passage; is there no way around?"
30319I slept ill, but shall be better presently-- shall I bear my blankets to the boats?
30319I still rely upon your attendance at the ball?
30319I wonder have you served long? 30319 I?
30319I? 30319 In the name of the saints, what is the meaning of this?
30319In what way, Monsieur?
30319Is it far yet until we attain the fort?
30319Is it there we leave the lake, Monsieur?
30319Is that not enough, Monsieur? 30319 Is the fort being attacked?"
30319Is there harm in such play, Monsieur,I asked innocently,"with so important an end in view?
30319Is there still danger then? 30319 It is small chance she has had to make choice, and as to her being an heiress, where heard you such a rumor, Colonel Delguard?"
30319It was I you sought then at the home of Hugo Chevet? 30319 It was for that you led me here?"
30319It was you then who saved me? 30319 Join me-- here?"
30319Know you aught of the man, sister?
30319Lieutenant of La Salle''s?
30319Madame will find it comfortable?
30319Mademoiselle,he said gently,"pardon me, but is not this the home of Hugo Chevet, the fur trader?"
30319May I ask you what?
30319Monsieur desired my presence?
30319Monsieur, deem you that impossible?
30319Monsieur, what could I think?
30319Monsieur,I asked breathlessly,"where do you suppose those Illini Indians to be?"
30319Murdered?
30319Must you two quarrel so soon?
30319My uncle; may I not see them, Monsieur?
30319My wife alive? 30319 No chance to procure supplies?"
30319No doubt, and the younger gallant? 30319 No one has told you?"
30319No, Madame, yet I can not deem your reason an unworthy one-- yet wait; could it be fear for my life?
30319No, Monsieur-- are they Indians?
30319Not fear of the voyage, I hope?
30319Not fitted for such a party as this?
30319Now, Adele, you are ready?
30319Of France? 30319 Of seeing you there?
30319Of wilderness?
30319Old Sequitah-- you know him?
30319On what charge?
30319Questioned you?
30319Settled? 30319 Shall I go, Monsieur?"
30319So I have heard-- a stronger man than De Baugis?
30319So that then is the trouble? 30319 So you sent for me-- why?
30319Surely yes, Monsieur; think you he had hope of escape?
30319Surely; and were his words true?
30319That he held commission from the King, while your only authority was by word of the Governor? 30319 That is your meaning, Monsieur?"
30319That you were to marry that coxcomb?
30319The Governor knows?
30319The ceremony was performed by a priest?
30319The fiends were in force then?
30319The first time you have left your tent, Madame?
30319The hour?
30319The papers supposed to be taken from the dead body of Chevet?
30319The rope is to be left dangling?
30319The savages have fled?
30319The spirit of the old days; the words of a soldier''s daughter, hey, Barbeau?
30319The witness to be heard is Madame?
30319The_ Griffin_?
30319Then speak your message-- M. Cassion is dead?
30319Then there is no hope? 30319 Then what can we do?"
30319Then you believed also that I was guilty of the foul crime?
30319Then you hid there, and overheard the conversation between Colonel Delguard and myself?
30319There is a rifle?
30319There would be small chance if I wished, Monsieur; and do you suppose I would seek companionship with one who had killed my uncle?
30319They are friendly?
30319They are not cowards then?
30319They are papers belonging to Chevet?
30319They have proven dangerous?
30319They will convict?
30319Think you he would give such pledge?
30319This young fellow-- De Artigny,he said thoughtfully,"you have some special reason for keeping him in your company?"
30319To assure the conviction, and death of De Artigny?
30319To bring the lad here?
30319To the fort? 30319 To where, Monsieur?"
30319To whom do you refer, Monsieur?
30319To whom do you refer?
30319To whom? 30319 True; and what about the lady?"
30319Under arrest? 30319 Was it not your will that it be the guide-- the Sieur de Artigny?"
30319We have reached the trail?
30319We leap upon them from cover?
30319Well, my beauty,he said harshly,"have n''t I waited long enough to learn if it is war or peace between us?"
30319Were there any canoes in sight along the shore?
30319Were those words addressed to me, M. de Tonty?
30319Were you able to see far?
30319Were you alone? 30319 Were you of that party?"
30319What big man? 30319 What did he do, and say, after he entered the house?"
30319What difference, Monsieur? 30319 What do you mean?"
30319What else could I think? 30319 What else?
30319What friend? 30319 What is it you desire me to tell, Monsieur?"
30319What is it?--the Iroquois?
30319What is that yonder-- a canoe?
30319What is the meaning of this, M. de Tonty?
30319What is this you say, Monsieur-- my testimony?
30319What is this, Madame?
30319What is this, Mademoiselle? 30319 What is your meaning, Monsieur?"
30319What masquerade, Monsieur?
30319What mean you by that threat?
30319What meaneth all this chatter?
30319What meaneth this? 30319 What means this, in Heaven''s name?"
30319What means this? 30319 What said the Sieur de Artigny?"
30319What think you their purpose is, Monsieur?
30319What, Madame,exclaimed De Tonty,"you here also?"
30319What? 30319 Where are they now?"
30319Where are you going?
30319Where is Father Le Guard?
30319Where is my Uncle Chevet?
30319Where learned you of this wealth?
30319Who else should it be, Madame? 30319 Who has charge of the others?"
30319Who is their chief?
30319Who is there?
30319Who was here when you came in?
30319Who was that?
30319Who were in the canoe?
30319Who wishes entrance?
30319Who? 30319 Whose is it then, I ask you?
30319Why blame me for the act of La Barre?
30319Why did you make no report?--was it to shield De Artigny?
30319Why not let me choke the truth out of him then? 30319 Why not?"
30319Why should I, Monsieur? 30319 Why should a girl object if her husband be rich?"
30319Why should our friendship arouse his antagonism to such an extent? 30319 Why should you be so serious?
30319Why so much haste? 30319 With ammunition, and food?"
30319With whom, Monsieur?
30319Withdrawn? 30319 Would you seek to enter against my wish?"
30319Yes, Monsieur-- you were seeking me?
30319Yes; why did you guess that?
30319Yet how is this to be done?
30319Yet some among you are hurt?
30319Yet you would make him love you?
30319Yet''twas not your hand which did the deed?
30319You are alone?
30319You are badly hurt?
30319You are sad, sweetheart; you long too for New France?
30319You are the wife of Monsieur Cassion?
30319You attend, Monsieur?
30319You believe it to be an assault?
30319You counted them?
30319You depart tonight?
30319You did not like to hear me speak as I did?
30319You do not know that he reached her?
30319You do not know what has occurred?
30319You entered through this window?
30319You fear the end?
30319You go by the Ottawa, and the lakes?
30319You had some word you wished to say, Monsieur?
30319You have guarded me?
30319You have memory of the face you say?
30319You have no fear?
30319You have quarreled?
30319You have served with De Artigny? 30319 You have some word for me?"
30319You have sufficient force?
30319You heard alone?
30319You hold this treachery?
30319You imagine you may have been followed here? 30319 You knew him then-- my father?"
30319You know of them, Sister?
30319You know this?
30319You know-- who?
30319You leave him to die?
30319You make it a trial, a test?
30319You make it no more than a joke?
30319You mean the Sieur de Artigny?
30319You mean the Sieur de la Salle?
30319You mean the same method you proposed to me back on the Ottawa?
30319You mean you will go with me into exile, into the woods?
30319You mean you will not pretend to care for me?
30319You overheard their talk?
30319You overheard, Monsieur?
30319You refuse obedience to the Governor of New France?
30319You remember that?
30319You sacrificed yourself for me?
30319You saw Cassion when he arrived?
30319You saw Sieur de la Salle in France? 30319 You saw it?"
30319You saw the lady?
30319You see?
30319You seek his love?
30319You sent for me, sir?
30319You suspected another?
30319You take his side against us who hath the authority of the Governor?
30319You think me immodest, indiscreet?
30319You thought me long in returning, Monsieur?
30319You threaten me?
30319You trust me then?
30319You vacate them for me?
30319You waved to me?
30319You were at the trial?
30319You will go first, with the lady?
30319You will have naught to do with the fellow?
30319You will walk with me, dear one; you are not afraid?
30319You wish me to retire?
30319You wished me to come?
30319You would bar me without? 30319 You would go at once?"
30319You would have us desert you, Monsieur?
30319You would kill the man?
30319You would never have told?
30319You would risk life for that?
30319You-- you desert me then? 30319 You-- you think they-- they are all gone?"
30319You-- you thought I did it?
30319You-- you will try, as his wife, to win confession?
30319Your dressing case?
30319Your husband?
30319Your legal right?
30319Your scouts ventured no further?
30319_ Mon Dieu!_ Another heard?
30319_ Mon Dieu!_ Does a man have to give excuse for desiring to speak with his own wife? 30319 _ Mon Dieu!_ What is this?
30319_ Mon Dieu!_ was it the case of my father?
30319_ Mon Dieu_, is it not clear already? 30319 ''Tis a desperate chance I admit, but have you better to propose?
30319''tis not the old captain?"
30319''tis through him you have invitation to the great ball?"
30319Adele, do you mean your words?
30319Ah, M. de la Durantaye, what say you of this matter?"
30319Ah, that reminds me, Madame; you sent for me?"
30319And are all provisions and arms aboard?
30319And did he realize what was said?"
30319And if she did, would De Artigny care enough to come?
30319And this marriage?
30319And this other, the Commissaire Cassion-- is he a bird of the same plumage?"
30319And what have they to oppose them?
30319And what of the defense?
30319And why not?
30319And you, Monsieur de Artigny, am I to meet you there also, or perchance later at the boat landing?"
30319Are all things ready for departure?"
30319Are both ready?"
30319Are the warriors with you armed?"
30319Are the wolves again loose in the valley?"
30319Are we alone here?
30319Are we not?
30319Are we ready to go forward?"
30319Are we ready, Madame?
30319Are you becoming dry?"
30319Are you of white blood?"
30319Ay, if I might once bring him word, I could rely on his response; but how could that be done?
30319But do you not see that a blow from your hand struck at Francois Cassion would separate us forever?
30319But how could I reach him with my tale?
30319But what is this De Artigny you have with you-- a woman?"
30319But what plan did M. de Tonty outline for me to follow?"
30319But who else could be the murderer?
30319But why are you here, Madame?
30319But why did De Artigny fail to sound an alarm when he found the body?
30319But why do you make plea on his behalf-- the man is surely no friend of yours?"
30319By whom?
30319CHAPTER XV THE MURDER OF CHEVET Who had killed him?
30319Can not we be friends?"
30319Can we not at once begin the journey?"
30319Cassion?"
30319Chevet here tells me you know a shorter journey to the Illinois?"
30319Chevet possessed no papers of value?"
30319Chevet sat by the open fire listening, his pipe in his mouth, his eyes scowling at the news; suddenly he blurted out:"De Artigny, say you?
30319Chevet told you?"
30319Chevet?"
30319Come, De Artigny, tell me what you know-- is the fort one to be defended against Iroquois raiders?"
30319Come, man, what mummery is this?"
30319Could Cassion have interfered?
30319Could I have trust, and confidence in his loyalty?
30319Could he have found the paper of restoration, and kept it concealed, until all was in his hands?"
30319Could he have learned of our interview, and used his influence secretly to prevent our meeting again?
30319Could she have heard the truth?
30319Could there be any reason why he should desire the death of Chevet?"
30319Could they have already gone?
30319Could you think that possible?"
30319Did De Tonty mention to you where he believed the Illini were in hiding?"
30319Did I not know you were together in Quebec?
30319Did he remain silent?
30319Did he still resent my words, or was it his consciousness of guilt, which held him thus aloof?
30319Did you say Rene de Artigny was in the fighting yonder?"
30319Do I owe him kindness; or tender consideration?
30319Do we approach the fort?"
30319Do you give me the pledge?"
30319Do you hope to gain my respect by such base charges as that, Monsieur?"
30319Do you know what that marriage has cost me?
30319Do you not know what that means to a man like him?
30319Do you number a hundred?"
30319Do you realize what your actions naturally meant to me?"
30319Do you realize, Monsieur, why I chose to remain unseen?
30319Do you think me blind?
30319Do you?"
30319Does M. Cassion know you saw the young man that night?"
30319For the time being you are on my side-- but for how long?"
30319Had Boisrondet discovered the prisoner so closely guarded as to make rescue impossible?
30319Had Cassion sought marriage previously?"
30319Had De Artigny refused to accept the chance?
30319Had I read rightly the message of his eyes?
30319Had Monsieur Cassion any occasion to distrust me?"
30319Had he quarrel with anyone, Moulin?"
30319Had his nerve, his daring, vanished before the real danger of the venture?
30319Had the plans failed?
30319Had you a companion?"
30319Has the man shown mercy to me, that I should feel regret because he suffers?
30319Have husbands no rights in this wilderness paradise?"
30319Have men really lived here?"
30319Have we not waited long enough?"
30319Have you any theory as to this change in his front?"
30319Have you courage, Madame, to give him your assistance?
30319Have you no friends?"
30319Have you not cost me heavily in these years?
30319Have you not yet learned I am master here?"
30319Have you strength now to climb the bluff?"
30319Have you thought of this?"
30319Have you, Barbeau?"
30319He doth persecute you with his wooing?"
30319He has not even told you the story of our journey?"
30319He is not of the forest school?"
30319He must seal my lips to protect himself-- but how?
30319He travels with Cassion, you say?"
30319He was with me once on the Ottawa-- and tonight?"
30319How are matters there?"
30319How came it here?"
30319How came this in your possession?"
30319How can I fail, Monsieur?
30319How could I fight these men?
30319How could I meet him?
30319How far to the rocks?"
30319How long was M. de la Durantaye on station here?"
30319How would you save the man?"
30319How?
30319How?
30319Hugo Chevet?
30319I am Jacques Barbeau, a soldier for twenty years; did he not speak to you of me?"
30319I am your friend, Adele, always-- you will believe that?"
30319I asked, startled at his haste,"without even waiting until he is buried?"
30319I asked,"and make your night camps beyond those of the main company?"
30319I asked,"the man who led?"
30319I can speak to you frankly?
30319I despised, hated him; yet what could I do?
30319I feel the honor, Mademoiselle, yet why am I especially singled out for so great a distinction?"
30319I have your word?"
30319I knew all this-- but was that all?
30319I know-- is his abuse beyond endurance?"
30319I know; the choice is made-- will you take me?"
30319I overheard talk last night between the Governor and his aide- de- camp, Colonel Delguard-- you know him?"
30319I shall have no rival then in all this wilderness; you think me harmless, Monsieur?
30319I should have to face Cassion, and in what spirit could I meet him best?
30319I stood in silence, wondering at what was about to occur; was I to be made prisoner?
30319I thought you were of the party of Sieur de la Salle?"
30319I-- Hugo Chevet?
30319If this be so why does Francois Cassion seek the maid so ardently?
30319Ignace?"
30319Indeed, why should I care but to have justice done?
30319Is appeal to the Governor, to the judges impossible?"
30319Is he one to resist De Baugis?"
30319Is it Iroquois?"
30319Is it my tent they erect yonder?"
30319Is it not a man''s duty to seek to guard your safety in such an hour?
30319Is it not possible, Adele, that my purpose was the same?
30319Is my decision to return right, Rene?"
30319Is my thought right?"
30319Is not M. Cassion in the fort yonder?"
30319Is that all?"
30319Is that enough, comrade?"
30319Is that enough?"
30319Is that fair?"
30319Is that not a recommendation, M. de Tonty?"
30319Is that not your thought, M. de Tonty?"
30319Is there no other woman?"
30319Is there understanding between you and this Sieur de Artigny?"
30319Is this not true?"
30319Is this true?"
30319It is all mystery, even why you should be here with us on this long journey?
30319It is true, is it not, that La Chesnayne left an estate of value?"
30319Know you anything to warrant suspicion?"
30319Know you where the young cock is now?"
30319Know you why I made the effort?"
30319La Salle has reached the King''s ear?"
30319Look, by the foot of that big tree, the fellow in war bonnet, and deerskin shirt-- what make you of him?"
30319Louis?"
30319Louis?"
30319Louis?"
30319Madame, may I have the pleasure of escorting you?"
30319May I tell him the truth, Madame?
30319May I tell you what, in my judgment, seems best for you to do?"
30319Monsieur Boisrondet is there a way?"
30319Monsieur Cassion surely I am not in error that you informed me of your engagement to Mademoiselle la Chesnayne?"
30319Monsieur Cassion?"
30319Monsieur, am I to fight this fight alone?"
30319Must I not defend myself-- and what other weapons are at hand?
30319Now what next?"
30319Now will you answer me-- were you alone there ten minutes ago?"
30319Now will you confess the truth?"
30319One rescued from the canoe?"
30319Our time is up, Sister?"
30319Perchance you preferred some other gallant?"
30319Sequitah knows who speaks?"
30319Shall we go meet him?"
30319Shall we go?"
30319So answer me, Madame-- you saw De Artigny bend over the body of Chevet-- was your uncle then dead?"
30319So you dared to have tryst with him?"
30319Surely I should have died but for your help, yet I hardly know now what occurred-- you sprang from the canoe?"
30319Surely my orders were sufficiently clear?"
30319Surely now that we are under protection there will be no attack?"
30319Surely they can not capture the fort, Monsieur?
30319Surely you do not jest?"
30319Surely you had no such thought when we parted last?"
30319Surely''tis not far along the shore now to the portage?"
30319Surely, you would not we d me to that creature?"
30319Tell me then, Mademoiselle, by what right does this Cassion hold you as a captive?"
30319That he would resist my authority?"
30319That lad?
30319The soldier stood silent, fingering his gun, until De Artigny asked impatiently:"You have none?"
30319The village has been attacked?"
30319The younger priest waved his hand to the_ engagà ©_, yet asked softly:"Monsieur Chevet-- he is delayed also?"
30319There was some special cause?"
30319There, is that better?
30319They say he has left Quebec; what more know you?"
30319Think you I am one to disappoint because of so small an obstacle?
30319Think you this Cassion has some hold on Hugo Chevet to make him so harsh?"
30319This is clear?"
30319Those papers were upon him-- are they of value?"
30319Tomorrow we go to Quebec, to the Governor''s ball, and when Monsieur Cassion returns from his mission you will marry him-- you understand?"
30319Treason, and mutilation of official records?
30319Was he seeking to serve my cause?
30319Was it a mere passing fervor, a fleeting admiration, to be forgotten in the presence of the next pretty face?
30319Was it not by Royal Orders that La Salle was relieved of command?"
30319Was it not your order, Monsieur?"
30319Was it possible that they merely dropped this brief message, and instantly vanished?
30319Was it to protect me from suspicion?"
30319Was not my father a land owner?"
30319Was there no other way by which we could serve?
30319Was there not work enough in the camp yonder, that you must be testing your fancy graces every time a boat lands?"
30319Was there quarrel between her father and this Francois Cassion?"
30319Well, and why should I not?
30319Well, for what purpose?"
30319Were any of our lads hurt?"
30319What Indians have you?"
30319What are the white man''s words of wisdom?"
30319What are you laughing at?"
30319What could I say?
30319What could ever excuse a crime like this?
30319What difference?
30319What distance lies between there and this Fort St. Louis, on the Illinois?"
30319What does it mean?"
30319What else did this Chevet have to say?"
30319What had happened; what was happening out there in the mystery?
30319What has happened between you and Cassion?"
30319What has happened to him?
30319What he dared say to me?"
30319What hour do you make it now?"
30319What if Cassion had followed me up the path, or had despatched one of his men to spy upon my movements?
30319What is it you would tell me?"
30319What is the boy to you?"
30319What is your judgment, Père?"
30319What make you the hour?"
30319What man has been your companion here?"
30319What more can you ask?"
30319What more could any girl desire in a husband?"
30319What more would you learn, Messieurs?"
30319What occurred back in New France to cause the murder of Chevet, and this attempt to convict De Artigny of the crime?"
30319What pledge?"
30319What purpose?
30319What said De Tonty when you told him?"
30319What say you, Chevet?"
30319What says the war chief of the Mascoutins-- will his warriors fight?
30319What should I do?
30319What spirit of revenge, of hatred, of fear, could have led to such an act?
30319What think you you were employed for, fellow-- an esquire of dames?
30319What think you, Barbeau?"
30319What was it La Barre said?"
30319What was that black, shapeless thing he had paused to examine?
30319What will be said, thought, if I seek rest elsewhere?"
30319What will be your course from Green Bay?"
30319What would be his verdict?
30319What would he say, or do, when he learned the truth?
30319What would you?
30319What, are you going already?
30319When you looked in through the window what did you see?"
30319Where are the others?"
30319Where before did you ever meet this popinjay?"
30319Where is the other?
30319Where was all this to lead?
30319Where was to be the end?
30319Where went the fur- stealer?"
30319Where, Mademoiselle, have you hidden yourself, to remain unknown to us of Quebec?"
30319Wherefore is that a crime?
30319Who brought the matter to the attention of Louis?"
30319Who brought you the message?"
30319Who do you mean?"
30319Who is he?
30319Who is the man I am to trust?"
30319Who will compose the party?"
30319Whose boot print is this, Madame?
30319Why I have done what must seem an unwomanly act?"
30319Why did you remain silent?
30319Why do I say this?
30319Why do you address me like that?"
30319Why do you not build the fire, and dry your clothing?"
30319Why do you pick out De Artigny on whom to vent your anger?"
30319Why had it happened?
30319Why had the deed been done?
30319Why is M. Cassion so wild for the lad''s blood?
30319Why it is all rock?"
30319Why should I not seek for you a husband of worth in these colonies?
30319Why should I, Monsieur?
30319Why should I?
30319Why should I?
30319Why should he take so roundabout a way to reach the shore?
30319Why should my uncle sacrifice me?"
30319Why was he hiding about the mission house, and peering in through the window?
30319Why what is he?
30319Why, then, if I wished, was it not my privilege to speak with the Sieur de Artigny?
30319Why?
30319Will they strike with us a blow against the beasts?"
30319Would I swing clear?
30319Would he care greatly?
30319Would he dare danger to serve me?
30319Would it not be best, Monsieur, for us to scale the cliff, and wait our rescuers there, where we can keep lookout?"
30319Would the Mother Superior, whose stern rule I knew so well, feel slightest sympathy with my need?
30319Would the rope reach to the rock?
30319Would the sister be successful in her mission?
30319Would you doom me to live out my life with that brute-- that murderer?
30319Would you give up all for me?"
30319Yet I bore it for your sake-- why?
30319Yet how can we get Madame safely over the logs?"
30319Yet is it not matter of interest to these as well?"
30319Yet of what interest can all this be to me, Monsieur, now that I am married to you?"
30319Yet surely it was not merely to say farewell that you assumed such risk?"
30319Yet wait-- why came you to me with such a tale?
30319Yet what do you mean by thus expressing surprise at my marriage to Monsieur Cassion?"
30319You agree to accompany the party without resistance, Madame?"
30319You are Francois Cassion, of Quebec?"
30319You are glad I came?"
30319You are not afraid to be left alone?"
30319You are not angry?
30319You are not greatly wearied, Madame?"
30319You are not seriously struck?"
30319You are the friend of Sieur de Artigny?"
30319You begin to feel warm?"
30319You believe my word?"
30319You bring me message from Monsieur?"
30319You can walk, Rene?"
30319You checked them, Le Claire?"
30319You do not grasp my plan?"
30319You expect to gain the fort unseen?"
30319You forbid me entrance?"
30319You found no other documents, Madame?"
30319You had no glimpse of the boats?"
30319You have a bit of cloth-- a handkerchief?"
30319You have a plan?"
30319You have been at the fort?"
30319You have chosen your course?"
30319You have come from the fort I take it, De Artigny?
30319You have grown to suspicion another since, Madame-- dare you name the man?"
30319You have met this Henri de Tonty?
30319You have my letter of instruction?"
30319You have pledged me?"
30319You have protected me with your silence-- was it not because you cared for me?"
30319You have the strength?"
30319You hear me, Messieurs?
30319You here again, you bastard wood ranger?
30319You honor me with the suspicion that I had an appointment here with one of your men?"
30319You knew it not?"
30319You know a safe passage, you say?"
30319You know him well?"
30319You know him, and never told me?"
30319You know me then?"
30319You know that stream, Altudah?"
30319You know this Cassion, Madame?"
30319You leaped into the water from the canoe?"
30319You let them go, believing us dead?"
30319You love me, Adele?
30319You made no refusal?"
30319You mark my words, Mademoiselle?"
30319You mean a rescue?"
30319You met with no harm when you fell?"
30319You met with trouble?"
30319You never heard this?"
30319You overheard what was said in La Barre''s office about-- about my father''s property?"
30319You perceive my plan, no doubt?"
30319You recall the great rock beside the trail?"
30319You see this stream?
30319You sought me, you said?
30319You surely do not suspect him?"
30319You suspected?"
30319You then are of his company?"
30319You think it was easy?
30319You thought me capable of driving a knife into the man''s back to gain revenge?"
30319You understand now?"
30319You understand?"
30319You understand?"
30319You were in hiding there together?
30319You will bear to your master a message?"
30319You will give me audience with the Sieur de Artigny?"
30319You will make camp soon?"
30319You will speak him fair?"
30319You would dare disobey me?"
30319You would have me spare him?"
30319You would serve me?"
30319You-- you leave me to this fate?"
30319Your father, Mademoiselle?"
30319Your uncle knew of your fortune?"
30319_ Mon Dieu!_ Do you think I play?
30319_ Mon Dieu!_ how?"
30319_ Mon Dieu!_ was that a noise overhead?
30319_ Sacre!_ What is the fellow to me?
30319_ Sacre_, you think me easy, hey?
30319a man, you mean?
30319and how came there to be trouble between Rene, and the fur trader?
30319and then what happened?"
30319and there might be many warriors there?
30319and who is in charge?"
30319another one of La Salle''s spawn?"
30319by whom?"
30319do I not speak my will plainly enough?
30319do you imagine I fear the coxcomb ahead?"
30319do you think yourself a queen to choose?
30319for what, Monsieur?
30319has talked with you?"
30319he asked calmly,"and the white men will sally forth to aid us?"
30319he convinced Louis?"
30319he paused as though in doubt,"and the Sieur de Artigny-- had he part in this feat of arms?"
30319here comes a messenger from below-- what is it, my man?"
30319how can this be?"
30319how could I hope to win against their schemes, and plans of vengeance?
30319is there then more than one prospective bridegroom?
30319is this you Le Claire?"
30319know you the fur trader, Hugo Chevet?"
30319make no protest?"
30319no documents taken from Hugo Chevet?"
30319not eaten yet?"
30319not service under Francois Cassion?
30319nothing we can do?"
30319of suspecting you?
30319or did he have some other object, some personal feud in which he sought revenge?
30319or what form was my punishment to assume?
30319or would he condemn me for this act in which I was in no wise to blame?
30319perhaps I perceive-- you love the young man?"
30319that I am doing naught unworthy of my womanhood?"
30319they found you then?
30319they will remember you, and obey your orders?"
30319to Louis?"
30319to learn the truth of my relationship with Cassion?
30319to save me from the clutches of Cassion?
30319to whom?"
30319what can I hope to accomplish without your aid?"
30319what is love?
30319what mean you?
30319when does it take place?"
30319who ever heard of love nowadays?
30319why not?
30319you do not regret?"
30319you left him well?"
11217A hot day''s just nothing but a hot day to you, is it?
11217A little harder to make a map this time, is n''t it? 11217 A-- quest?"
11217Ai n''t you getting awful hungry, Aunt Kate?
11217Am I''moored''any place?
11217And I presume it never occurred to you, Katie, that neither Ann nor I was fairly surfeited with opportunities for conversational initiative? 11217 And Italy?
11217And do they never try to rescue others from fires?
11217And do you mean to say you would want me-- anyhow?
11217And have you-- you are so good as to confide in me, so I presume to ask questions-- have you said anything to Ann?
11217And how did you happen to be so unkind as to call me up, Ann?
11217And how much,pressed Katie,"did the least experienced and skillful make?"
11217And is_ that_ all that matters? 11217 And it''s trying to be waked out of a sound sleep, is n''t it, uncle?"
11217And knowing nothing, you took her in?
11217And look here, Katie, what''s this about Prescott? 11217 And never tried to stop her?"
11217And the explanation? 11217 And then after a while you left this town?"
11217And what are you talking about? 11217 And what do you suppose he was prying around the Island for?"
11217And what does she mean to you, Katie?
11217And what would you say, Worthie,she asked after they had gone a little way in silence,"was the difference between thinking and wondering?"
11217And who, pray, is the man that mends the boats?
11217And why not?
11217And why, if I may venture still another blundering question, was poor Nora held responsible for a cough she never coughed?
11217And yet,she turned to him, after following his glance to a girl''s tense, white face,"what can they do?
11217And you call_ that_ not vulgar? 11217 And you feel, do you, Katie, that the need of your life just now is for danger?"
11217And you''ll be down there-- mending boats?
11217And you''ll be good to Ann?
11217And you''ll be there a little while, wo n''t you,he asked wistfully,"before you go-- you do n''t know where?"
11217And you''ll-- come and see me?
11217And you,he said softly,"do n''t know anything about the''underlying principles of life''?
11217And your mother, dear? 11217 Ann,"he asked gently,"have n''t you a''right to''--if we want you to?"
11217Ann--_who?_ Ann--_what?_"Ann_ who!_ Ann_ what!_ That''s a nice way to speak of my friends! 11217 Ann--_who?_ Ann--_what?_""Ann_ who!_ Ann_ what!_ That''s a nice way to speak of my friends!
11217Ann?
11217Are n''t you coming with us?
11217Are they sorry they''re not as old as somebody else?
11217Are you a socialist?
11217Are you sure-- you know?
11217Are you thanking God for yourself or for Watts, sonny?
11217As a favor to me, Watts, will you be good to the little dog?
11217As a favor to_ you_, Miss Jones,said Watts, making it clear that for his part--"Watts,"she asked,"how long have you been in the service?"
11217Aunt Kate,he asked,"when''s Miss Ann coming back?"
11217Aunt Kate?
11217Aunt Kate?
11217Aunt Kate?
11217But I suppose,she began again,"he would n''t be very likely to be there mending boats now?"
11217But could n''t you be court- martialed for doing that?
11217But how could you think that?
11217But how do you know he''ll rail?
11217But how do you know, Aunt Kate? 11217 But is any-- individual-- worth it?"
11217But of course,she added,"you paid it back just as soon as you could?"
11217But she knows?
11217But she''s coming back? 11217 But to keep the other country from getting a corner of it?"
11217But was n''t there_ any_ fun, dear?
11217But what did you tell him I wanted to see him_ for_?
11217But what else is there? 11217 But where is your future then, Wayne?"
11217But why hate me?
11217But why not, Aunt Kate?
11217But why not?
11217But why, Worthie?
11217But why, uncle? 11217 But why?
11217But wo n''t I have_ any_ gun''tall, Aunt Kate?
11217But wo n''t she be back?
11217But you like Ann, do n''t you, Wayne?
11217But you never feel that way, so you are contented and like the service, Watts?
11217But, Aunt Kate,he pursued after another silence,"what''s father making guns for-- if there are n''t going to be any?"
11217But, Aunt Kate-- won''t there be anybody''tall to kill?
11217But, Worth,she asked, when she had blinked the gnat away,"what did you tell this other man?"
11217But, dearie, what will you do when we land?
11217But_ she_ knows?
11217Ca n''t they come back, Katie? 11217 Called where?"
11217Called_ away_?
11217Can you always do what you want to do?
11217Dear little chappie, and Aunt Kate''s a cross mean old thing, is n''t she?
11217Dear me-- is he a public speaker?
11217Did he--_die_?
11217Did n''t I think it might be--_nice?_ Oh Katie-- you''d have to know what that day had been-- what so many days-- all days-- had been. 11217 Did n''t know I could do that, did you?"
11217Did n''t you get him?
11217Did n''t you tell me, Nora, that your cousin''s wife was very clever at sewing-- at fixing things over?
11217Did n''t you_ never_ have a dog?
11217Did n''t your papa get you''nother one?
11217Did you ever wonder,she asked, with real curiosity,"how in the world you happened to have such a daughter?"
11217Did you find out all you wanted to know from him, Aunt Kate?
11217Did you see it, Katie?
11217Did you see''Daisey- Maisey''?
11217Do all those people belong here?
11217Do many of these men go to church?
11217Do n''t Papa know''bout them?
11217Do n''t they-- don''t they have to-- work?
11217Do n''t you see that it is? 11217 Do n''t you want me to enjoy my place any more?
11217Do n''t you want them to know what you think, Aunt Kate?
11217Do n''t you want to tell me what you know? 11217 Do n''t_ go?_ Kate, what''s the matter with you?
11217Do n''t_ go?_ Kate, what''s the matter with you? 11217 Do n''t_ you_ know?"
11217Do they let them burn-- just because they know fire for a dangerous thing?
11217Do you always say what you mean, Aunt Kate?
11217Do you disapprove of this affair between Nora and Watts?
11217Do you ever hear a call, dear heart? 11217 Do you know-- do you know,"choked Katie--"that she may kill herself?"
11217Do you think I''d leave a sick girl sitting out here all alone?
11217Do you think I''d let them come back? 11217 Do you think socialism''s going to remove all the suffering from the world?
11217Do you want to know the honest truth?
11217Do you-- know?
11217Does n''t it occur to you, Katie, that as a matter of fact the other country might like a chance to develop its resources? 11217 Does n''t it seem to you,"she asked gently of the Reverend Saunders,"that it''s just an awful pity?"
11217Does n''t that ever seem to you a beautiful thing?
11217Does she_ look_ tired?
11217Does-- must one always''gain''something?
11217Elizabeth Barrett Browning is your favorite poet, is n''t she, Ann?
11217Envied him? 11217 Escape-- what?"
11217For what?
11217Fred,she asked, moved by her never slumbering impulse to find out about things,"just what is it you care for in Helen?
11217Frighten_ who?_"Ann,she repeated demurely.
11217From_ you_?
11217Get who?
11217Goin'', Aunt Kate?
11217Harry,she asked, in rather metallic voice,"how about that affair of yours down in Cuba?"
11217Harry,she asked,"have you said anything to your mother?"
11217Have you any reason,she asked,"to think Ann cares for you?"
11217Have you had them before? 11217 Have you made many excursions into the great outer world?"
11217He goes-- with you and Ann?
11217He likes his work?
11217Hello there,he said;"it''s been a long time since we saw you, ai n''t it?"
11217Her dream or your dream, Wayne?
11217Home? 11217 Honestly now, do you get that?"
11217Honey, will you play with him sometimes? 11217 How could you know each other?
11217How do you know there''ll be another?
11217How do you know,she asked, still demurely,"that I would like to marry any?"
11217How long you been here?
11217How long you goin''to stay?
11217How old are you, Katie?
11217How old is Miss Ann?
11217How should I know?
11217I s''pose you''ve seen the chickens?
11217I think you have had a hard time,Katie murmured, thinking to herself that one must have had hard time--"And what''s that to you?
11217I wonder, Nora, would she come and help us?
11217I wonder,he voiced it,"where it''s going to lead you?
11217In a world of homeless dogs, why should n''t I feel badly?
11217In for what?
11217In one of those?
11217In what way is he a queer genius?
11217Is her mother living?
11217Is it a wicked world?
11217Is it coming back?
11217Is it--?
11217Is n''t it scandalous?
11217Is n''t it the limit the way they''do you''at those girls''schools?
11217Is n''t it?
11217Is n''t poor Nora permitted to cough, if she is disposed to cough? 11217 Is n''t that what life is?
11217Is n''t there ever something makes you do things you know are n''t the things to do?
11217Is n''t this heat distressing?
11217Is this-- Captain Jones?
11217Isn''t-- what a pity?
11217It does look nice this way, does n''t it?
11217It hurts when applied to dogs, does it?
11217It seems we ought to be able to tell father whether they''re taking good care of it, does n''t it, Worth?
11217It shows what sort of hostess I am, does n''t it? 11217 It would seem rather inconsiderate, would n''t it?
11217It''s great about your friend coming; Miss--?
11217It''s lovely, is n''t it?
11217It''s not so simple a matter for you, is it-- this''being free''? 11217 Joke?
11217Just what kind of man would you like to marry?
11217Just what kind of man,asked Katie demurely,"would you say I had better marry?"
11217Katie, do you know how I''d like to pay you back? 11217 Katie, where did you learn it was very fetching to say outrageous things so demurely?"
11217Katie, why do you think it''s so funny? 11217 Katie, would you think a man a brute to propose to a girl on the day she was giving an important dinner?"
11217Katie, you do n''t mean to marry Prescott, do you?
11217Katie,he asked abruptly,"has she no people?
11217Katie,he asked passionately,"you mean that if walking together we ca n''t always be all in the sunshine--?"
11217Katie,he asked pleadingly,"where has Ann gone?"
11217Katie,he asked,"how much do you really care for the army?"
11217Katie,he besought,"wo n''t you help me?
11217Katie,he demanded sharply,"have you been disagreeable to Ann?"
11217Katie,he demanded,"how much did you ever talk to this fellow?
11217Katie,he said-- he never spoke her name save in that timid, lingering way--"don''t you think you''re rather over- emphasizing the sadness?"
11217Katie,he suddenly demanded,"what were you up to?
11217Katie,he was asking,"where did you first meet her?
11217Katie,it made him ask,"do n''t you think you''d better-- quit?"
11217Katie,she approached it, in Zelda''s own delicate fashion,"what would you think of Major Darrett and me joy- riding through life together?"
11217Lady or chorus girl?
11217Like her?
11217Look here,she said to the Major,"what is this?
11217Love her?
11217May I ask to whom I am indebted for this kindness?
11217Miss Kate,said Nora,"can you come and look at the table a minute?
11217No slam on either party?
11217No? 11217 Nora,"asked Katie, standing with her back to her,"what is it about Miss Forrest?"
11217Nora,she said, and Katie''s face was white and pleading,"did n''t Miss Ann say anything about leaving me a note?"
11217Not like what?
11217Not the Major Forrest family?
11217Now do you_ see_?
11217Now look here, Katie, surely you-- a girl of the world-- the good sort-- aren''t going to be so melodramatic as to dig up a''past''for me, are you?
11217Now was n''t that just sweet of father?
11217Now wo n''t you tell me what I can do?
11217Oh Worthie,she whispered,"is n''t it_ lovely_ to be getting home?"
11217Oh do n''t you think we''re a good deal of a joke, uncle?
11217Oh yes, help them get higher wages, I suppose?
11217Oh yes--_yes_--what is it?
11217Oh you are, are you? 11217 Oh, I say, jolly night, is n''t it?"
11217Oh, am I? 11217 Oh, do they?"
11217Oh, he-- then he is here?
11217Oh, is that so? 11217 Oh, that so?
11217Oh, will it?
11217Oh, would he?
11217Oh-- so he''s a guide, is he? 11217 Oh--"gasped Katie, and lost all color--"Oh--""Katie--?"
11217Oh--_yes_?
11217Oh_ yes_, Wayne?
11217On the Island? 11217 Over roads where there might be no sunshine?
11217Poor little doggie, does he want a pat?
11217Prescott, did n''t you hear something?
11217Remember your telling me about visiting at Fort Riley when you were quite a youngster? 11217 Rescue them for what?
11217See what-- dear Katie? 11217 Shall we walk on?"
11217She arrived this afternoon?
11217She goes back?
11217She the girl that''s sick?
11217Showing up the full- blowness of the bride? 11217 Some joy- ride, do n''t you think?"
11217Something is the matter?
11217Tell me,said Katie, more seriously,"why do you want to marry?"
11217Tell me,said Katie,"what''s in the great outer world?"
11217That you may invest it in dangerous literature?
11217The day who came? 11217 The what, Aunt Kate?"
11217The-- now what is it, Aunt Kate?
11217Then do n''t you see? 11217 Then each of those girls made a dollar today?"
11217Then may I ask, mysterious one, what you''re laughing at?
11217Then pray why have you any business here?
11217Then where will you go, Katie?
11217Then, how dare I? 11217 There are lots of silly people in the world, are n''t there?"
11217There are so many ways in which automobiles make life more bearable, do n''t you find it so, Miss Jones?
11217They''re out and out materialists, are n''t they? 11217 Think not?"
11217Think not?
11217This is not a bad looking suit, is it? 11217 This is what I mean-- it''s not the end, is it?"
11217Though a man''s past is not a woman''s business?
11217Through sleeping?
11217Uncle, does it ever come home to you that life''s a pretty serious business?
11217Uncle, how can you? 11217 Uncle,"Katie asked quietly,"do you ever think much about Christ?"
11217Up where?
11217Want me to get the man that mends the boats?
11217Was it the day_ she_ came?
11217Was it? 11217 Was there ever anybody in the world so wonderful-- so funny-- as Katie?
11217Watts say anything about whether he was still mending boats?
11217Wayne,she asked slowly,"what do you mean?"
11217Wayne,she asked,"have you felt this way a long time?
11217Wayne?
11217We know, do n''t we, how hard it is for army men to find futures as civilians?
11217Well I suppose--this she ventured tremulously, imploringly--"you went to West Point-- and were-- did n''t finish?"
11217Well sir, what do you think? 11217 Well then what did you do?"
11217Well where_ is_ she?
11217Well, Ann,she began, her voice high pitched and unsteady,"this is about the limit, is n''t it?"
11217Well, Katie, you-- you do n''t mean to take it up, do you?
11217Well, Wayne,she laughed,"are n''t you getting a little-- cryptic?
11217Well, did n''t you know,he demanded passionately,"that you could_ live_ with_ us_?"
11217Well, uncle, dear uncle,she laughed,"hast forgotten the days when nothing mattered so much as having the leaves the right shade of yellow?"
11217Well, what did she do it for?
11217Well, what of it?
11217Well, what people? 11217 Well, what would you think,"he suggested,"of''asking''for a system more interested in conserving nervous systems than in producing millionaires?
11217Well, what_ does_ get you there?
11217Well, where did I leave myself? 11217 Well, who is she?
11217Well,he said defiantly,"and what if she was?
11217Well?
11217Well?
11217What Forrest?
11217What are those men doing?
11217What are you doing it for?
11217What are you doing this for? 11217 What being, Aunt Kate?"
11217What can I do?
11217What did it? 11217 What do I care about sunny paths, if I must walk them alone?"
11217What do you know about me?
11217What do you mean? 11217 What do you mean?"
11217What do you mean?
11217What do you want to show me, dear?
11217What do you_ think_ about me?
11217What for? 11217 What indeed?"
11217What is it about Katie?
11217What is there about me to pity?
11217What made you think I was a socialist?
11217What rules?
11217What shall I do? 11217 What thinking about, Worthie dear?"
11217What will you do?
11217What will you have? 11217 What would you say they look upon as the most important thing in life?"
11217What''ll I tell him, Aunt Kate?
11217What''s a different matter?
11217What''s his name?
11217What''s your theory?
11217When did you begin to want to know about the''underlying principles of life''?
11217When doctors or lawyers do n''t do things right ca n''t you sue them and get your money back? 11217 Where do you live?"
11217Where have you been?
11217Where would you have to go, Aunt Kate? 11217 Where?"
11217Which is Aunt_ Kate? 11217 Which of what?"
11217Who are her people, Fred?
11217Who do you suppose the scoundrel_ is_?
11217Who is she, Katie?
11217Who is your stunning friend, Katie?
11217Who?
11217Whom do you think I could do good to?
11217Why a blow?
11217Why are n''t there?
11217Why are you sorry for me?
11217Why ca n''t you take as well as I can take?
11217Why do n''t you know all the world''s like that? 11217 Why do you need her?
11217Why is it? 11217 Why not?"
11217Why not?
11217Why not?
11217Why really, it''s quite as good as a play, is n''t it? 11217 Why should n''t I let myself feel badly?"
11217Why would it--?
11217Why, Ann, ca n''t you guess what it is about Katie? 11217 Why, Aunt Kate, do n''t you know him?
11217Why, Katie,Ann began,"does it make so much difference-- just because you know him?"
11217Why, Katie,he cried,"_ does_ it matter so?
11217Why, Katie,laughed her brother,"what do you mean by coming over here and interviewing men on their politics?"
11217Why, Wayne, you can scarcely expect me to be-- wholly pleased, can you?
11217Why, honey,she laughed,"does it really seem to you such a gloomy world-- world in which there will be nobody to kill?
11217Why-- why, Wayne?
11217Why? 11217 Why?"
11217Will you take Worth?
11217With the man that mends the boats?
11217Wo n''t you--_fight_ for it?
11217Work what wonder?
11217Worth dear, will you do something for your Aunt Kate?
11217Worth, was this one of the men?
11217Worth,she asked, grotesquely overdoing unconcern,"where''s Miss Ann?
11217Worth,she asked,"what is there on the_ other_ side of that little island?"
11217Worthie, is that why you like him? 11217 Would I be able to_ help_ being myself?"
11217Would Miss Ann be sorry she''s not as old as you?
11217Would he annihilate me?
11217Would you be so kind as to tell her I am here? 11217 Would you like to hear my favorite quotation from Scripture?"
11217Would you rather I came there? 11217 Would you say that''fine and virtuous women''have succeeded in keeping the world a perfectly safe place for women?"
11217Would you say, Katie,she asked anxiously,"that she is the sort of girl to make my boy a good wife?"
11217Y-- es; but why would n''t he, Aunt Kate? 11217 Yes, and when I''ve finished telling you, you''ll go back to your sunny paths, wo n''t you?
11217Yes, are n''t they lovely?
11217Yes, but if you get in the habit of looking at it as an end, will there be anything left for it to be a means to?
11217Yes, but, father, is n''t a good gun a gun that kills folks? 11217 Yes, do n''t we?
11217Yes, is n''t it? 11217 Yes, it is really terrible, is n''t it?
11217Yes,agreed her companion,"pleasant weather, is n''t it?"
11217Yes,said Kate grimly,"pleasant weather, is n''t it?"
11217Yes? 11217 Yes?"
11217Yes?
11217You are thinking,she ventured,"that your feeling for it is going to be-- hard for me?"
11217You call that a good place to work?
11217You can breathe better this way, ca n''t you?
11217You do n''t mean, do you,--looking away, as if with scarcely the courage to say it--"that I''m to''stop''--everything?"
11217You do not approve of these things?
11217You do wonder, do n''t you, Aunt Kate? 11217 You going out in it?"
11217You going to take it, Aunt Kate?
11217You got a dog at home?
11217You hear me, Katie?
11217You heard anything about him, Worth?
11217You know her?
11217You know, Katie-- what I told you-- what I must tell you--"Oh yes,said Katie,"there was something, was n''t there?"
11217You mean she is not coming back?
11217You mean,she asked, in slow, hushed voice,"that I should stay here-- here?--as a friend of yours?"
11217You seen the new cow?
11217You sick?
11217You think you could? 11217 You think_ weather_ makes any difference?
11217You too?
11217You want to hear about it?
11217You wanted me? 11217 You were--?"
11217You will wait for that, wo n''t you? 11217 You''ll try to do that for me, wo n''t you, dear fair- minded, loving- spirited Katie?
11217You''re not pleased?
11217You''re very fond of her?
11217You''ve walked sunny paths, have n''t you? 11217 You_ struck_--an officer?"
11217You_ will_ laugh, Katie, wo n''t you?
11217Your Miss Osborne and the fifty cents a day girls-- all one world? 11217 _ Do_ they know?
11217_ God_?
11217_ Katie? 11217 _ Struck_--your superior officer?"
11217_ Try_?
11217_ Was_ it so common, Katie? 11217 _ You_--needed_ her_?"
11217''Cause he knows everything?
11217''Sent_ away_?''
11217''What do you mean?''
11217''What right had you to dispose of him?''
11217A call to a freer country than any country you have known?
11217A fine thing?
11217A little red light would flash-- sometimes it would flash straight into my brain-- and I''d say''Number, please?''
11217After all, the department might throw him down-- who knew what it might not do?--and then what would have been the use?
11217After all, what would one have?
11217Am-- am I keeping you from anything you should be doing?"
11217And I suppose,"she laughed scornfully,"you''re going into the ranks?
11217And as it is to be something of an army wedding, may I not have you, whom Harry calls the''most bully army girl''he ever knew?"
11217And do n''t you see that it would be the most fascinating-- altogether jolliest sort of thing for us to try?
11217And do you not see, Katie, that that makes her about the biggest thing in life to me?"
11217And even if she had-- how find her there if she did not wish to be found?
11217And here a life-- Why what kind of people are we?"
11217And how dared you bring your lawyer here to me?
11217And how many would be let stay in the places where they had been put?
11217And if in fancy you sometimes let yourself drift into that other country, am I with you there?
11217And if you_ do_ know each other,"--turning upon him furiously--"need we all act like thieves?"
11217And it interested her the way people said:"Prescott?
11217And now the spirit''s dead and the form''s left-- and what''s so absurd as a form that rattles dead bones?"
11217And now?
11217And on the heels of the whirlwind knocking down the country of make- believe would come the girl from a vast unknown rushing wildly from-- what?
11217And that other thing there was to tell her--?
11217And was all hating to go when all men saw?
11217And what was there left?
11217And what would happen now?
11217And when one is tired of exursions-- I suppose one is at perfect liberty to abandon them--?"
11217And when within the world of May that robins love one was finding a whole undiscovered country to explore?
11217And why did one worm go one way and in a lot of million years be a little boy and another worm go another way and just never be anything but a worm?
11217And why should we?"
11217And why this mad passion of mine for destruction?
11217And why--?
11217And why?
11217And why?
11217And with such an adorable shy little way?
11217And yet did the things the years had made one ever really abdicate?
11217And you ca n''t help that either, can you?
11217And your brother, Katie, have you told him?
11217And, Katie,_ is n''t_ there something else?
11217And, taking no thought for the morrow, is there any reason in the world why you should n''t go out now and have a beautiful drive?
11217And_ N''est- ce- pas_--well, Watts would say_ N''est- ce- pas_ meant''ai n''t it''?
11217Are n''t they a little too precious, too hardly won, too freighted with memories to be lightly cast aside?"
11217Are n''t you idealizing this forest service?
11217Are outlived things to push us apart?
11217Are we going to make no efforts to set ourselves free?
11217Are you listening?"
11217At last she asked:"And Wayne, which would you say I was?"
11217At least that''s what we''re told by our superiors, and are you the kind of young woman to question what you''re told by your superiors?
11217At luncheon Katie suddenly demanded:"Wayne, where do you get dangerous literature?"
11217At peace in the beauty of form, might Ann not find an inner beauty?
11217Because Ann could not dream her way to realities did it mean that Katie must fight her way to them?
11217Because Ann could not find joy was it to be that Katie could not have peace?
11217Believe in me enough to feel I will put through anything I begin?
11217But did that make the distances less vast?
11217But did you ever eat the eggs that were triumphantly announced by the darlingest bantam--?"
11217But do n''t you ever hear them, uncle?
11217But do you care much about plumbing when looking at"--her pause before it might have been one of reverence--"The Madonna of the Chair?"
11217But do you know what I think of the''game''you play?"
11217But have you really no notion of why she went away?"
11217But instead of alluding to them he asked abruptly:"How is she today?"
11217But is n''t it bigger than that thing of being members of the same family-- hurting each other''s feelings?
11217But it was not five minutes later she asked, with studied indifference:"Pray what does this absurd being look like?"
11217But just what were those things that mattered?
11217But may n''t desertion be a brave thing?
11217But one who suggested dreams of Tuscany when taking observations on the use of the salad fork-- was there not hope unbounded for such a one?
11217But she came back to him to say, and this with the oddest smile of all,"Would n''t it be a queer sensation for us?
11217But what good are they?
11217But why should it be"too much"for the daughter of a minister to hear anything about God?
11217But you were the beginning, were n''t you?"
11217But you''re leaving the army, are n''t you?
11217But, Katie, if you get_ very_ tired waiting for it-- don''t you believe you might take it-- most any way it came?"
11217But, dear Katie-- the old things?
11217But-- go home to what?
11217CHAPTER III"Kate,"demanded Captain Jones,"what''s that noise?"
11217Ca n''t they?"
11217Ca n''t we always just leave it unsaid?
11217Ca n''t you see what a curse it is to mix times that way?"
11217Ca n''t you tell me all about it?"
11217Call to a country where the things which bind you could bind no more?
11217Call to her?
11217Can it?
11217Clever?
11217Could Ann keep within hailing distance of one''s imagination?
11217Could it be--?
11217Could you bring yourself to stay just long enough to see that I am not trying to do you good?
11217Could you get word for him to come here-- here, to my house-- right away?
11217Could you go in a boat?"
11217Could you send for your cousin''s wife to help us, Nora?"
11217Did Ann have it in her to live up to the things one wished to believe about her?
11217Did he have it in him remotely, unavowedly, to suspect?
11217Did it also mean an impossible one?
11217Did it know it was going to do it?
11217Did it perhaps love to take them in, knowing that upon the sands of this once upon a time the other could keep no foothold?
11217Did knowing-- seeing-- spoil hating?
11217Did life thwarted in one place take it out in another?
11217Did n''t I think that might be nice?
11217Did n''t I?"
11217Did n''t Katie agree that a girl who could make her own way distanced the girls who could do nothing but spend their fathers''money?
11217Did n''t it ever occur to you that God had more to do with your Something Somewhere than He did with things done in His name in Centralia?"
11217Did n''t she love you-- and help?"
11217Did n''t she want poor Ann to have a good time-- and feel at home-- and be admired?
11217Did n''t you know what Katie must suffer in your leaving like that?"
11217Did people lose the power to hold themselves in the one that made you_ you_?
11217Did she belong to anybody?
11217Did she care for her when she was somber and shy, and resent her when happy and confident?
11217Did she think he had any chance?
11217Did she think in another hundred million years that little bird up there would be something else?
11217Did she think those little ants knew that they were alive?
11217Did_ chairs_ count?
11217Did_ he_ think she was not there?
11217Do I know her?"
11217Do n''t you know we all can be fine and free until it comes up against_ our_ lives?"
11217Do n''t you know, Aunt Kate-- the man that mends the boats?"
11217Do n''t you love me''t all any more, Aunt Kate?"
11217Do n''t you see how that must appeal to the sense of humor of the one about to go down?"
11217Do n''t you see, even Zelda thinks it stunty?"
11217Do n''t you think, Katie, it would be fun to look in on the dance up here at the club house?"
11217Do you ever have a picture of our venturing together into the unknown ways-- daring-- suffering-- rejoicing--_growing_?
11217Do you really get_ at_ her, Katie?"
11217Do you suppose Miss Ann knows, Aunt Kate, that she used to be a frog?"
11217Do you suppose it will ever be any different?"
11217Do you suppose, Aunt Kate, we''ll ever know as much as Watts?"
11217Do you think Mike and Pat are pretty names, Aunt Kate?"
11217Do you think you could bear it with Christian fortitude if I were to tell you I''m beginning now to try and figure out what I was smiling at?"
11217Do you understand anything except things that nobody else wants to understand?
11217Does n''t he mean to come over?"
11217Does n''t it make you think of those sturdy forefathers of yours who came to it long ago, when it was an unknown land, and braved dangers for it?
11217Does she care for golf?"
11217Does that mean it must kill for us what we have said is the biggest emotion-- experience-- the greatest joy and brightest hope life has brought us?
11217Does the absurdity of it never strike them?"
11217Even their vocabularies ca n''t disguise them, and if that can''t-- what could?
11217For heaven''s sake, what did you mean?"
11217For what?
11217From what other world?--and why?
11217From whence?
11217Funny?
11217Get right into the inner things that are the matter and bring peace and good will and loving kindness everywhere?"
11217Going for a drive does n''t commit one to any philosophy of life, or line of action, does it?
11217Had Ann''s yearning for love been the breath blowing to flame Katie''s yearning for understanding?
11217Had Katie ever heard her say anything about him?
11217Had Katie ever seen any one so beautiful?
11217Had Katie ever seen such eyes?
11217Had it killed it in her?
11217Handy, ai n''t it?"
11217Has Ann another name?
11217Has she gone for a walk?"
11217Have so much?
11217Have you no soul?"
11217Have you thought of that?
11217He did not know the voice, it was too faint, too far- away, but a suggestion in it made his own voice and hand unsteady as he said:"Yes?
11217He had halted beside them and Katie was saying, with her usual cool gaiety:"You care for this day, too, do you?
11217He looked at her meditatively, and then asked, humorously but gently:"Well Katie, what were you expecting me to do?
11217He looked at his niece and smiled as he asked:"Katie dear, are you becoming world weary?"
11217He said to her at the last, with that direct boyish smile it seemed could not frighten even a startled bird:"You think you are going to like it here?"
11217He took a step backward for the weighty, crushing:"Well, you''ve seen the_ horses_, have n''t you?"
11217He walked right into it with the never- failing"Why?"
11217He yearns for a christening?"
11217Hear whom moaning and sobbing?"
11217Here in a place like this-- what do you know about it?
11217His silence led Katie to gasp:"Wayne, are you becoming-- anti- militarist?"
11217How about the case of Miss Katherine Wayneworth Jones?
11217How can I be a half- breed if I''m a thoroughbred?"
11217How can I tell whether I would or not?
11217How can you expect me to stick to a subject when paths open out on all sides of you like that?
11217How charming your host was?
11217How could one combat with words, or in action, that rooted so much deeper than mere words or action?
11217How could she be resting in an hour which had just been tacked on to her life?
11217How could she help it?
11217How could she hope to go laughing through a world which sobbed?
11217How could she outrage the army as long as Wayne had done so?
11217How dare you-- standing for the You of the world-- dampen the splendid ardor of my hate?"
11217How did it happen that things you made up were things I had dreamed about without really knowing what I was dreaming?
11217How did she get there?
11217How did she go?
11217How did you come to know her?
11217How do you need her?"
11217How get out of the sand?
11217How many people would create for themselves the background it was assumed they belonged in just because they had been put in it?
11217How might Ann''s soul not flower when she at last saw God as a God of beauty?
11217How much of life''s ground all unknown to her had these poor little slippers trodden?
11217How turn from life when she saw life suffering?
11217How_ do_ you know?
11217I did n''t say what kind, did I?"
11217I do n''t care if you do, only if you tell him anything, wo n''t you try and make him understand everything?
11217I do n''t make the crazed crowds, do I?"
11217I had my suspicions, and that night I asked,''Uncle, did you preach the sermon you meant to preach this morning?''
11217I hope she is fond of the water?"
11217I presume I go on record as the worst sort of bounder in asking if you really care greatly about living there?"
11217I take it, however, that she was one of those''excursions''into the great outer world?"
11217I thought-- oh you''ll find her for me-- won''t you?
11217I trust it was satisfactory?"
11217I was so upset about them champagne glasses--""Well, where is it?
11217I wonder if I may ask one thing more?
11217I wonder if you would do this?
11217I wonder if you''re prepared to go where it may lead you?
11217I wonder-- why?"
11217I wonder-- would you be willing to come up to my room with me-- help make a cup of tea for us and-- stay with me a little while?"
11217I''m going to try sleeping in there-- isn''t insomnia a fearful thing?
11217I--"She paused, coloring slightly as she said with a little laugh:"We all like to be liked, do n''t we, Katie?
11217If I thought that-- You do n''t think, do you, Katie, that that was what he was trying to work you for?"
11217If even they were to be gently grouped with the wicked as more to be pitied than hated, then whom would one hate?
11217If he were to come there--?
11217If he were to kiss her in the way he hungered to kiss her would it wake nothing more than that sick terror in her wonderful eyes?
11217If he''s charming to them-- to you-- what do you suppose he seemed to me as he stood there smiling at me-- looking so sorry for me--?
11217If it ever seems I can be of any use-- in any way-- will you come where you know you can find me?"
11217If making a place for you here is going to make one for me there-- on the inside, I mean-- you''re not going to refuse to take me in, are you?"
11217If she had had a chance, when things were going badly, to sit in such a chair and rest, might the river have seemed a less desirable place?
11217If so,"--he went boldly to the edge of it, then halted, and concluded with a boyishly bashful humor--"will you keep my application on file?"
11217If you ca n''t offer a safe place, why rescue at all?
11217If you''re going to pity me, why do n''t you do it sincerely instead of scoffingly?
11217In the letter she received that night he wrote:"Katie, is it going to spoil it for us?
11217Is he a spiritual or an economic guide?"
11217Is it my fault that I do n''t know anything about life?
11217Is it so strange I_ loathed_ the Bible?
11217Is n''t it only square to give me a chance to demonstrate the honor of my worthlessness?"
11217Is n''t it queer how we do-- know without knowing?
11217Is n''t it rather-- oh, unthrifty, to let pasts and futures spoil presents?
11217Is n''t she-- moored any place?"
11217Is n''t there a popular notion that our pasts have something to do with our futures?"
11217Is she pretty?
11217Is something wrong?"
11217Is that prohibitive?"
11217It forced him to an unwilling, uneasy:"What more could a girl want?"
11217It gives me a sort of--''Oh I am on to you, uncle old boy''feeling that is most--""Disconcerting?"
11217It lets_ us_ out so beautifully, does n''t it?"
11217It seemed indeed that this life was in her hands-- for was it not her hands had kept it a life?
11217It was only-- what shall I say-- would there be such a thing as usurping beauty?
11217It was that gnawed at the heart of it.... How go to bed that night without knowing that Ann had a bed?
11217It was the suggestion in the motto led her to ask:"Tell me, have you really no idea, have you never had so much as a suspicion of why Ann went away?"
11217It would be droll, would n''t it, to have some one on a far hill call--''But why do n''t you come over here?''
11217It''s been a fine sleep, has n''t it?
11217It''s hard not to squeeze''em though, ai n''t it?"
11217Just drop me a hint sometime when you are not going to be at home, will you?
11217Just how bad is it, anyhow?"
11217Just one long thing of trying and failing?
11217Just what brand of boredom are you planning to inflict?"
11217Just what did it make Katie think of?
11217Just what is it she means to you?"
11217Just what is it the army does?"
11217Just what were her plans?
11217Katie knew her?
11217Katie, what is it?
11217Less to be desired?
11217Lord, do n''t they have it easy though?"
11217Loving a thing because you do n''t know it is n''t a very high way of loving it, is it?
11217Loving you-- laughing, splendid you-- how can I?
11217Mann?
11217Masculine dotes on discovering feminine-- but have you ever noticed what the rest of the feminine dote on doing to that discovery?
11217May I tell you what it is I want to do?"
11217Might it not be that some of the most genuine Florentines had never been to Florence?
11217Might it not be--?
11217Might not Ann be her gun?
11217Might not Mrs. Prescott find the reality in the possibilities?
11217More fires?
11217Motives are slippery things, do n''t you think so?
11217Moved by an impulse half serious, half mischievous she asked:"You would say then, Wayne, that Ann seems to you more of a lady than Zelda Fraser?"
11217Need I add that it means''why''?
11217No ties?
11217None of the rest of us seem to be inquiring into our sources of revenue, so why should you?"
11217Not the words but the sob behind them moved him to ask gently:"Katie dear, what is it?
11217Nothing is to be gained-- But for God''s sake, Katie, what is she doing here?
11217Now did he perhaps hold back in timidity from that world of the trivial things?
11217Now how can I throw it away?"
11217Now how did I start?
11217Now what do you think of that?
11217Now what in the world had he meant by that?
11217Now when you ask her if she likes Benedictine, do n''t be at all surprised to have her dreamily murmur:''But why should oranges always be yellow?''"
11217Now will you telephone Prescott, or shall I?
11217Of all the unheard of-- outrageous-- unpardonable-- What did you_ mean_"--turning savagely upon her--"by selling false hair?"
11217Of course there are sometimes a few little things--""Why did you enter the army, Watts?"
11217Of course there must have been lots of other fellows in love with her-- a girl like that-- but had she cared for any of them?
11217Oh Katie-- how did you know?
11217Oh yes-- he was in Cuba, was n''t he?"
11217One''s own kind and the other kind just one kind, after all?
11217Or do you like him-- just because you like him?"
11217Or rather I meet you down town?
11217Order her out of the house?"
11217Out of sympathy with the army?"
11217Perhaps it did make her think of hard things, but was that any reason for failing in the things that made all this possible?
11217Perhaps the heat was enervating, but was that sufficient reason for embarrassing one''s hostess?
11217Perhaps you know that she came on the Island from the south bridge?"
11217Question is-- not what did you do yesterday-- but what good are you to- day-- what are you worth to- morrow?
11217Rangers?
11217Reach all the aches and fill all the empty places?
11217Really?
11217Resistance made her face the more stern as she went on:"Do you think I''m going to impose on you-- just because you know so little?
11217Rough, steep roads, perhaps?"
11217Run after her?
11217Saved her by making her save you?"
11217See how it works-- not altogether for the good of the works, you see?
11217Shall I ask him again?"
11217Shall I call some one?"
11217Shall I see if we can get Watts?"
11217Shall I tell you what life is like?"
11217She ca n''t reach far enough to count, so why make herself unhappy?"
11217She is lovely, is n''t she?"
11217She rides?"
11217She sought refuge in a frigid:"I beg pardon?"
11217She turned around to ask oddly:"Why, Wayne, why all this heat?
11217She was silent, then asked:"Why?"
11217She will be with you for the summer?"
11217Should a man walking on a tight- rope yield to every playful little desire to chase butterflies?"
11217Smiling, but eyes speaking for the depth of the meaning, she said:"I''d rather be only half in the sunshine than be--""Be what, Katie?"
11217So it''s the man that mends the boats says these hateful things about me, is it?"
11217So low?
11217So of course"--with his little shrug Katie loved--"what''s my having a month on my hands?"
11217So you''re going to be very festive in this house to- night?"
11217So you''re not going away leaving it in any such distressing state, are you?"
11217So-- what''s that nervous word?
11217Something moved her to ask:"Wayne, do you think you would have done it, if it had not been for Ann?"
11217Sometimes they heard her stir; as one day soon after Ann''s coming Katie had said:"Ann, just what is it is the matter with your vocal chords?"
11217Starting in at your age-- with your training-- to''work from the bottom up''--is that it?"
11217Startled, peculiarly gratified, impishly delighted, she yet replied lightly:"A lady, is she?
11217Sympathetic?
11217Taken it?
11217That call?
11217That fellow-- what''s his name?
11217That one was indeed bound hand and foot and brain and heart and spirit?
11217That thing of really''helping''some one?"
11217That thing that makes us keep on even when our Something Somewhere wo n''t have anything to do with us?"
11217The good time you had?--how gay it was?
11217The man who mended the boats knowing about Ann?
11217The things that are n''t nice about him are n''t his fault, Worthie, so we must n''t be hard on him for them, must we?
11217The two different worlds had sent Ann away; was it, in a way she was unable to cope with, likewise to send him away?
11217Then how could one step from that place without leaving a conspicuous looking vacancy?
11217Then in the distance she heard a mocking voice insinuatingly inquiring:"But why not, if it''s all one world?"
11217Then the once upon a time of the sandpile did not shut them out-- they who had known another once upon a time?
11217Then what?
11217Then what?
11217Then why should it be mine now-- any more than yours?"
11217Then why this air of discovery?"
11217Then wo n''t you take me in?
11217Then, desperately resolved to break through, she asked boldly:"Am I keeping you from anything important?"
11217Then-- what to do?
11217There''s more to wonder about than there is to think about, do n''t you think so, Aunt Kate?"
11217Things fought for, tested, mellowed by our fathers and mothers, and their fathers and mothers?
11217Things was as they_ was_, held Watts, and how could anybody but a fool expect them to be any way but the way they_ was_?
11217Think of them, not in the old grooves, but just as it comes in to you as the story of a life?
11217Those beautiful_ old_ things which the generations have left us?
11217Though could she?
11217Though pray why should one wish to be anything so terrifying as indispensable?"
11217Though visioning be child of desiring-- was the vision less splendid, and was not the desire ennobled?
11217Though what''s the good working a morning like this?
11217To be followed with:"Important?
11217To desert a thing we''ve gone beyond-- to have the courage to desert it and walk right off from the dead thing to the live thing--?
11217To do less and get more is not what you''d call a spiritual aspiration, is it?"
11217To have vague association with the mysterious things of life, and yet not to have"made a mess of things"--what more could one ask?
11217To my uncle''s?
11217To whom?"
11217Was Watts the real philosopher when he said"things was as they was"?
11217Was he happy, or had the unhappiness of his marriage gone too deep?
11217Was he meaning to deliver that lecture on the army?
11217Was he young or old?
11217Was he-- a wizard?
11217Was he-- would she say he was one to be kind of easy on a fellow, or did she think he took his religion pretty hard?
11217Was it because she could not get things together it seemed to her she must make them all stop?
11217Was it because the girl of the years was too worn for assertiveness that the girl of fancy could seem the all?
11217Was it irritating to have people for whom hot days were but hot days call heat distressing?
11217Was it often like that?--that the things created for the fun and the joy found the paths of tragedy?
11217Was it only that she slumbered-- and sometimes stirred a little in her sleep?--And when_ she_ awoke?
11217Was it something of that same force which bounded boisterously up in boy and dogs which was stealing over Ann-- softening, healing, claiming?
11217Was it the day you took her in?
11217Was it true-- as the man who mended the boats would hold-- that the one made the other possible-- only to be excluded from it?
11217Was it_ gone_?
11217Was n''t he quite given to falling in love with pretty girls?
11217Was n''t that funny?"
11217Was she a school friend?
11217Was she capable of taking unto herself the past and temperament with which one would graciously endow her?
11217Was she heading for a general?
11217Was some one looking for Ann?
11217Was that it?
11217Was that what came of violating the canons?
11217Was that why he could be moved to no sense of responsibility about stray dogs?
11217Was that why he was a good man for the service and had no ambitions as civilian?
11217Was that, too, something that would have hurt them?
11217Was the hurt to one''s friends the punishment one got for it?
11217Was the whole world losing its mind just because it had been such a hot day?
11217Was there any other fellow?
11217We know''em-- don''t we, old Queen?"
11217We may come to the garden party?"
11217We who have come so close?
11217We''re all in the grip of dead things, are n''t we?
11217Well, what of him?
11217Were the things which"mattered"forging a religion of their own?
11217Were you ever in a little town in Indiana?"
11217What about Miss Forrest?
11217What are you doing it for?"
11217What are your puny little problems of the church compared with people''s lives?
11217What boats does he mend, Aunt Kate wanted to know, and what business has he landing them on our Island?
11217What can I do about it?"
11217What can you know of the real sorrows and hardships of life?"
11217What chance did I ever have to know anything real?
11217What could be farther from serving one''s own day than rendering to it the dead forms of what had been the real service to a day gone by?
11217What could do that?
11217What did it matter whether the universe was wonderful or not if the wonderful thing in one''s own heart was to be denied life?
11217What did she mean?
11217What did that matter, the wise gardener would scornfully demand, when there were growing things underneath pushing their way to the light?
11217What did you do?"
11217What did you say her name was?"
11217What did you want?"
11217What do I know about you?"
11217What do you know about_ me_?"
11217What do you know?
11217What do you mean by leaving her all alone?"
11217What do you think, Katie?
11217What does this all mean?"
11217What good thing can come of hate?"
11217What had become of that girl?
11217What had happened?
11217What had she been through?
11217What had she done save prove that she could do nothing?
11217What have you done?
11217What have you to_ gain_ by it?"
11217What in the world did she mean by saying she''d like to be a deserter herself?
11217What is it they call them?
11217What is it, Katie?
11217What is it?
11217What is it?"
11217What is the world coming to?
11217What is this all about?
11217What more can we ask?"
11217What of that union?
11217What other method is there?"
11217What right had you to assume I''d do this?"
11217What was it had closed the door and shut in those things that were killing Ann?
11217What was that thing less fleeting than fancy, more imperative than sympathy, made Ann mean more than things which had all her life meant most?
11217What was there left for her?
11217What was there to talk about so important as talking of nothing?
11217What were those things that had filled up and choked Ann''s poor soul?
11217What will you_ have_?"
11217What would be the use?
11217What would you think of our trying to do that?"
11217What''s the good living in a dangerous age if you do n''t get hold of any of the danger?
11217What''s the trouble?"
11217What''s the use making a gun at all if it is n''t going to kill folks?"
11217What''s the use?
11217What?"
11217What_ did he mean?"
11217What_ shall_ I do?"
11217What_ was_ a hot day-- save a hot day?
11217When did she go?"
11217When did she say, dear,"she pleaded,"that she would be back?"
11217Where did you meet him?
11217Where did_ you_ know her?"
11217Where had she come from?
11217Where was she all this time?
11217Where would he take it?"
11217Where would you know each other?
11217Where''s Ann gone?"
11217Where?
11217Where?
11217Where_ had_ Ann come from?
11217Whether either the hard blighting religion of Ann''s father, or the aesthetic comfortable religion of her uncle"mattered"much to them?
11217Who is it, please?"
11217Who was Ann?
11217Who would get the nice corners it had been taken for granted certain people should have just because they had been fixed up for them in advance?
11217Who?--Why?"
11217Why are n''t you?"
11217Why ca n''t you do the same thing with educators?
11217Why could they not reach then?
11217Why did you come home?
11217Why do n''t you adopt it for your favorite, too?
11217Why do n''t you assert your right?"
11217Why do n''t you give them jobs?"
11217Why do n''t you go and see?
11217Why does it make you want to grin?"
11217Why does one go anywhere?
11217Why had Ann been dressed that way?
11217Why had she done it?
11217Why had she not had the courage to press it?
11217Why had she wanted to kill herself?
11217Why how under the sun,"she asked, laughing wildly,"did you ever meet Major Darrett?"
11217Why not let people_ be_ what they were?
11217Why not let them be themselves, instead of what one thought they would be from what one knew of their lives?
11217Why not ride with me instead?
11217Why not spend next season in Washington with him?
11217Why should I stop her?
11217Why should you have to stay here-- if you do n''t want to?
11217Why this haughty aloofness?
11217Why was I born like that?"
11217Why was it given the Anns-- and not the Vernas?
11217Why were you born with your brain cells screwed into question marks?--and_ why_ do I have to go through life getting them unscrewed?"
11217Why what do you think I''m made of?
11217Why would it be so much worse for Captain Prescott to marry Ann than it would be for Ann to marry Captain Prescott?
11217Why would n''t I want you?
11217Why''s that your affair?"
11217Why, why not?
11217Why-- why, Wayne?
11217Will it do any good for me to get in the crowd?
11217Will it go away?
11217Will it make you thrill?"
11217Will you do that?
11217With the emotion of the world surging in and out like that how could any one claim to have a solution for the whole question of living?
11217Wo n''t you run along and play?"
11217Wo n''t you tell me where I can find her?
11217Wo n''t you trust me enough to know that you will not be asked to do anything that would be too hard?
11217Women can even look at wondrous soft brown eyes and lovely tender mouths through those''Who was your father?''
11217Would Katie tell him of her life and her people?
11217Would Katie tell him something about her?
11217Would he go so far as to say the first use for the rifles--?
11217Would n''t it be better to forget?"
11217Would n''t you rather do without the gun and know that nobody was going hungry?"
11217Would she be ranked out of quarters?
11217Would she ever know?
11217Would she hear from_ her_ again?
11217Would there be things in the paper about her?
11217Would they ever be anything else?
11217Would you call that a very intelligent gang of kids?
11217Would_ they_ be anything else?
11217You care a little something for Katie, do n''t you, Ann?"
11217You do n''t think, do you, that he was trying to get you for his''army girl''--or some such rot?
11217You hear what I say?
11217You know anything about it, Katie?"
11217You say Ann went in the machine?"
11217You see one who had never been in the crowd would say--''Why do n''t you get out?''
11217You see what I mean?
11217You see?
11217You sent for me?"
11217You were n''t sick at all-- were you, Katie?
11217You''ll come?
11217You''ll come?"
11217You''re of the bound, too, are n''t you?
11217You''re waiting for a car?
11217You''ve demanded nothing?"
11217You-- the devoted daughter you always were-- not able to''help''hurting your mother?"
11217You_ will_ find her-- won''t you?"
11217You_?"
11217_ Does_ it make a difference?"
11217_ How_ did a worm become something that was n''t a worm?
11217_ Need_ it?
11217_ Were_ the big and the little things so close?
11217and why thither?
11217he murmured,"what is it?"
11217she burst forth, no longer able to hold back,"as you stand sometimes at the altar do n''t you hear them moaning and sobbing down underneath?"