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
20471All joking aside, what brought you here so early?
20471Are you going to New York to see Miriam married, dear?
20471Are you sure you would rather not go alone?
20471At last the mystery of''Where lies honeymoon land?'' 20471 BELOVED LOYALHEART:"Can you, your father and mother come to New York City at once?
20471But Jean, have you any idea of what might have happened to Tom?
20471But how long have you been in Oakdale and who told you about Tom?
20471But what about your work?
20471But when did you arrive, Emma?
20471But when the last good- bye has been said, wo n''t you please all of you see us as far as the gate?
20471But you guessed it, did n''t you, Miriam?
20471Ca n''t some one else adjust matters satisfactorily?
20471Ca n''t you manage between the two of you to do something to that door? 20471 Can she tell the past?"
20471Can you get away from the paper at any time during August?
20471Did Grace tell you that a New York newspaper had published an account of it?
20471Did Grace tell you? 20471 Did you really lacerate your itty bitty finger?
20471Do n''t you remember that morning you came to Wayne Hall for breakfast and asked anxiously if there would be waffles?
20471Do n''t you remember, that was one of the first pieces Reddy learned to play on the mandolin? 20471 Do n''t you think so, Mrs. Nesbit?
20471Do n''t you understand yet why we came out here? 20471 Do you mean, Jean, that you think this fellow is the one you were telling me of?"
20471Do you think it would be disloyal in me to leave Oakdale now, even for a day? 20471 Glad?"
20471Grace, have you any idea who furnished the copy for this?
20471Grace,Arline lifted solemn blue eyes,"have you ever for one minute been sorry that you gave up your work for-- for-- the sake of-- love?"
20471Have we a heavy mail this morning, Mother?
20471Having once admired me, can you refuse my humble request?
20471How did you ever happen to come across this, Jean?
20471How did you know my pet weakness?
20471I do n''t care what he thinks about_ me_, but what will he think about_ you_?
20471I do n''t look much like myself, do I?
20471I wonder what the postman has brought us this morning?
20471I wonder:''Is it I who write to thee, or thou to me?''
20471Is n''t it a lovely evening, David? 20471 Is n''t there a window in the cabin?
20471Is that a threat?
20471Jean, honestly, do you think we''ll ever find the boy?
20471May I sit by you, Anne? 20471 Oh, M''sieu''Tom,"Jean''s own voice overran with emotion,"is it of a truth that we hav''fin''you at las''?"
20471That reminds me,broke in Elfreda, in business- like tones,"where are we going to hold the reunion this year and at what time?
20471Then why did you do it?
20471Then you wrote to me at the same time and confused the two letters? 20471 Then you_ do_ know something about it?
20471We did n''t decide where, did we?
20471Well, Gracious, how is everything?
20471Were you thinking of that, too?
20471What about the Elfreda Briggs who proved herself the most loyal friend and roommate one could ever hope to have?
20471What did I tell you?
20471What grudge could you possibly have against a man you had never even met?
20471What is life without Emma Dean?
20471What is the matter, Daffydowndilly?
20471What is the matter, Grace?
20471What''s the matter with that taxicab, I wonder?
20471What''s the meaning of this onslaught? 20471 What''s the use in taking turns?"
20471What''s the use in writing home now?
20471What?
20471When can you start north, Jean?
20471When must you go, Tom?
20471Where did you find her, Elfreda? 20471 Where on earth did J. Elfreda manage to find her?"
20471Where, oh, where did you come from?
20471Whither away, good prince?
20471Who gave out the news?
20471Who will be the first to consult Amarna, the Seeress of the Seven Veils?
20471Who would n''t be? 20471 Why ca n''t you come here?"
20471Why did we never think of Jean before?
20471Why lug a mandolin along if no one intends to sing?
20471Why not, Hippy? 20471 Why not?"
20471Why not?
20471Why should I not announce that the momentous time is at hand?
20471Why, Hippy Wingate, what are you doing here so early?
20471Wo n''t you miss all that when winter comes and you cease to be Kathleen West?
20471Would you mind telling me about it?
20471You knew I loved this old place, did n''t you?
20471You noticed, then?
20471You were thinking of her?
20471You-- understand-- don''t-- you?
20471Am I a credit to my profession, or am I not?"
20471Are you there?"
20471As an almost- wed are you willing to sacrifice your reunion claim to Elfreda?"
20471But what?
20471But why remind us that fall is coming?"
20471By the way, are you very sleepy?"
20471CHAPTER II THE HOUSE BEHIND THE WORLD"How many letters for me, Bridget?"
20471CHAPTER IV"TO THINE OWN SELF BE TRUE""Well, Daffydowndilly, what is on your mind?"
20471CHAPTER V FLYING IN THE FACE OF SUPERSTITION"Oh, mother, is n''t it nice to be home again?"
20471CHAPTER VI THE SHADOW"But why must_ you_ go, Tom?"
20471CHAPTER VII THE VEILED PROPHETESS OF DESTINY"But is Emma really coming, Elfreda?"
20471CHAPTER X THE SHADOW DEEPENS"Oh, Fairy Godmother, what does it mean?"
20471CHAPTER XXII OUT OF THE VALLEY"Did you hear that, Jean?"
20471Ca n''t you climb out of it?"
20471Can she really tell fortunes?"
20471Could Elfreda''s prophesy of good fortune have been thus so quickly fulfilled?
20471David''s stentorian tones asking,"Are you all right, Jean?"
20471Did I dream it, Nora, or did I see you lay your work bag on the hall settee?
20471Did n''t you know it?"
20471Did n''t you know that?"
20471Did you get my wire?"
20471Did you know that Miss Briggs remembered you from hearsay and was the first one to suggest that you would be the very person to hunt for Tom?"
20471Did you take a sleeper here?"
20471Do I get the job?"
20471Do n''t you see, Tom?
20471Do you give me leave to do the reversing act?"
20471Do you think I would invite a royal princess to enter her castle if it were n''t really her very own?"
20471Does he know my surname and where I live?"
20471For the sake of your anxious and bewildered Fairy Godmother, will you come to me as soon as possible, if you have not heard from him?
20471Forde?"
20471Had she boasted of her happiness only to see it snatched rudely from her life?
20471Harlowe?"
20471Have you any idea where we are?"
20471Have you ever been up here before?"
20471Have you noticed it?"
20471How about you, Arline?
20471How did you find her out, Julia?"
20471How in the world did you ever manage to get the key to it?"
20471I ask you as man to man-- why this thusness?
20471I don''t----""About Tom?"
20471I suppose the momentous question of''Where shall we reunite?''
20471If he''s still in Oakdale, why do n''t you ask him to go and look for Tom?"
20471Is Grace here?"
20471Is it a go?"
20471Is n''t it queer, though, how things like that are often the means by which we begin the staunchest friendships?"
20471Is n''t that a glorious message?
20471Is n''t that sweet in him?
20471Is your rifle outside, Jean?
20471It made him lose his way, then----Who knows what happened then?"
20471It seems a long while since then, does n''t it, Grace?"
20471Not far?
20471Now do n''t you?"
20471Now that you know my opinion of you, will you kindly leave us?
20471Now, which of us is a know- nothing?
20471Of course you received it?"
20471Should she or should she not write to Tom?
20471Suppose Tom were never to return?
20471Suppose even the knowledge of his fate were to be denied her?
20471Suppose it were an omen?
20471The Range and Grange Hustlers By FRANK GEE PATCHIN Have you any idea of the excitements, the glories of life on great ranches in the West?
20471The last time I left him to his own folly, he decorated the dining- room with all sorts of absurd signs--''What is home without the Irish?''
20471The table looks sweet, does n''t it?"
20471Then to Tom:"Hav''you not then the axe, to chop him into splinter''?
20471Then----""Did some one in Oakdale tell you Tom was missing?"
20471Tom''s first words after greeting David were:"Tell me quickly, how are Grace and Aunt Rose?"
20471Was it possible that Miriam, her little girl of yesterday, had actually stepped out on the highway of married life?
20471Was the telegraphic communication he bore for her?
20471We can continue our session in the morning, ca n''t we, Fairy Godmother?"
20471We would n''t want to make her guess that, would we?"
20471What am I to do, Grace?
20471What does your father think of it?"
20471When is it to be?"
20471Where was he going?
20471Who in the world wrote that?"
20471Who is the man Mrs. Gray has engaged to clear up the mystery?"
20471Why ca n''t you come down to Wildwood again?
20471Why had this dreadful uncertainty intruded itself into the very heart of her Golden Summer?
20471Will you go to her and explain even more fully?
20471Will you please sign for it?"
20471With trembling fingers she tore open the envelope and read:"DEAR GRACE:"Have you heard from Tom?
20471Wo n''t I, Jean?"
20471Would you mind sorting the mail?
20471You are satisfy?"
20471You are satisfy?"
20471You can walk a little, M''sieu''Tom?
20471You do n''t mind if I tell Mother and Father?
20471You do n''t suppose anything has happened to her, do you, Elfreda?"
5770''Wot am I to do when I gits dar? 5770 A monkey?
5770Ai n''t you no Indian?
5770All asleep, eh? 5770 All of you, eh?"
5770All ready?
5770All right, but how is a fellow to get the cream if he loses?
5770Am I dreamin'', or am I back to Putnam Hall again?
5770Am I not right, Uncle Randolph?
5770An''who was de black- hearted rascal?
5770An''yo''--whar yo''dun come from?
5770And King Susko has kept you a prisoner all this while?
5770And did you find any trace of Dick and my uncle?
5770And how are we going to get there?
5770And how is your mother?
5770And if he was, who was he?
5770And if you and Anderson are both dead to me, what will I do?
5770And is the sailor, Converse, safe?
5770And is the second letter from father?
5770And she never mentioned the man at any other time?
5770And slim?
5770And that is all?
5770And the ship left you here?
5770And then he went down the back stairs?
5770And this is one of your nephews?
5770And what brought you here?
5770And what brought you here?
5770And what brought you out here-- going on a hunt for your father?
5770And what do you demand?
5770And what do you say, Sam?
5770And what do you think?
5770And what is in it?
5770And what is that?
5770And what is the kolobo?
5770And what is this news of my father?
5770And who was it?
5770And why did n''t they slay the poisoner?
5770And why not?
5770And why not?
5770And will you, too, see me humiliated?
5770And you can not imagine who it was?
5770And zay do carry zare money wid zem?
5770Anderson Rover?
5770Are those your friends?
5770Are you a prisoner, too?
5770Are you going up the Congo?
5770Are you much hurt, Tom?
5770Are you the Dick who just answered me?
5770Are zay verra rich people?
5770Be you fellers from Pornell school?
5770Been here many years?
5770Boys, what is the row up here?
5770But Cujo--?
5770But I''d give a good deal to face de cap''n-- jest to see wot he would say, eh?
5770But the question is, now we have tracked the rascals, what is to be done next?
5770But what can be wrong, my lad?
5770But what can you tell?
5770But what does this mean?
5770But when is this kite- flying contest to come off?
5770But who really discovered the country, Uncle Randolph?
5770But would the authorities allow, them to go there?
5770But you are willing to fight the Indians, are you not?
5770But you haf von big lettair of credit, not so?
5770But you will help me, wo n''t you, Rand?
5770But, oh, Aleck, what does it all mean?
5770By the way, do you know where Mumps is now? 5770 Ca n''t I cut the line with this?"
5770Ca n''t we capture him without making a noise?
5770Ca n''t you even walk?
5770Ca n''t you imagine?
5770Can it be possible that he is mixed up in this affair?
5770Can it be that father is on his way home?
5770Can that be the mountain father was searching for when he came to Africa?
5770Can wot be possible, lad?
5770Can ye git in the wagon alone?
5770Can you make out if it is Susko or not?
5770Chester-- Rand-- will you not aid me against this-- er-- savage young brute?
5770Cujo whar you dun t''ink da be gwine?
5770Dat cadet wot tried to be funny wid me an''I had to show him his place? 5770 Den vot you say you vos put somedings new py him, hey?"
5770Did Baxter put up this plot against us? 5770 Did he give his name?"
5770Did he hurt you much, Uncle Randolph?
5770Did he say anything about the trail he was going to take?
5770Did you ever hear of this King Susko?
5770Did you ever meet him? 5770 Did you follow me to Africa?"
5770Did you notice how he walked?
5770Did you see his face?
5770Did you ship on her after you left Putnam Hall in such a hurry? 5770 Did you?
5770Do I see aright, or is it only another of those wild dreams that have entered my brain lately?
5770Do n''t dare to talk that way, Rover; do n''t dare-- or-- I''ll-- I''ll--"What will you do?
5770Do n''t they believe in anything?
5770Do n''t you recognize him?
5770Do n''t you see that fellow in the boat?
5770Do you imagine I would be fool enough to do that, Mr. Crabtree? 5770 Do you know the man?"
5770Do you know why we are here?
5770Do you know why you were brought here?
5770Do you know, I heara dem talk about you?
5770Do you mean to say he got away from you?
5770Do you mean to say you are going to turn over a new leaf?
5770Do you object to the search?
5770Do you remember how he was dressed?
5770Do you see this?
5770Do you suspect anyt''ing, Massah Rober?
5770Do you think it is as bad as that?
5770Do you think we ought to care, Baxter?
5770Do you want to bring the captain down on us at the last minute?
5770Do? 5770 Does she ever mention Josiah Crabtree?"
5770Dot vos lots of fun to make me tance, vosn''t it? 5770 Exactly, Richard-- and-- er-- you-- who is with you?
5770From father?
5770Got afraid I''d come around, eh?
5770Got what?
5770Had a breakdown?
5770Had some trouble up thar, did n''t ye? 5770 Have the white men come at last?"
5770Have you any idea where this Niwili Camp is?
5770Have you seen or heard of him since?
5770He is, then, alive?
5770Him steal dat cattle,explained Cujo,"but him do n''t say dat stealin'', him say um-- um--""A tax on the people?"
5770Hold on, Sam, where are you going? 5770 How can I, with the ship tossing like a cork?
5770How could he be am here?
5770How do you like that?
5770How is business?
5770How mooch morlish you bring wid you from America?
5770How mooch?
5770How much?
5770How on earth did you get out here?
5770Hullo, Frank, what are, you running so fast about?
5770Hullo, what are you?
5770Hullo, who''s that?
5770Hullo, who''s this?
5770Hullo, wot''s the matter?
5770I believe you are hunting for the young man''s father?
5770I dink, Tom, you vos play no more such dricks, hey?
5770I do believe they look happy, do n''t you, Tom?
5770I do n''t believe in ghosts, do you, Cujo?
5770I do n''t know of any boats around here-- do you?
5770I think so myself, Dick; but still--"Why did n''t this man come straight to the house to tell us this?
5770I wonder how Mr. Blaze is making out?
5770I wonder how he drifted out here?
5770I wonder how the Baxters feel to be locked up?
5770I wonder if anything has happened to him?
5770I wonder if he''ll come back tonight?
5770I wonder if the country will ever be thoroughly civilized?
5770I wonder what has become of old Josiah Crabtree?
5770I wonder what he can mean?
5770I wonder what will happen to us this term? 5770 If You are Mr. Randolph Rover, are you not?"
5770In camp?
5770In this vicinity?
5770In what manner?
5770Indians?
5770Is dat yo'', Massah Dick?
5770Is he all right?
5770Is he really alive?
5770Is it bad?
5770Is it? 5770 It ton''t vos no goot?
5770It was a great pity he ever got under Dan Baxter''s influence I wonder how Arnold Baxter is getting along? 5770 Josiah Crabtree, you did n''t expect to see me here, did you?"
5770Josiah Crabtree?
5770Me fight der Indians? 5770 Me?
5770Mr. Dickerson, do you recognize any of those boys?
5770Of course all the boys who sleep in your dormitory were present?
5770Oh, Uncle Randolph, did you ever see anything like it?
5770Pop, is this your watch?
5770Richard Rover, is it-- ahem-- possible?
5770Sam, have you a good strong cord on your kite?
5770Samuel, was the party you saw in the hall- way tall and slim?
5770Say, can I sell you any of these old things of mine cheap?
5770Say, why ca n''t you take me with you?
5770See dem shinin''eyes back ob de leaves?
5770See, da is gwine up into a big hole in de side ob de mountain?
5770Sit on the stove? 5770 So they said I ought to be in jail, eh?
5770So you intend to work such a game?
5770So? 5770 Surely you do n''t think any of us was guilty?"
5770That is true, but how did this get here, Pop?
5770That letter? 5770 That''s certainly odd,"was Dick''s comment"Was it a man or a boy, Sam?"
5770The Congo is a pretty big stream, is n''t it?
5770The blame of what, Samuel?
5770This is how you repay our kindness, Baxter?
5770Two to one, eh? 5770 Vere is da?"
5770Vot for you vos blay me such a drick as dis, hey?
5770Vot is dem Indians doing here annavay?
5770Vot-- vot--?
5770Was it a man or a woman? 5770 Was that a tree went down?"
5770Was that the noise I heard last night?
5770Was this before I came up or after?
5770Well, Peleg, is he safe in jail?
5770Well, it amounts to the same thing, eh, Capitan Villaire?
5770Well, perhaps we''ll meet in the interior, who knows?
5770Well, why do n''t you have him searched?
5770Well, wo n''t you speak to him about it, Sam? 5770 Well?"
5770Went up the Congo four or five years ago-- maybe longer?
5770Were you cut adrift?
5770What alarmed you?
5770What boat was it?
5770What brought you here?
5770What brought you here?
5770What can that man or boy be up to?
5770What did we strike?
5770What discovery?
5770What do you make of this?
5770What do you mean?
5770What do you say I get the suit?
5770What does he want?
5770What has happened?
5770What is it, Dick?
5770What is it, Dick?
5770What is the row here?
5770What kind of a looking boy was it?
5770What of Sam and Tom?
5770What shall the wager be?
5770What then?
5770What wid dern Frenchmen? 5770 What''s that?"
5770What''s the row?
5770What''s up, Tom; do you feel worse?
5770What''s up?
5770What?
5770Where did you fellows come from?
5770Where in the world am I?
5770Where is the key, Pop?
5770Where shall we go this afternoon?
5770Where to?
5770Who brought it?
5770Who is that who speaks?
5770Who is there?
5770Who was present at the feast?
5770Who would send it to him?
5770Why did n''t the writer come to you, as I have done?
5770Why do n''t Captain Putnam hunt around them air pawnshops fer the watches?
5770Why not look among Pop''s effects?
5770Why, do n''t you know that we are here to learn how to fight Indians?
5770Why, what did you do with him?
5770Why, what would three boys do in the heart of Africa?
5770Why-- er-- where did you come from, Rover?
5770Will I stand? 5770 Will yo''do it, Massah Dick?"
5770Will you bring me back?
5770Will you come and have a talk with us?
5770Will you come with me?
5770Wo n''t we?
5770Wonder if he sees me?
5770Wot''s dat, sah?
5770Would you like some hot soup?
5770Would you recognize that boy again if you saw him?
5770You are certain za have ze monish?
5770You are sure of that?
5770You are zare friend, eh?
5770You did not come to Africa alone, did you?
5770You do n''t want me to speak to the students under your charge?
5770You have heard of the robberies that have been committed?
5770You leave zat in Boma, wid ze bankers, eh?
5770You lika do somet''ing wid me?
5770You mean that Indian rig?
5770You never heard one word of him?
5770You saw him go in and come out of one of the sleeping rooms?
5770You think the storm will be a heavy one?
5770You think za will pay?
5770You think, then, that he is in bad shape?
5770You were in a small boat attached to some steamer?
5770You were shanghaied as a sailor?
5770You wish to see me?
5770You wo n''t keep off?
5770You''ve had a hard time of it, I suppose? 5770 Your kindness?
5770An''what am yo''going to do in Africa?"
5770And that black, how is it he came along?"
5770And what is in that, Uncle Randolph?"
5770And what was the dream?"
5770And who are you?"
5770And who wrote it?"
5770And you say he got away from you?"
5770And you-- did you come in search of your missing father?"
5770Anybody I know?"
5770Are you one of that party of college students we have heard about?"
5770Are you-- going to keep off or not?
5770Baxter, have you no spirit of fairness at all in your composition?"
5770But I reckon you do n''t care about that?"
5770But I''ve made a big discovery-- at least, I feel pretty certain that I have?"
5770But if he is guilty how did that ruby stud and the watch come into Alexander Pop''s possession?"
5770But if you did not follow me why are you here?"
5770But what of your party?"
5770But you surely do n''t suspect him, do you?"
5770But-- but yo''do n''t go fo''to distrust me, do yo'', cap''n?"
5770By de way, whar is dis ship bound?"
5770CHAPTER VII WHO WAS GUILTY?
5770CHAPTER VIII IN WHICH ALEXANDER POP RUNS AWAY"Will you submit to having your trunk examined or not?"
5770Captain Villaire, have you had them searched?"
5770Dickerson?"
5770Did he eber dream ob talkin''to sumboddy in Chicago froo a telephone?
5770Did he expect to send a telegram to San Francisco in a couple ob minutes?
5770Did he knew anyt''ing about electric lights, or movin''pictures, or carriages wot ai nt got no bosses, but run wid gasoline or sumfing like dat?
5770Did n''t I refuse your offer, made just before you went away?"
5770Did yo''gran''fadder expect to ride at de rate ob sixty miles an hour?
5770Do n''t you remember how Arnold Baxter escaped from the hospital authorities last year?"
5770Do you imagine you can scare me in that fashion?
5770Do you know anything of him?"
5770Do you know him?"
5770Do you know what Dick said to me before he left for school?
5770Do you realize that you are absolutely in my power?
5770Do you think he-- fell into the lake?"
5770Does your father give my particulars?"
5770Hook?"
5770How do you like it?"
5770How is matters up to the school-- larnin''a heap?"
5770I suppose you''ll be satisfied if he keeps away from Dora and her mother in the future?"
5770If Cujo-- What''s that?"
5770May I ask where you come from?"
5770Now what had I best do with him?"
5770Or shall I read it for the benefit of all?"
5770See that eye?
5770Should they tell the captain of the strange figure Sam had seen in the hallway?
5770Shuah yo''is foolin'', Massah Dick?"
5770Supposing it had gone off and killed somebody?"
5770The other terms kept us mighty busy, did n''t they?"
5770The question is, what is your liberty worth to you?"
5770Vere you got dot bistol?"
5770Vot you means py dot?"
5770Vot''s dot?"
5770Was Crabtree serious?
5770Was this really the domineering Baxter, who had always insisted on having his own way, and who had done so many wrong deeds in the past?
5770What are you doing here?"
5770What brings you?"
5770What did they say?"
5770What do you intend to do with us?"
5770What should they do next?
5770What will that boy do in such a jungle, and among such fierce natives?
5770Where are you?"
5770Where are you?"
5770Where are you?"
5770Where will you go next?"
5770Who was the party?"
5770Why do n''t you try to turn over a new leaf?"
5770Why should I go there to a pawnshop?"
5770You do n''t think anybody will follow us?"
5770You hata zem?"
5770You say you saw a lion?"
5770You will not-- ahem-- say anything about the past to them, will you?"
5770repeated Dick slowly,"What makes you believe that he is guilty?"
5770what struck me?"
9856Afraid?
9856Ah, and where is Monsieur Dan?
9856Ah, yes,said the Marquis,"Mademoiselle Nancy, I have not the pleasure to see her this morning?"
9856All is as it used to be?
9856Already once to- night you have risked our lives by your fool- hardiness,--for the sake of this woman, eh? 9856 And Mademoiselle, she has not returned?"
9856And Nancy--?
9856And from Mademoiselle Nancy, I trust, also?
9856And if I have?
9856And now what the deuce are we going to do about it?
9856And that is?
9856And the treasure?
9856And they were large ships?
9856And to what mishap do you attribute Mademoiselle''s so unceremonious departure?
9856And we shall have the pleasure of seeing you again?
9856And what assurance then shall I have that the Marquis will be released?
9856And what is that, my friend?
9856And where is it that he has gone?
9856And who pray is your new boarder?
9856And yet?
9856And you ca n''t find her?
9856And you have n''t seen or heard from the Marquis again?
9856And you will not permit me even a word-- ever so little a word-- with my poor friend?
9856Are n''t we going to keep watch to- night?
9856Are n''t you ever?
9856Are we safe?
9856Are you cold, Nance?
9856Are-- do--?
9856But Nancy--?
9856But how?
9856But soon--?
9856But suppose, madame, that I can not agree to that?
9856But tell me, Nance, who is the Marquis-- what happened-- how did they get you away?
9856But tell me,asked Tom,"What did you find in the cabinet?"
9856But what have you to complain of, Nancy? 9856 But what would you have me do?"
9856But what''s this?
9856But who could have designs upon Nancy? 9856 But who?"
9856But why not? 9856 But why, madame, did he not take my mother into his confidence?"
9856But why--?
9856But you have heard from him?
9856But you love me?
9856But you will see me again?
9856But, Nance, what has come over you?
9856But, dearest one,murmured Dan,"this proves to you my love, does n''t it?
9856But-- why me?
9856Ca n''t you open the door; is it locked?
9856Can you point it out to me? 9856 Can you remember how to open the secret places?
9856Claire, you are on our side? 9856 Dearest, what is it?"
9856Did you find anything this afternoon?
9856Do n''t you ever get weary with the emptiness of it all, the everlasting round, the dullness? 9856 Do you expect to signal her from the beach?"
9856Do you know what has become of Dan?
9856Do you know what you tell me? 9856 Do you think the father is alive, Dan?
9856Do you, perhaps, make out the name?
9856Does your mother know?
9856Eh?
9856For why, monsieur? 9856 From Coventry, monsieur-- Monsieur--?"
9856Going to the Port to- day, Tom?
9856Gone!--where?
9856Guard?--what?
9856Have what out?
9856Have you been through the north wing?
9856Have you seen Miss Nancy this morning, Jess?
9856How can you ask?
9856How could you know it-- has the Marquis--?
9856How will they know who you are?
9856Hunt for the treasure ourselves, eh?
9856I am to infer then that my liberty or my further unwarranted imprisonment on this ship is to be determined by you?
9856I see-- and where''s the old Marquis?
9856I shall meet you to- night at ten o''clock, at the end of the avenue of maples near to your inn; you know the place? 9856 I wonder, Tom, if you killed that poor wretch on the deck?"
9856I''m thinking,resumed Dan musingly,"of throwing up the business, what''s the use of pretending to keep an inn?
9856I?
9856Is he not returned?
9856Is it you?
9856It is that that I desire, monsieur; and yet--?
9856Lights, you have seen lights?
9856Madame Meath--?
9856Mademoiselle Nancy, she has not been found?
9856May I ask one more question?
9856Merely to ask you, madame, what Captain Bonhomme proposes to do with me, should you not be so good as to use your influence in my behalf?
9856Monsieur Pembroke,he said,"to what am I to attribute these so unusual attentions?
9856Monsieur,said the Marquis,"What is it that you do?
9856Mother, Mother,Dan protested good- naturedly, as he bent over to kiss her good- morning,"are n''t you ever willing to spend a day alone with me?"
9856My God, what can have happened to her?
9856My poor boy,she said gently,"you really love me?"
9856No, but you have it?
9856No-- you love me?
9856Not marry me? 9856 Now, quick; are you only locked in or barred as well?
9856Of course, did n''t you know it?
9856Or what?
9856Pembroke?
9856Really?--you are setting up to rival the Inn, eh?
9856Secret drawers? 9856 See here, Nance,"he exclaimed impulsively;"has the Marquis anything to do with the mood you were in this afternoon?
9856Shall I strike a light?
9856Shall we have breakfast?
9856Shall we,asked Tom in a low tone,"go down the corridor or around outside?"
9856She is a good fine boat, eh?
9856So?
9856Still no word of Mademoiselle?
9856Tell them what?
9856The Inn at the Red Oak?
9856The Marquis de Boisdhyver?
9856The paper?
9856The sleigh had n''t been at the Inn?
9856The_ escritoire_?
9856Then, my first service, is to put you into complete possession of the secret?
9856There is no clue, Dan?
9856There is nothing between you and the old Frenchman-- no mystery?
9856There is, however,inquired the Marquis with interest,"anchorage for a vessel, a large vessel?"
9856This is it, really?
9856Very good, marquis-- and at what time shall I have a carriage ready for you?
9856Well, well,he murmured,"quite on his dignity, eh?
9856Well, why not? 9856 Well?"
9856What deviltry has bewitched you?
9856What do you make her out?
9856What do you mean? 9856 What do you mean?
9856What is he up to?
9856What is it that you say?
9856What makes you ask?
9856What makes you think that I was successful in finding that, when the Marquis failed?
9856What on earth is the matter with Nancy?
9856What shall I say, monsieur? 9856 What time did you say it was?"
9856What would you have me do?
9856What''s that?
9856What''s the matter?
9856What''s the matter?
9856What? 9856 When did you go to sleep?"
9856When was this?
9856Where does that door lead?
9856Where is Nance, Dan?
9856Who could have forced her? 9856 Who was it?"
9856Who''s that?
9856Who''s that?
9856Why are you restless and discontented, Nancy?
9856Why lock him up, and then let him out? 9856 Why not?"
9856Why should you go; why should we not all join forces, hunt for the treasure together, if there is a treasure; why this division of interests?
9856Why so pensive, Monsieur Pembroke? 9856 Why then, since until last night everything has gone as you planned it, why has not the treasure already been discovered?"
9856Will you not seat yourself, monsieur?
9856Will you not trust me?
9856With the schooner?
9856Yes, madame, but why should you infer that my motive in looking into that room was interest in your affairs?
9856Yes,Dan agreed,"but do you mean that the father actually abandoned her?"
9856Yes?
9856You are sure? 9856 You escaped without notice?
9856You have consulted with the Marquis?
9856You have n''t any queer wild plan in your head to go away, have you?
9856You have not been asleep and dreaming, have you?
9856You have not seen or heard anything then of my sister, Nancy Frost?
9856You know Madame?
9856You love her, Dan?
9856You love me, Dan?
9856You love me?
9856You love_ ma belle patrie_, eh? 9856 You mean, madam, that you wish to see the Marquis?"
9856You must believe it; will you believe it if I give you the paper?
9856You never knew of any did you?
9856You promise me?
9856You refuse then to come to terms?
9856You say, my friend,she asked at length,"that you care a little for me, for just me?
9856You will not be thinking of going home tonight, Tom?
9856You will pardon me,said Monsieur de Boisdhyver,"for having begun without you?"
9856You, Tommy?
9856_ Bien- aimà ©_, what will you that I say?
9856_ C''est drole_, monsieur, but I find you very attractive? 9856 _ C''est folie_,"she cried hoarsely,"have I not told you that we are in great danger?
9856_ Eh bien_,she said at last,"you do not trust me?"
9856_ Ou est Madame Meath_?
9856_ Qui va la_?
9856... the directions will be found, for getting the treasure, in a golden chest in the secret chamber?
9856A member of the household?"
9856Ah dearest one, what can that mean but good?"
9856Ai n''t he done over- slept hisself like you?"
9856And Mister Tom--""Where is Tom?
9856And Monsieur Frost, he has also over- slept, you say?"
9856And it dates, yes,--from the year 1693?
9856And now, sir,"he continued, turning again to the stranger,"may I ask your name?"
9856And shall we not wait for Mademoiselle Nancy?"
9856And the old Inn, madame, it dates, your son tells me, from 1693?"
9856And who had so complimented their simple abode of hospitality?
9856And who, may I ask, is your French gentleman?"
9856And you have come far to- day?"
9856And you, my friend?"
9856And you,_ mon ami_?
9856And you--?"
9856And you?"
9856And you?"
9856Are they come already?"
9856Are you certain that no one follows you?"
9856Are you ready, sir?
9856Are you ready?
9856Be n''t she in the house?"
9856But how does Nance come in?"
9856But how?
9856But if-- to- morrow passes and still you do not hear--?"
9856But now you will let me see her?"
9856But tell me, what''s the news?
9856But this, this is the old Inn at the Red Oak, is it not?
9856But what is she?"
9856But what mattered anything now that he loved her?
9856But what the deuce, Nance, has been happening?
9856But why?
9856But you are forever reading, thinking... what''s it all about?"
9856But, Tom, what is the meaning of it all?
9856CHAPTER XX IN THE OAK PARLOUR"You know the way?"
9856Can they be following?"
9856Can you get Nance off?"
9856Dan, can anything have happened to her?"
9856Dan, what is all this mystery about?"
9856Dan?"
9856Did father ever find anything in them?"
9856Do n''t you ever want to get away from Deal, and know people and see things and be somebody?"
9856Do you agree?"
9856Do you expect me to meet you as though nothing had happened?"
9856Do you suppose she has left us deliberately?
9856Do you think I could marry as I am, not knowing who I am?"
9856Do you think she may have been kidnapped?"
9856Do you understand that?"
9856Do you want us to fall into a trap?"
9856Do you, by any chance, know him?"
9856Dorsetshire, you say?
9856Est- ce possible_?"
9856For Heavens''sake, Dan, where do you suppose she can be?"
9856For what reason do you watch me at midnight?
9856Fountain?"
9856Frost, will you do me a favour?"
9856Frost--?"
9856Get that old French dictionary out of the bookcase downstairs, will you?
9856Good Lord, what does it mean when people are in love with each other, what does it mean when a girl kisses a fellow like that?"
9856Had she been decoyed away by the evil genius of the place; was she in danger?
9856Had she decoyed him to the rendezvous in the dark but to betray him to the bandits with whom she was in league?
9856Had she disappeared of her own free will; and did n''t she really love him?
9856Has Nancy come back?
9856Has he said anything to make you discontented?"
9856Have you all got guns?
9856Have you anything to say to me?"
9856Have you been having trouble, that you are guarding the door like a soldier on duty?"
9856Have you got my translation of the directions?"
9856How about it?"
9856How are we going to rescue Dan?
9856How could I know?
9856How could he shoot down in cold blood a fellow man?
9856How did he work it?"
9856How is Mother?
9856How many are there?"
9856How''s that for a version?
9856I believe that I am speaking with--?"
9856I demand to know what you mean by this proceeding,--capturing me like a common thief and imprisoning me on this confounded ship?"
9856I have told you all, and now you will aid me to find the treasure that is your foster- sister''s heritage, will you not?"
9856I was assured last night....""When you did not see the signals?"
9856I will see Monsieur le Marquis this afternoon, and immediately afterward--""But, madame, surely,"Dan exclaimed,"I am to accompany you?"
9856I wonder; and why is she anchored here instead of in the Port?"
9856Is everything clear?"
9856Is it not so, that you have it?"
9856Is it that you are mad?"
9856Is it that you are quite sure that Monsieur Frost is confined on the ship?"
9856Is it that you understand?
9856Is that clear?"
9856Is that you?
9856It is that you have-- do you not say?--turned the tables upon us?"
9856May I keep this letter?"
9856May I venture to enquire your pleasure?"
9856Meath?"
9856Monsieur le Marquis is, shall we say, in confinement?"
9856On what condition, monsieur, will you release the Marquis de Boisdhyver?"
9856Pembroke?"
9856Perhaps she stays at the House on the Dunes?"
9856Que voulez vous?
9856Quite recently the manners of your friend, Mr.--eh--?"
9856Shall I give you some coffee?"
9856Shall I shoot at any one who opens?"
9856Take a look down the road, and call after her, will you?
9856Tell me quickly-- are you here of your own free will or are you a prisoner?"
9856Tell me, do you know how your foster- sister came to be in the charge of your mother at the Inn at the Red Oak?"
9856Tell me, is the old_ escritoire_ still to the left of the door?"
9856Tell me-- the Marquis, he was released, as your friend has promised me he should be?"
9856That I am an adventuress?"
9856The instant he enters the Inn at the Red Oak, you promise that the Marquis de Boisdhyver be released and that he be given this note from me?"
9856The old inn, eh, by the great tree?"
9856The thing''s torn in two-- haven''t you the rest of it?"
9856Then Nance is back?
9856To what end was the Marquis de Boisdhyver exchanging mysterious signals with some one in that lonely farmhouse, and what did they mean?
9856Tom, see that Manners has another drink before he goes, will you?
9856Tommy, you will be staying to dinner with us?"
9856Understand?
9856Understand?
9856Was it a signal being exchanged, and between whom?
9856Was it a signal to the Marquis de Boisdhyver?
9856Was there a hidden treasure and how did the Marquis know about it?
9856We have another of these so beautiful days, eh?
9856We have loved sincerely, have we not?
9856We shall have a charming little reunion at supper,_ n''est- ce pas_?"
9856What are we going to do?
9856What could you think I was doing?"
9856What do you make of it?"
9856What does a French marquis want in a deserted hole like this, I''d like to know?
9856What does he want poking about in a deserted old hole like Deal?"
9856What does this mean?"
9856What else?"
9856What had become of her?
9856What is it that I hear?"
9856What is it?
9856What is she?
9856What matters now anything that you have said or done?
9856What more would you have me do?"
9856What part had the_ Southern Cross_ to play with its diabolical looking captain, and what could have become of Nancy?
9856What the devil is that old rascal after, and how has he bewitched Nance?"
9856What time will Tom be back?"
9856What was the influence, the fascination that strange old Frenchman seemed to exert?
9856What was to be the end of this mad night''s work?
9856When did she come?"
9856When the casement is opened, you will shoot, will you not, and shoot to kill?"
9856Where is Tom?
9856Where is she?"
9856Where was she now?
9856Where would she be, I wonder, if it had n''t been for me?
9856Who the deuce is''ançois de Boisdhyver, and how did he come to leave money in the Oak Parlour?
9856Who the devil is the Marquis?"
9856Who would ever have guessed it?"
9856Why are you surprised?"
9856Why is it that my affairs give you interest?
9856Why is it that you can think that the Marquis de Boisdhyver and I have been in secret communication?"
9856Why is it that you so insult me?"
9856Why not begin to- night?"
9856Why should I deny that which already you know?
9856Why then is it he has not left the Inn?"
9856Why, you foolish boy, have n''t we kissed each other hundreds of times before?"
9856Will you be kind enough to walk with me and show me the way?"
9856Will you know from now that I am a thousand times unworthy?
9856Will you tell me why it is that you can think that this Marquis de Bois-- what is the name?"
9856Wonder what it means?"
9856You are at once so naive and so clever?"
9856You are certain?"
9856You can make something of it, ca n''t you?"
9856You come from Paris, sir?"
9856You follow me in all this, Monsieur Dan?"
9856You have been here before then, sir?"
9856You have guessed, have n''t you, that he loves Madame de la Fontaine?"
9856You have interests, friends in my country?"
9856You have no further plans for seeking Mademoiselle?
9856You heard nothing in the night, did you?"
9856You heard the click?
9856You know how Mother is...""What difference will it make if you wait a moment?
9856You mean there is a treasure?"
9856You speak French, monsieur?"
9856You too, Manners, had best let me bunk you till morning; you''ll not be going back to the Port tonight?
9856You will do me the kindness to provide me with supper and a bed?"
9856You will not mind?--perhaps, enjoy it?"
9856You''re not fair...""But you do love me?"
9856_ Comprenez- vous_?"
9856a stranger, a woman?
9856and for what reason?
9856and therefore Nancy''s uncle?"
9856and why is it that you believe this, Monsieur?"
9856but what has it all to do with me?"
9856do you suppose there really is a fortune hidden away in the Inn all these years?"
9856he protested,"You trust this woman?
9856is it that I deserve this?"
9856is it that I have not explained?
9856mam''zelle_,"a rough voice hissed,"_ ou allez- vous_?"
9856man, have you searched the house?"
9856man, what do you make of it?"
9856one can see quite plainly from one house to the other, is it not so?"
9856repeated Madame de La Fontaine,"and is that near by?"
9856that he has communicated with her?"
9856the French gentleman who is staying with you at the Inn at the Red Oak, is it not so?"
9856then Eloise-- then Mademoiselle Nancy, is returned?"
9856there was treasure, was n''t there?
9856to the schooner, you say?
9856who can tell?"
9856will you not run?"
9856you were to say--?"
33277''You see I''m your secretary,she said demurely,"and I''m-- I''m paid to be glad, are n''t I?"
33277A bear? 33277 A dug- out after nearly four years of raids?"
33277A lot of what?
33277About normal, then?
33277About the reward? 33277 About the reward?"
33277All right, mother dear, I wo n''t; you know my bark is worse than my bite, do n''t you?
33277Am I included in the invitation?
33277And are n''t you happy?
33277And are you glad to know me?
33277And does he say that to Sir Lyster?
33277And have n''t you sometimes missed not having a mother?
33277And have you informed the police?
33277And how long will it take to construct say a hundred?
33277And that he is a prisoner?
33277And the Skipper?
33277And then?
33277And we are to see the thing through?
33277And we''ll have a picnic- hamper, shall we?
33277And what about a nurse?
33277And what are we to say?
33277And what did he usually say?
33277And what did you say?
33277And what do you eat?
33277And what is that?
33277And what would you do, Sage?
33277And what''s the result, sir?
33277And what?
33277And when may we expect Mr. Dene''s new submarine over?
33277And yet you still advise this course?
33277And you came here?
33277And you?
33277Any what?
33277Anything new?
33277Are you hit?
33277At first I thought you were working her too hard, Mr. Dene, but,she added hastily, as if in anticipation of protest,"but-- but----""But what?"
33277Bad time?
33277Better?
33277But all that time what happened to the_ Destroyer_?
33277But did n''t Nero fiddle while Rome burned?
33277But he is n''t a bear, is he, Dorothy?
33277But how can we be sure they will not capture the_ Destroyer_?
33277But how did they manage Jim after he''d got into that taxi?
33277But how did you manage to do it in the time?
33277But suppose anyone heard you, dear, what would they think?
33277But the questions in the House as to why we are offering this reward?
33277But the_ Destroyer_?
33277But what are we going to do about our tea?
33277But what proof----?
33277But where is he now?
33277But who said''shucks''?
33277But why, Dorothy?
33277But why, mother?
33277But you do n''t always say a thing just because it''s true, do you?
33277But, mother, when you were a girl and knew a nice man, did n''t you want him to kiss you?
33277But,continued Dorothy,"suppose one day I was looking very plain and unattractive, would you tell me of it?"
33277But,persisted Dorothy,"why do we do it?
33277But,protested Sir Lyster,"how shall we know what is happening?"
33277By the way, Thompson, you did n''t happen to drop any finger prints about in Waterloo Place?
33277Can we go round by Whitehall? 33277 Can you tell me,"he asked slowly,"why the British Empire has not gone to blazes long ago?"
33277Can you type? 33277 Clever, was n''t it?"
33277Colonel Walton told you what happened?
33277Could n''t you wear a red beard and blue glasses and----"What''s that?
33277Did he propose? 33277 Did you want to see any one?"
33277Did you?
33277Do for you?
33277Do n''t you always sleep?
33277Do n''t you think, Mrs. West, that God must be pleased when two nice people come together?
33277Do what?
33277Do you come from the Ritzton?
33277Do you imagine that Dene slipped off to the north to trick the Germans?
33277Do you mind? 33277 Do you think he''ll marry you?"
33277Do you think it''s drink, Grayne, or only the heat?
33277Do you think she knew who we were?
33277Do you want the_ Destroyer_ or do n''t you?
33277Does he know?
33277Does that matter, sir?
33277Does that mean that I had better go?
33277Does that mean that I''m discharged?
33277Dorothy dear, are you joking?
33277Dorothy dear, what do you mean?
33277Dumb?
33277Envying you?
33277Excuse me,said John Dene, lifting his hat,"but is that the Admiralty you''ve just come out of?"
33277Going, Heyworth?
33277Got him, Thompson?
33277Got that little list of mine?
33277Got what?
33277Had they got far with the first one?
33277Has Finlay seen him since?
33277Has he linked up with Naylor yet?
33277Has he tried to kiss you yet?
33277Have I, sir?
33277Have you an appointment?
33277Have you tried Scotland Yard, sir?
33277Have you warned Dene?
33277He in?
33277Here, what the hell do you mean by giving that girl only nine dollars a week?
33277Here, what the hell''s all this about my meals?
33277Here, where do you come from?
33277How about John Dene?
33277How did you get it?
33277How did you get the copy?
33277How did you know?
33277How did you know?
33277How did you learn this?
33277How do I do it?
33277How do you mean, Dorothy?
33277How do you mean, dear?
33277How do you plan to proceed?
33277How do you propose to keep at sea for any length of time without recharging your batteries?
33277How is the_ Destroyer_ progressing?
33277How many false calls did you say?
33277How was his memory bad?
33277How''s the_ Destroyer_?
33277How?
33277How?
33277I have an absolutely free hand?
33277I have been wondering about Wessie----"Wessie, who''s she, a cat?
33277I know I''m a horrid little beast,she cried, turning quickly,"and I say outrageous things, do n''t I?"
33277I may smoke?
33277I may, may n''t I?
33277I see, I see,cried Mr. Llewellyn John;"but how on earth did you ferret all this out?"
33277I wonder why it is?
33277I''m so sorry, mother dear; but it slipped out, you know, and really it''s such an awfully convenient word, is n''t it? 33277 If it is n''t the spies,"continued Marjorie,"then what is it?"
33277If they do for me, I want you to give the command to Blake, then to Quinton, and so on, only to my own boys; is that agreed?
33277If this is slow, what''s fast?
33277If what''s all right?
33277If you did n''t supply lunch yesterday, who the blazes did?
33277If you kill, where are the plans? 33277 In other words?"
33277In the meantime what is to be done?
33277In which direction did he drive?
33277Incidentally, Sage, where did you get all this from?
33277Is he going to call this evening?
33277Is he safe?
33277Is he, dear?
33277Is it or is it not a deal?
33277Is it?
33277Is n''t it funny how one runs across the same person time after time?
33277Is n''t what?
33277Is she ill?
33277Is that twelve Haymarket?
33277Is that what you came here to say?
33277Is there any news?
33277Is there anything I can do?
33277Is-- is-- Miss West here?
33277It is very difficult to give instances; but previously he had always been so pleasant and-- and----"Unconscious of himself, shall we say?
33277It sounds rather flippant, does n''t it?
33277J. D."What do you mean, Rojjie?
33277Jim there?
33277Jim''s all right,said John Dene,"but where''s Miss West and my keys?"
33277Knew what?
33277Know what?
33277Like it?
33277Like who?
33277May I sit down?
33277May I suggest that under the circumstances we consult Mr. Llewellyn John?
33277Me or who?
33277Mother dear, do you think you could faint?
33277Mother,said Dorothy presently,"what made you love father?"
33277Mr. Dene knows his own invention and we might enrol his crew in the Navy; what do you think?
33277Mr. John Dene?
33277Mr. Van Helder?
33277Must n''t what?
33277Naylor?
33277No?
33277Not resigning?
33277Nothing has happened?
33277Now,said John Dene, turning to the Admiral,"what''s the greatest difficulty you''re up against in submarine warfare?"
33277Of course he knows?
33277Of me?
33277Oh, I''m horrid, are n''t I?
33277Oh, would you?
33277Only just discovered it?
33277Only what?
33277Only,she continued calmly,"you seem a little-- a little-- may I say jumpy?"
33277Or----?
33277Perhaps you''d rather not come?
33277Please, Mr. Dene, may I be a bridesmaid?
33277Please, Mr. Dene, what is a dancing lizard?
33277Rationed?
33277Ready for the trial trip?
33277Say, does this bother you any?
33277Say, what''s all this worth to you?
33277Says what, Dorothy?
33277Seen John Dene?
33277Shall I do?
33277Shall I go?
33277Sooner you went?
33277Sorry for what?
33277Speeds?
33277Structural defects wo n''t explain it?
33277Suppose the Germans were able to sink a ship without even showing their periscopes?
33277Sure,said John Dene,"and we''ll be getting up to it again, wo n''t we, mother?"
33277Sure,said John Dene; then turning to Admiral Heyworth,"What would happen if Germany got a submarine that could see and do fancy stunts?"
33277That he''s being watched? 33277 That phrase,"continued Sage,"was a great asset to one party, why should it not be to another?"
33277That so?
33277That you, Inspector?
33277That you, Smart?
33277The bear?
33277The calls have always come through in the same way?
33277The point is,said Sir Roger,"what is happening at Auchinlech?"
33277The question is, how long is this to continue?
33277The ring?
33277The thing is, where is John Dene?
33277The what?
33277Then why the devil should the Hun get the wind up?
33277Then you know?
33277Then you refuse to tell me?
33277They do a lot of that here, do n''t they?
33277Thinking of what?
33277Thinner?
33277This some of your funny work?
33277This the Admiralty?
33277Thought of what?
33277Through with everything?
33277To Canada?
33277To know what?
33277To what?
33277Typing?
33277Was ever maid so wooed?
33277Was the John Dene Report what you wanted, sir?
33277Was the other girl pretty?
33277Watch who?
33277We shall not be overheard, no?
33277We should be delighted, should n''t we, Dorothy?
33277We should n''t let you go, should we, mother?
33277We-- we thought----"And shall I get twenty thousand pounds if I give you up to a policeman?
33277Well, Grayne, what do you think of our friend, John Dene?
33277Well, I think I can promise that the matter shall be put right, and we''ll make Blair take her out to lunch by way of apology, shall we?
33277Well, is it a deal?
33277Well,he demanded, looking from Colonel Walton to Sage,"what are we to reply?"
33277What about Deutsches über alles?
33277What about Deutsches über alles?
33277What about Finlay?
33277What am I to do, sir? 33277 What are the official figures for the last six weeks, Heyworth?"
33277What are you doing to poor Blair?
33277What are you talking about?
33277What are your reasons?
33277What did you mean about the odd trick, dear?
33277What did you say to him?
33277What did you say to him?
33277What did?
33277What do you know about pawn- tickets, Rojjie?
33277What do you make of it, Thompson?
33277What do you make of the inscription?
33277What do you mean, Miss West?
33277What do you mean?
33277What do you mean?
33277What do you think has happened?
33277What happened?
33277What have I got to offer? 33277 What have we been doing now?"
33277What is at the back of your mind, Sage?
33277What is the detective for if it''s not to solve mysteries?
33277What odd trick?
33277What on earth are you talking about?
33277What on earth do you know about it?
33277What other things?
33277What pattern?
33277What reply are we to make?
33277What should you do?
33277What the devil''s up with old Sage and Onions?
33277What the hell have you done with that girl, and who''s closed my offices?
33277What then?
33277What would you suggest doing?
33277What''s that?
33277What''s the matter, Tommy?
33277What''s the use of morals?
33277What''s through me?
33277What''s wrong?
33277What?
33277When did you first notice this?
33277When does he go to Streatham?
33277Where am I to tell him?
33277Where are you going to stay?
33277Where are you staying?
33277Where are you taking us to dinner?
33277Where is she now?
33277Where the deuce have you been hiding all this time?
33277Where will you end, Rojjie?
33277Where''s Finlay?
33277Where''s the bear, Wessie?
33277Where''s the tea?
33277Where-- how----?
33277Who is Jim?
33277Who is he? 33277 Who the devil''s going to issue all these warrants?"
33277Who was she?
33277Who''ll stare at you?
33277Who''s Wessie, anyhow?
33277Who''s going to guarantee that the War Cabinet does n''t talk in its sleep?
33277Who''s looking after him?
33277Who''s shut my offices?
33277Who?
33277Whose flat?
33277Why did n''t you act before?
33277Why did you come here?
33277Why did you let him do it?
33277Why do n''t you take the Skipper into your confidence, Sage?
33277Why do you smile?
33277Why is it that we women love men?
33277Why not have a try yourself?
33277Why not try the taxi?
33277Why not?
33277Why should I be here if I did n''t?
33277Why should n''t I be well?
33277Why should n''t we be frank and open about such matters? 33277 Why was my order to the Ritzton cancelled?
33277Why wo n''t you take it?
33277Why, mother?
33277Why?
33277Why?
33277Why?
33277Why?
33277Why?
33277Why?
33277Why?
33277Will you come this way? 33277 With that Bergen fellow''s?"
33277Wo n''t you come with us?
33277Wondering what?
33277Worth to me?
33277Would n''t it be funny to call him Jack?
33277Would n''t what?
33277Would n''t you like to ring up the Agent- General for Can''da and find out who I am?
33277Would she?
33277Would you sooner I went?
33277Would you-- would you?
33277Yes, do n''t you remember?
33277Yes, from that place-- where was it, North?
33277Yes; but whose orders?
33277Yes; what do they pay you?
33277You find London interesting?
33277You have been comfortable?
33277You have been seeing the sights?
33277You know anything about it?
33277You know anything about submarines?
33277You like them?
33277You remember the Winthorpe murder case, Sir Roger?
33277You remember the initials inside, chief?
33277You remember the lost code- book?
33277You see,she added,"he broke my teapot, and he owes me something for that, does n''t he?"
33277You seriously suggest this publicity?
33277You should have assumed that two such desirable people as mother and me were dining out every night, should n''t he, mother?
33277You think it is like?
33277You think so?
33277You think?
33277You what?
33277You wish to see the First Lord?
33277You''ll be here until it''s all through?
33277You''re in love with him, Dorothy, are n''t you?
33277You''re very kind, Mr. Dene,she said,"but is it-- is it----?"
33277You''ve got everything?
33277You''ve wirelessed?
33277''s conception of the detective then?"
33277Above all, why had John Dene taken a taxi when he had been warned against it?
33277Are you going to send for it to Herbert Jenkins Ltd., 3, York Street, St. James''s, London, S.W.1?
33277But ought I to go at eleven o''clock, Miss Cunliffe?"
33277But what I want to know is, what is it in a man that attracts a girl?"
33277But,"he burst out excitedly,"why on earth does Sage want to advertise our anxiety as to Dene''s whereabouts?
33277By the way, what did happen to John Dene of Toronto?
33277By the way,"he said, as he reached the door,"what time did this little tea- fight take place?"
33277CHAPTER III DEPARTMENT Z. I"Mr. Sage there?
33277CHAPTER IV GINGERING- UP THE ADMIRALTY"Boss in?"
33277Can I come round with Admiral Heyworth and an-- er-- inventor?
33277Dene?"
33277Dene?"
33277Dene?"
33277Dene?"
33277Dene?"
33277Dene?"
33277Dene?"
33277Dene?"
33277Dene?"
33277Dene?"
33277Dene?"
33277Dene?"
33277Dene?"
33277Dene?"
33277Dene?"
33277Dene?"
33277Dene?"
33277Did Scotland Yard think that John Dene had disguised himself with a false beard?
33277Did you know of this?"
33277Did you know this at the time?"
33277Do you get me?"
33277Everybody at the Admiralty says he''ll get a title, and you''ll have to say to the servants,''Is her ladyship at home?''
33277Had he been drugged?
33277Have I your permission to proceed?"
33277Have n''t you seen the papers?"
33277He had worn himself out, she decided, or was it that he was being drugged?
33277Her search- lights----""But how have you done it?"
33277How did you know?"
33277I suppose we can get tea around here?"
33277II"Was that the telephone?"
33277If a man offers you a pedigree- pup for nothing, and you want a pedigree- pup, would n''t you just hold out your hand?"
33277In future he----"Here, who the hell''s shut my offices, and where''s Miss West?"
33277Mr. Dene, what''s happened?"
33277Now confess, mother, are n''t you?"
33277Now is n''t she?"
33277Now we shall insist upon your taking us to tea, wo n''t we, mother?"
33277Now what do you think he''d do?"
33277Now, is it a deal?"
33277Now, why is the submarine blind?
33277Of course I must n''t do that, must I?"
33277One man wired from St. Andrews that he was tracking a strange man round the golf course, would Scotland Yard telegraph a warrant for his arrest?
33277She outrages all the dear old Victorian conventions, does n''t she?"
33277Sir Bridgman lit a cigarette, then after a short silence Sir Lyster said tentatively:"I suppose it is n''t the Americans?"
33277Tell me, where is it?
33277That so?"
33277The notice drawn up by Department Z. ran: MISSING £ 10,000 REWARD Where is JOHN DENE of TORONTO?
33277Then as an after- thought he added,"to a girl?"
33277Then with a sudden change of mood she added:"But why should n''t a girl be pleased because she''s got nice legs, mother?"
33277Was he waiting for her?
33277Was it relief that he saw?
33277Was there any danger of the telephone system being interrupted?
33277We----""Did n''t you want father to kiss you?"
33277West?"
33277West?"
33277What I want to know is how long this will last?"
33277What do you think I had better do?"
33277What girl?"
33277What is he?
33277What is it that makes them want to hold hands?"
33277What say you, Grayne?"
33277What should we have done without you Canadians?"
33277What use am I to a woman?"
33277What was John Dene to her that she should miss him?
33277What was she doing?
33277What will people think when we offer ten thousand pounds for news of John Dene of Toronto?"
33277What would be said?"
33277What would you have done?"
33277What''s that?
33277Where do you go for lunch?"
33277Why do n''t you stop''em?
33277Why do you think girls wear pretty shoes and stockings, and low cut blouses as thin as a cobweb?"
33277Why had he been so interested in the taxi that was bearing John Dene away, and why had he tried to signal to other vehicles passing along Pall Mall?
33277Why had he come to London to drive to desperation an already over- worked department?
33277Why not promise him something dramatic in a few weeks''time?
33277Why should I do it?"
33277Why should I do it?"
33277Why should n''t we talk about it?
33277Why the hell ca n''t you decide on a thing at once, when you''ve got everything before you?
33277Why?"
33277Will you give me some idea of your business?"
33277Would they find out at what time he left the hotel?
33277You get me?"
33277You get me?"
33277You see,"she continued slowly, gazing away from her mother,"it''s always difficult to---- What made you love-- care for father?"
33277You wo n''t forget, mother, will you?"
33277You''re a stenographer?"
33277You''ve seen the papers?"
33277cried Dorothy reproachfully,"how can you be so unkind?
33277cried John Dene, then he asked suddenly:"What are you?"
33277did n''t I, then why do you suppose I''ve got my new stockings on?"
33277exclaimed Sir Lyster in alarm,"what is to be done?"
33277he cried,"where can I buy a pound of tea?"
33277repeated Sir Lyster,"Jim who?"
33277said Mrs. West,"only we''re not in quite the right clothes for the Ritzton, are we?"
33277say?"
33277say?"
33277were n''t they?"
33277what girl?"
33277why will you never be serious?"
20519A fingernail?
20519A way out?
20519Am I a great big curse? 20519 Am I?"
20519And I''m to follow yours?
20519And have you radiating the fact like a broadcasting station?
20519And how can I believe you?
20519And if I fail?
20519And knowing the score makes me also dangerous to your Highways? 20519 And now?"
20519And to which school do you belong?
20519And who is the character?
20519And you found what, when you tried to call her?
20519Anything?
20519Apologize?
20519Are you going to let him get away with this?
20519Are you guilty or not guilty?
20519Both sides?
20519But Steve-- what can we do?
20519But could n''t I have been told_ something_?
20519But how does this apply to me?
20519But how on Earth--?
20519But what is their purpose?
20519But what kind of a sign would call your interest so deep that you did n''t at least see the limb, even if you were perceiving the sign?
20519But what makes you think you are being pushed?
20519But what?
20519But where did she go?
20519But why would we lie to you?
20519But--?
20519Can-- I see-- How is--? 20519 Catch any plans from them?"
20519Catherine?
20519Certain?
20519Chess?
20519Could n''t someone tell me?
20519Could n''t you have taken me in too?
20519Depends upon exactly what?
20519Did I ever deny it?
20519Did you get it?
20519Did you have a clean- up squad following me all the time, picking up the debris? 20519 Digging for what?"
20519Dismal prospect, is n''t it?
20519Do I look all shot to bits?
20519Do go on? 20519 Do you believe me, Steve?"
20519Do you hope to get more?
20519Do you know much about crystallography?
20519Do you want me to get the cure? 20519 Do you yourself really expect me to seek blessed oblivion?"
20519Does it hurt?
20519Done any drinking?
20519Everybody?
20519Fast?
20519Fine day for a ride, is n''t it?
20519For four months?
20519For what?
20519For what?
20519Forget her--?
20519Got any plans?
20519Guinea pig?
20519Has anybody ever stopped to consider mine?
20519Has n''t anybody thought of arresting me for kidnapping, suspicion of murder, reckless driving and cluttering up the highway with junk?
20519Have I got a vote? 20519 Have n''t you done enough already?"
20519Have you an assignment?
20519Helping it?
20519How about the crazy man who questions his own sanity, using this personal question as proof of his sanity since real nuts_ know_ they''re sane?
20519How about the guy that hauled me out of that wreck? 20519 How are you going to find out?"
20519How can I believe you now?
20519How can I possibly believe you?
20519How come the Harrisons moved so abruptly?
20519How do I get it?
20519How far out does this damned dead area extend?
20519How long have I been known to be a Mekstrom Carrier?
20519How much postage did you cost? 20519 How''d you connect?"
20519How''d you guess?
20519Huh?
20519Huh?
20519Huh?
20519I know that, sir, but--"Then why do you disobey?
20519I presume these signs cost quite a bit more than the stark, black and white enamel jobs?
20519I suppose you know that I''m still trying to find my fiancà © e?
20519I was n''t trying, then--"How about the people in the hotel in Denver?
20519I-- what?
20519Impossible?
20519In other words you are more than willing to be convinced?
20519In other words your parents are due for the treatment next?
20519Is it bad?
20519Is it terrible?
20519Is n''t medicine a field that deals with people?
20519Is n''t that bad? 20519 Is n''t the fact that you''re Mekstrom and I''m human likely to cause some rather pointed comment?"
20519Is what terrible?
20519It''s cold outside, remember?
20519Just exactly what do you have in mind?
20519Just like that?
20519Just what has this to do with me and my future?
20519Just what went on?
20519Just where do they live?
20519Just why was this registered nurse travelling with you?
20519Know the route?
20519Later?
20519Let well enough alone?
20519Look,I asked him,"why not admit it?
20519Look,I said with a sudden thought,"Why ca n''t I still go on?
20519Looking for someone?
20519Marian?
20519May I cut in?
20519May I point out that I am far ahead of your game? 20519 May I quote you?"
20519Mekstrom''s?
20519Mind if I ride back to the house with you, mister?
20519Mind telling a non- telepath what the devil you cooked up?
20519Mind telling me what I''m slated for? 20519 Miss Macklin, you Mekstroms have hard bodies, but do you think your hide will stop a slug from this?"
20519Moved?
20519No feeling?
20519No?
20519No?
20519Now, Miss Nameless, you sit over there and tell me how come this distressing tableau?
20519Now,he finished,"Shall I read you chapter and verse?"
20519Odd theory?
20519Oh, Steve--"And then again maybe you''re doing your best to lead my puzzled little mind away from what you consider a dangerous subject?
20519Oh, he did, did he?
20519Oh, it is n''t so worthless, is it?
20519Oh?
20519One thing,she suggested,"have you talked to the people who got you out from under your car yet?"
20519Poor esper,she said softly,"you could n''t really know--""Know what?"
20519Pushed around?
20519See here,I snapped,"did you ever have a guest named Farrow?"
20519See?
20519Shall we have a drink and relax for a moment?
20519Shock?
20519Siberia? 20519 So have you any plans?"
20519So how do I go out and get it?
20519So long as someone does the work, huh?
20519So now what happens?
20519So what do I do to avert this future?
20519So what do we do now?
20519So what has this to do with Mekstrom''s Disease and supermen?
20519So what tripped you up?
20519So what''s this truth?
20519So where is all this getting us?
20519So who wrote me?
20519So--"So what do you propose to do about this?
20519So?
20519Sort of when a locomotive falls on their head?
20519Spokes? 20519 Steer?"
20519Steve, what on Earth are you talking about?
20519Steve,she said earnestly,"Believe me and let me be your--"# Better half?# I finished sourly.
20519Steve,she said,"why do you do these things?"
20519Successful?
20519Such as--?
20519Suppose,said Miss Macklin unexpectedly,"that it is impossible?"
20519The full treatment--? 20519 The what?"
20519Then explain the license, the date with the reverend, the hotel reservation?
20519Then for the love of God, what do you expect of me?
20519Then what is the difference?
20519Then what is this all about? 20519 Then what the devil is wrong?"
20519Then where the hell is she, Doc?
20519Then why all this balderdash about shock, rejection, and so on?
20519Then why was-- is-- she here so long?
20519Then you begin to agree with me?
20519They took to it willingly?
20519Think I''ll have to learn all over?
20519Think it''s safe for me to wait?
20519To what?
20519Trouble?
20519True,said Mr. Macklin,"And yet, if they declared their intentions, how long would they last?"
20519Understand what?
20519Want to start something?
20519Well, where do we go?
20519Well, why in the devil do n''t you announce yourselves?
20519Well, you''d still prefer to find her alive, would n''t you?
20519Were you all working to innoculate me at Homestead, or were you really studying me to find out what made me a carrier instead of a victim?
20519Were you?
20519Were?
20519Wha--?
20519What am I?
20519What are we looking for?
20519What are you going to do?
20519What cooks, Farrow?
20519What did they find?
20519What do they do with failures?
20519What do you consider good evidence?
20519What do you mean?
20519What do you mean?
20519What else can I do, Steve?
20519What gives?
20519What goes on?
20519What good did you do there?
20519What happened?
20519What have you got that I have n''t got?
20519What have you in mind for him?
20519What is the meaning of all this? 20519 What may I do for you?"
20519What next?
20519What would you like me to just give up, Marian? 20519 What''s the treatment like?"
20519What''s to talk over?
20519What''s your trouble--?
20519What--?
20519What?
20519Wheelchair?
20519When would they have the chance?
20519Where are you?
20519Where have you been published?
20519Where--?
20519Which train?
20519Which way do I go from here? 20519 Which way?"
20519Which will it be? 20519 Who are your writers?"
20519Who can?
20519Who is n''t?
20519Who''s to decide?
20519Who-- me?
20519Why could n''t I have joined her-- you--?
20519Why did n''t they?
20519Why dispute my word?
20519Why do n''t you come on in?
20519Why is he quietly sitting there in Mekstrom hide while he is overtly grieving over the painful death of his fellow man?
20519Why not give it up?
20519Why not?
20519Why on earth would they be doing that?
20519Why should I smoke my own?
20519Why would you lie to me?
20519Why, Mr. Cornell, what are you doing back here?
20519Why?
20519Why?
20519Why?
20519Why?
20519Will Catherine find solace in Phillip''s arms? 20519 Will you get my car?"
20519Will you wear it again, my dear?
20519Wo n''t that be dangerous?
20519Yeah?
20519Yeah?
20519Yeah?
20519Yes, your honor?
20519Yes?
20519You did n''t happen to notice whether the mailbox flag was up, did you?
20519You drove across the country before, remember? 20519 You mean that?"
20519You realize that you''re probably as big a liability with us as you were trying to find us?
20519You would n''t have wanted us not to help? 20519 You''d like to register a formal charge?
20519You''ll be all right?
20519You''ll listen to the bitter end?
20519You''re certain that Phelps is a Mekstrom?
20519You''re certain?
20519You''re informing me?
20519You''re not really a failure yet, are you, kid?
20519You''re speaking of what?
20519You''ve got something to add?
20519Your folks at home?
20519# And the fact that I was carrying a story that would get me popped into the nearest hatch for the incipient paranoid made it all right?# She nodded.
20519# Can I see her?#"Lord no!"
20519# Catherine?# I thought sharply, because most medicos are telepath, not perceptive.
20519# Eight days?
20519# Eleven o''clock.#"Going to call?"
20519# Fingerprints?#"You''d been dating her."
20519# How bad off am I?#"You''re a mess, Steve.
20519# Mekstrom''s Disease--?# was my thought of horror.
20519# Now-- why?# The telepath half of the team answered.
20519# So they moved so fast that they could n''t even change their Highway Sign?# I thought worriedly.
20519# Telepath?# He nodded imperceptibly.
20519# Telepath?#"Yes, and a good one."
20519# The laboratory again?# I thought.
20519# What are they saying, Farrow?# I snapped mentally.
20519# Who else is awake?#"Just me, so far,"she replied quietly.
20519''Ca n''t it wait until morning?''
2051940?"
20519After all, would you want Catherine to stay with you?
20519Again, as apparently irrelevant, she said,"He''s a top grade telepath; he knows control--""Control--?"
20519Am I not correct?"
20519Am I not right?"
20519Among the other incredible items--""Incredible?"
20519And at this point the long long trail takes a fork, does n''t it?
20519And beyond your basic suspicions, what can you prove?"
20519And you?"
20519And, most important of all... could Steve find that enemy before they made him vanish too?
20519Another disappearance?
20519Another week or two--?"
20519Are you?"
20519As I was saying, how can we credit much of your tale when you raved about one man lifting the car and the other hauling you out from underneath?"
20519As a mechanical engineer, you are familiar with the line of reasoning that we non- engineering people call Occam''s Razor?"
20519As we turned back South, I asked her,"Any more comment?"
20519Away from or toward what?
20519But do you have to prove it?"
20519But if neither side can afford to have the secret come out, how come--?# I pondered this for a long time and admitted that it made no sense to me.
20519But lacking your original plan, what are you going to do now?"
20519But now--""Now what?"
20519But our mutual desire to find some privacy in this modern fish- bowl had put me in the hospital and Catherine-- where--?
20519But who would reject a block and tackle in favor of an impossibly strong man?
20519But why did n''t someone stop to think of the poor benighted case who was in the accident ward?
20519But why would Scholar Phelps be lying?
20519But,#--how could anyone have taken a look at the scene of the accident and not seen traces of woman?
20519Ca n''t you stop accusing yourself of some evil factor?
20519Can you dig that fine, Officer?
20519Can you make it alone, Steve?
20519Car?
20519Changing the subject, I asked,"but what about the others who just drop out of sight?"
20519Cornell?"
20519Cornell?"
20519Cornell?"
20519Cornell?"
20519Cornell?"
20519Cornell?"
20519Cornell?"
20519Cornell?"
20519Cornell?"
20519Cornell?"
20519Could I have mis- heard you?"
20519Could either side afford to let you walk into New Washington with the living proof of your Mekstrom Body?"
20519Could n''t you do the usual job?#"You were pretty badly ground up, Steve.
20519Did you dig her telephone number?"
20519Do I turn with the missing spoke, or do I turn with the one that is not missing?
20519Do you understand?"
20519Doctor--?#"Sorry, Steve.
20519Doctor?
20519Eventually I held her up from me, tried to shake her gently, and said,"Now what''s the shooting all about, Farrow?"
20519Ever heard of it?"
20519Finally I said,"Marian, if you know that I''m not to be changed by logic or argument, why do you bother?"
20519Fred Macklin interrupted,"Look, Dad, why are we bothering with all this guff?"
20519From my first meeting with her I knew she was no telepath, so I bluntly said,"Where''s the regular girl?
20519Going to amputate?
20519Going to watch me writhing in pain as my infection climbs toward my vitals?
20519Had Mr. Macklin given me the truth or was I being sold another shoddy bill of goods?
20519Harrison?"
20519Have n''t you any feelings?"
20519Have you ever been put on an odious job, only to find that the job is really pleasant?"
20519Have you ever heard of the psi- pattern changing before?__ Ah, and another item, that road sign with the busted spoke has been replaced.
20519He shook his head unhappily as he said,"Why ca n''t you leave well- enough alone?"
20519His voice rasped,"Indeed?"
20519How did you get out?"
20519How many people did you convince?"
20519How the heck did you find us?"
20519How would you select them?"
20519I asked,"Phil, please tell me-- what is going on?"
20519I broke the silence by saying,"What right has any man or collection of men to decide whether I, or anyone else, has the right to live or die?"
20519I eyed him cynically and then added,"Or is it''Whom shall I kill?''
20519I flipped my lighter and let her inhale a big puff before I put the next question:"Why are you here and what goes on?"
20519I had to grab myself to keep from yelling,"Unfortunate?"
20519I interjected,"And what do we do about it?"
20519I looked down at the hand and said,"Young lady, do you realize that you have an advanced case of Mekstrom''s Disease?"
20519I posed the question:# Am I nuts?#"No, Steve,"she replied solemnly.
20519I said hopefully,"I suppose as a Mekstrom I''ll eventually be qualified to join you?"
20519I snapped,"Farrow, what grade of telepath is Catherine?"
20519I stopped briefly a few hundred feet from the lead- in road and asked Miss Farrow:"What''s your telepath range?
20519I took a fast stab:"Doctor, how does my flesh differ from yours?"
20519I tried giving him stare for stare, but eventually I gave up and said,"So now where do we go?"
20519I''ll call Step Two passably okay, but--?
20519I''m a bit less than bright, but what have I done now?"
20519I''ve been here eight days--?"
20519I--""Will you come quietly, Mr. Cornell?
20519If our child came as predicted, the first thing I''d do would be to have the child inoculate the father?
20519If they wanted to take over the Earth, could n''t they do it by a show of force?
20519Inwardly I grinned, and then with the same feeling as if I''d laughed out loud at a funeral, I said,"Through these steel bars?"
20519Is n''t it wonderful, though?
20519Is n''t that about it?"
20519Is that it, Marian?"
20519Is that right?"
20519It changes them so--""But that''s what I''m headed for, is n''t it?"
20519Just die?
20519Keep it running in one direction, please?"
20519Know what happens?"
20519Know where they went?"
20519Likely to bring''em out of Hiding?"
20519Makes me sort of a male Typhoid Mary, does n''t it?"
20519Maybe we all had it in for Catherine, and did her in?"
20519Maybe--?"
20519Me?
20519More evidence to the fact that Miss Lewis was with you?
20519Mr. Cornell, what is your reaction to Mekstrom''s Disease at this point?"
20519Mullaney,''he asks me,''How would you like to be that strong?''
20519New?"
20519Now do you understand?"
20519Now, Mr. Cornell, how about this theory of yours?"
20519Now, Mr. Cornell, may I see that postcard?"
20519Now, Steve, ready to steer?"
20519Now, suppose you tell me what happened?"
20519Now, what gives?"
20519Officer-- are you telepath or perceptive?"
20519Okay?"
20519Or a gunny sack weighted down with an anvil?
20519Or are you going to cut it off inch by inch and watch me suffer?"
20519Or did the Highways make you indulge in a running competition?"
20519Or did you come second class mail?"
20519Or did you just pick up the ones you wanted?
20519Or do they drum you out of the corps?"
20519Or had he spun me a yarn just to get me out of his house without a riot?
20519Or shall I lay one along your jaw and carry you?"
20519Or shall I put the big arm on you?"
20519Or would you rather wait until my parents are cured?
20519Or,"I went on bitterly,"is it the Hypocritic Oath?"
20519Or,"she added slyly,"have you been trained to prepare a patient for the full treatment?"
20519Painfully?"
20519Perhaps of kidnapping, or maybe illegal restraint?"
20519Ran twelfth in your class at Illinois, did n''t you?"
20519Relax, will you Steve?
20519Right?"
20519Right?#( Farrow nodded slowly.)
20519Sensible?"
20519Shall I please everybody by taking a bite of my hip- pocket artillery sights whilst testing the trigger pull with one forefinger?
20519She slipped her hands out sidewise on the backs of their seats, put her face between them and said,"Anybody got a cigarette, fellows?"
20519She tried:"Mr. Cornell?
20519She went on,"I suppose you would not be happy with the usual press release?"
20519So how long have I been here?#"Eight days."
20519So that you could watch her die at the rate of a sixty- fourth of an inch each hour?"
20519Something that really is not so?"
20519Somewhere, Old Adam must have been slightly to blame--?"
20519Sounds reasonable, does n''t it?"
20519Steve, can you hear me?"
20519Steve, if James Thorndyke had asked me to jump off the roof, I''d have asked him''what direction?''
20519Steve-- what are we up against?"
20519Stock?
20519Tell me, did anyone see you leave that apartment with Miss Lewis?"
20519Tell me, fellow, where are you now?"
20519That about it?"
20519The door opened and a big stubble- faced gorilla gazed out and snarled at me:"Are you the persistent character?"
20519The high jump?
20519The next awkward question comes up: What are we going to do with me?"
20519Then she looked up at me with troubled eyes and asked,"What are you going to do now, Steve?"
20519Then we cracked up.#"What did it?"
20519There ai n''t no woman in this room, see?"
20519This is not my own idea alone, but the combined ideas of a number of people who have studied the human mind--""In other words, I''m nuts?"
20519To stand there and watch the tears in the eyes of a woman as she asks you,"But ca n''t you remember, son?"
20519To the door down there-- three beyond the one you''re perceiving now-- is there a wheelchair there?"
20519Understand?"
20519Understand?"
20519Well, have you ever eyed the human race in slightly another manner?"
20519What about the character in 913?"
20519What can I do for you?"
20519What could I say to that?
20519What do I have to do to gain this benefit?
20519What does he say?"
20519What happens next?"
20519What have I done, other than to be present just before several people turn up missing?
20519What is your next move?"
20519What possible justification have you for putting me through my jumps?"
20519What shall we do next?"
20519What should I do?
20519What the hell did I know, really?
20519What was Phelps getting at?
20519What was behind the spreading plague called Mekstrom''s Disease?
20519What we must know now is: Is Steve Cornell, the Mekstrom Carrier, now a non- carrier because he has contracted the disease?"
20519What were the oddly sinister symbols along otherwise ordinary roads?
20519What would it be now?"
20519What would you like to know?"
20519What''s cooking?"
20519When he saw the stuff taking hold, Thorndyke asked,"Steve, just who is Catherine?"
20519Where is?"
20519Where''s my nurse?"
20519Who could?"
20519Who do I have to kill?"
20519Who ever hunted ducks from a canoe, dressed in windbreakers and hightopped boots?
20519Who was the elusive enemy with powers even beyond those ESP had bestowed on mankind?
20519Why bother to ask me how I feel?"
20519Why must I fumble my way through this as I''ve fumbled through everything else?"
20519Why were there"blank"spots where telepathy did n''t work?
20519Why, then, had Catherine come here to place herself in their hands?
20519Will Steve catch Mekstrom''s Disease?
20519Will you help bring to the Earth''s People the blessing that is now denied them?"
20519Without knowing that I was asking, I cried out,"But why?"
20519You ask me,''am I going to live or die?''
20519You do n''t mind?"
20519You''re no pinup boy, Steve, but-- and this may come as a shock to you-- women do n''t put one- tenth the stock in pulchritude that men do?
20519You''re not endowing them with extraterrestrial origin, are you?"
20519_ Lenient--?_"However, unless you are able to pay, I have no recourse but to exact the prison sentence of ninety days.
46774All, uncle? 46774 An''I s''pose I''m to let you know if I see what''s- his- name or Patterson on the way?"
46774And do you think I shall find him, uncle?
46774And have you heard nothing of Litizki?
46774And what do you think of it?
46774And what is your address?
46774And which of these hypotheses,asked Poubalov, guardedly,"do you consider the more probable?"
46774And you have nothing to tell me?
46774Are n''t they near enough together on this side to make it possible to watch both for their return? 46774 Are you engaged?"
46774Are you going to say anything about Lizzie?
46774Are you going to tell her what we have done?
46774Are you money- mad?
46774Are you seriously alarmed about it, uncle?
46774Better ask what has he done?
46774But tell me, my dear child, is there anything in the situation that promises a solution other than that found by the detectives and the reporters?
46774By the way, did you see anybody call at the house while you were waiting?
46774By the way,he said,"is there any communication between my room and the one in front?"
46774Can I see him?
46774Can there be more than one who would hound a poor Russian the world over?
46774Can you give me a seat in this car?
46774Could the nut have been removed then without the driver knowing it?
46774Could you see the man we were after?
46774Dangerous? 46774 Deserted you?"
46774Did Mr. Strobel have a second accident?
46774Did he seem quite well?
46774Did n''t the passenger pay his fare?
46774Did n''t you have some news for me, uncle? 46774 Did she tell you I was coming?"
46774Did you read about my daughter?
46774Did you see anything?
46774Do I understand you to say that you expect to have news of your-- Mr. Strobel before the day is over?
46774Do n''t you know that it has n''t come, that such a thing ca n''t be effected in a moment?
46774Do n''t you think it would be better, Clara,he said gently after they had exchanged a few words,"to withdraw for a while from public view?
46774Do you desert me, Vargovitch?
46774Do you know Paul Palovna''s address?
46774Do you know where Strobel hired his carriage?
46774Do you mean by''certain circumstances''his intended marriage?
46774Do you mean that you have been disappointed, uncle?
46774Do you mean to say that Mr. Strobel was a Nihilist?
46774Do you realize,returned Clara,"what might happen if I did n''t do something of this kind?
46774Do you remember,asked Clara,"the gentleman who called on Mr. Strobel the morning he was to be married?"
46774Do you think so?
46774Do you think,he asked,"that I would have time to go ashore and get a bottle of whisky?"
46774Do you want me to wait and go with you?
46774Do you wish it?
46774Do you, indeed?
46774Do? 46774 Do?"
46774Do?
46774Does he say that he drove Mr. Strobel to the Park Square Station?
46774Does n''t she say anything more about his call than that?
46774Doubtless; but would they credit him with such loyalty? 46774 Everything comes at once, does n''t it?"
46774Exactly; but why do you hedge-- pardon the term-- why do you set forth the conclusion with reservation? 46774 Forgive?
46774Going to be married, was he?
46774Good- morning,said Poubalov, gutturally;"this is Madame White, I believe?"
46774Has anybody been to see you this morning?
46774Has he gone?
46774Have you seen the driver of the closed carriage?
46774Have you such evidence as that? 46774 He was frightened away?"
46774He would lead us away from the scene of his operations, do n''t you see? 46774 Hello, Litizki,"exclaimed the young man,"where in the world are you going rigged out as if it were winter?"
46774Here is Ivan Strobel, more prosperous than we, with more powerful friends, and what has Poubalov done to him? 46774 How could she?"
46774How could you give him the pictures, Clara?
46774How did you come to see Poubalov?
46774I am indeed glad to see you, Strobel,he said, his deep tones vibrant as a church bell;"may I come in?"
46774I am very much obliged to you, Mr. Billings,said Clara;"I suppose you went directly to the Old Colony Depot after that?"
46774I do n''t think so, and what I really tried to ask was whether she were in love with anybody?
46774I only came,said the tailor,"to ask if there is any news of Mr. Strobel?
46774I suppose it would be hard to ignore it altogether, but could n''t you omit saying anything of the rumors that have connected their names?
46774I suppose it would be vain to ask you what you are going to do?
46774I wonder,he mused at last,"if this could have been accident?"
46774I? 46774 Is he the sort that carries a gun in one pocket and a razor in another?"
46774Is it any wonder, Alexander Poubalov?
46774Is it possible,asked Clara in a subdued voice,"that you have really been trying to find Ivan all along?"
46774Is it the noon train, Miss Hilman?
46774Is n''t there some way that you can detain Billings,she suggested,"until Litizki arrives?"
46774Is that all?
46774Is there such a thing as love of fair play in you?
46774It is very hard to understand it all,responded Clara;"but what makes you think Poubalov is better than we have thought him?"
46774It seems better, does n''t it?
46774It''s a splendid argument,said Paul when she had finished;"I suppose you were attracted by his very frankness in admitting that he is a spy?
46774Let us go straight to the hotel,said Mr. Pembroke;"I suppose there''s nothing you want to do to- night?"
46774May I hope that no offense will be taken,said Poubalov,"if I say that I planned to tell these things to you only?
46774May I light a cigarette?
46774May I tell you something?
46774May there not be reasons for my counsel-- reasons that you do not understand?
46774May we go to his room? 46774 Michael,"she cried,"could you overtake the car he is on?"
46774Mine will do no harm,answered Clara, quietly;"did n''t you hear him say he was bound to get it anyway?
46774Mrs. White,he said gravely,"have you any reason to think that Strobel and your daughter went away together?"
46774Mrs. White,he said,"you have shown me Lizzie''s letter; will you let me help you if I can?"
46774Mrs. White,she said tremulously,"you wo n''t show this letter to reporters, or detectives, or anybody else, will you?"
46774Must we begin where we left off yesterday?
46774My dear girl, is it not enough?
46774My poor child,he said,"you have heard everything, I suppose?"
46774No,he answered uneasily;"what good purpose would it serve?"
46774No,replied Lizzie;"what has this man you mention got to do with it?"
46774No,replied Louise, coming forward and entering the parlor;"has he gone?
46774No,''tain''t, not long, but you would n''t have me stop in front of the house to pull''em up, would you?
46774Nothing is so dreadful as uncertainty,replied Clara;"you''ll be very careful what you write then?"
46774Now, miss?
46774Now,he reflected,"shall I tell the police where to look for Ivan Strobel, or shall I consult with his lady?
46774Of Poubalov? 46774 Of course you must, but I was just leading up to this question: What in the world do you want of Mr. Litizki this evening?"
46774Oh,said her uncle, apparently relieved,"is that all?"
46774Only one?
46774Poubalov?
46774Publicity? 46774 Show him into the library, please,"answered Clara, then to Poubalov--"Will you pardon me?
46774So you are going to New York to- day?
46774Strange time of night to do things in a hurry,remarked Poubalov, still aiming his weapon at the young man;"do you belong here?"
46774Strobel was a good man,said one, after a long pause;"but what could any of us do?"
46774Tell me, child,he exclaimed,"why you have come?"
46774Tell me,she said, looking straight into his eyes,"why did you not wish to meet Billings?"
46774That is quite a long way from Park Street, is n''t it? 46774 There are two ferries, are n''t there?"
46774This little front room, too?
46774To what purpose, then, may I attribute your call?
46774Was his name Billings?
46774Was n''t there a deeper reason, Mrs. White, for your daughter''s reluctance to go to Ivan Strobel''s wedding?
46774Was she here when the stranger called?
46774Was there anybody there whom you knew?
46774Well,said the landlady at last as they stood on the landing beside Poubalov''s door,"do you see anything you like?"
46774Were we anywhere near the car?
46774What Russian, uncle? 46774 What could he wish to do against poor Russians, Nicholas Litizki, who have no intention of revisiting their native country?"
46774What do you mean, Clara?
46774What do you mean? 46774 What does he say?"
46774What is it you want?
46774What is it, dear?
46774What is it?
46774What is the matter?
46774What kind of a room do you want?
46774What sort of man was this, Mike, who talked to you?
46774What stable?
46774What was he like and where did he go?
46774What''s your plan, Miss Hilman?
46774What, in the name of all that is right, does Poubalov do here?
46774When one is in a foreign land, and has need of something, he will naturally apply to a fellow- countryman, will he not?
46774Where Patterson shook me, miss? 46774 Where are we, and where are they?"
46774Where did Mr. Strobel tell you to take him?
46774Where did you see her, Litizki?
46774Where to, miss?
46774Where to, sir?
46774Where?
46774Where?
46774Who is he?
46774Who is he?
46774Who is that talking?
46774Who was it?
46774Who was the caller and what was his business, if you happen to know?
46774Who? 46774 Whose rig was it?"
46774Why did n''t you go?
46774Why did you ask Billings that question?
46774Why did you think it was I?
46774Why do you say that?
46774Why not?
46774Why say that?
46774Why should you have feared?
46774Why try to compel me to stand on the same plane as you do?
46774Why, what''s in the paper,replied the landlady;"you''ve read the papers, I suppose?
46774Will I overhaul him, sir, right away?
46774Will you come into the next room a moment?
46774Will you do so?
46774Will you go downtown with me again this afternoon?
46774Will you send word to this Mr. Billings that I would like to see him?
46774Will you take me there?
46774Will you want me longer, miss?
46774Wo n''t you forgive me?
46774Would you know him again?
46774Would your employer spare you to help me to- morrow forenoon?
46774Yes, so I understood; but where?
46774Yes,admitted Peter,"but in the Strobel matter you do not forget what the police have discovered, do you?
46774Yes,she answered;"wo n''t you ride to the station with me?"
46774Yes,she replied in a low tone, while she and Paul kept as far back in the gloom of the carriage as they could;"have you ever seen him before?"
46774Yes?
46774You are still in doubt, then?
46774You are sure of this, I suppose,exclaimed Paul;"but when could it have been done?"
46774You can spare the time now, I suppose?
46774You have an idea, then,he said,"as to the correct explanation?"
46774You have come to tell me something about Mr. Poubalov, or Mr. Strobel, or both?
46774You have said that you love me,she said as calmly as possible;"can you ask me to believe that when you deliberately cause me the most cruel grief?
46774You have seen him, then?
46774You know that the secret society to which I referred adopted the term nihilism as a definition of its principles, do you not? 46774 You know where he lives then?"
46774You want me, then, do you?
46774You went to that quaint- looking house, of course?
46774You will permit me to hand you to a carriage, Miss Hilman? 46774 You will then keep Strobel a prisoner,"muttered Litizki,"until you have wrung from him by cruelty what you have come for?"
46774You''re not going to leave the house, I hope?
46774''An''what?''
46774''Go''n''to take Mr. Strobel to his wedding?''
46774''Hello,''says I,''how long you been driving?''
46774''I have n''t heard anything,''he answered excitedly;''who said I had?
46774''Why not?''
46774A father could n''t be more affectionate and kind; but in this matter, how can I yield to his wishes?
46774A shiver passed over her frame, and Louise inquired anxiously what was the matter?
46774Abandon?
46774After that, what matter?
46774And Litizki, what had become of him?
46774And have you seen either of them?
46774And may they not have conveyed such definite and fearful threats that he found it necessary to disappear?"
46774And, Mr. Bowker, can you not give me the name of the man who said he saw Mr. Strobel buy a ticket for New York?"
46774Any theor- ry to account for it?"
46774Are you aware that Poubalov may be, probably is, watching your every step?
46774Are you going to write to her?"
46774Are you sure that Poubalov spoke to nobody?"
46774As Mr. Pembroke walked him away, Clara heard Dexter croak:"What is she here for, Mat Pembroke?"
46774Ask Ralph and Paul to come to- morrow morning, will you, please?
46774Billings?"
46774Billings?"
46774Billings?"
46774Bowker?"
46774Bowker?"
46774Can you come?
46774Can you not suggest how I am to proceed to prove that and to rescue him?"
46774Can you place the coupé where you can see both doors?"
46774Clara spoke with a sudden energy that startled the driver,"was Mr. Strobel in the carriage when it was damaged?"
46774Could anything be more reasonable than to suppose that in some way the spy had frustrated the attempt of Litizki to help her?
46774Could it be that he was taking flight, too?
46774Could it be that she had heard nothing?
46774Could it have been his subtle purpose to interest her in a line of inquiry that should lead directly away from that?
46774Could she think of him as other than honorable and faithful?
46774Could this be the same Billings?
46774Did Billings drive to the station?
46774Did I do right?
46774Did he appear to be troubled about anything?"
46774Did he give the driver orders to go to the Park Square Station?
46774Did she hear her lover''s name?
46774Did somebody send you to tell me?"
46774Did you see Mr. Strobel speak or bow to anybody at the station?"
46774Did you see it?
46774Do n''t you know how the accident happened to our carriage?"
46774Do n''t you recall how I refused to answer, or evaded your questions?
46774Do n''t you see the cleverness of the plan?
46774Do n''t you see?
46774Do n''t you see?"
46774Do you mind telling me just what you told him?"
46774Do you refer to the suggested irregularities in his accounts?
46774Do you see that I honor you in the highest way that is possible for me?
46774Do you suppose, uncle dear, that that rumor disturbed me?
46774Do you understand me?"
46774Do you-- was Lizzie engaged?"
46774Does n''t it seem clear?"
46774Fear?
46774Had Poubalov lost Billings in the darkness, and, observing Litizki''s pursuit, purposely dodged hither and thither, to discomfit the tailor?
46774Had Poubalov, then, returned when she had weakly given up the watching, and abducted Ivan a second time?
46774Had he followed Billings?
46774Had she a right to listen?
46774Had she not heard how the great body of the nihilistic society was made up of the poor?
46774Has he been up to anything crooked?"
46774Has he ever told you about his life there?"
46774Has not everything he has done been done with a view to keeping me in Boston?
46774Has nothing been heard from Ivan?"
46774Has your detective seen the driver of the closed carriage?"
46774Has your revolution so far progressed as to convince you that it is worth while to waste energy?"
46774Have I not been good to listen, and ask no questions and volunteer no advice?"
46774Have I not learned to endure anything that can happen?"
46774Have n''t you seen him?"
46774Have you any obser- rvation to make upon Mr. Strobel''s absence?
46774Have you seen Mr. Litizki to- day?"
46774Have you written yet?"
46774He had surrendered his room; he must, therefore, have packed his belongings; had they been disturbed?
46774He seemed----""Did you tell him I had gone to New York?"
46774Honestly, would n''t you rather find out the truth, even if it did upset your first theory?"
46774How can I expect anything but unmixed evil from such a man?
46774How can I promise to believe you without confessing that, for this moment at least, I accept your own style of intercourse?"
46774How could she tell?
46774How did you find out?"
46774How long would Poubalov stand there and allow him to reflect?
46774How long you been living here?"
46774I suppose he had plenty of friends who were aware of his intentions?"
46774I suppose it is almost unkind to ask if there is any news?"
46774I suppose the evidence of the cabman would be satisfactory, would n''t it?"
46774I''m sure you''ve been very good and brave, Miss Hilman, but what is one to think?"
46774If Ralph Harmon were under suspicion, could she fail to defend him?
46774If he had abducted Ivan, would he hesitate to abduct Litizki if he found that the little tailor was in his way?
46774If so, who is it?"
46774If we had been married, and Ivan had disappeared, would it not be my duty as well as my inclination to turn the world upside down to find him?
46774If you only knew that Mr. Strobel was sick in a hospital, now, it would be better, would n''t it?"
46774In the very hopelessness of his passion would he not first murder Strobel, and then Clara herself?
46774In this house?
46774Is it customary, Mr. Billings, for cabmen to leave the curtains of their carriages closely drawn after they leave a funeral party?"
46774Is it too much to ask you to call at my uncle''s house some time during the evening?"
46774Is it you who would stand by and let this spy work his will among us?"
46774Is n''t it the same, Mike, with which you started to take Mr. Strobel to his wedding?"
46774Is n''t there something that I can do now?
46774Is that consistent?
46774Is there something you would like to have me say?"
46774It ca n''t be helped in a minute, can it?
46774It had happened upon a railroad train; what more probable, then, than that the railroad officials had suppressed the news?
46774It hurts me to displease uncle, but what would you do?
46774It is hard to believe that he will go to extreme measures-- but what am I saying?
46774It was in Cambridge, was it not?"
46774Ivan had befriended him; must she distrust him, too?
46774Litizki thought a moment, and then asked:"May I see Poubalov''s cane?"
46774Louise tucked her arm affectionately within Clara''s, and asked:"Where now, dear?"
46774May I ask, Miss Hilman, how you passed the night?"
46774May I copy Miss Lizzie''s address?"
46774May I leave it to you to prevent Litizki, if possible, from any act that would be indiscreet, or worse?"
46774May they not have imagined that, under certain circumstances, he might be induced to betray them?
46774Mr. Pembroke asked:"Well, my man, who is it you have seen?"
46774Mr. Pembroke suspected Dexter, but what could he do?
46774Mrs. White, may we step into your dining- room?"
46774Must you go now?
46774Must you hurry?"
46774No?
46774Now what better could he do than divert suspicion in my mind from Lizzie to those whom he calls Nihilists, or even upon himself?
46774One officious gentleman remarked to Poubalov:"You will, of course, report this matter to the police?
46774Page 21, changed''?''
46774Poubalov must be checkmated, Strobel rescued; and if in accomplishing this end, the spy should be-- Well, what then?
46774Poubalov?"
46774Poubalov?"
46774Shall I follow him?"
46774Shall I get you anything to read?"
46774Shall I tell your mother anything?"
46774Shall we breakfast together, Paul Palovna?"
46774Shaughnessy looked doubtingly at Mr. Pembroke, and then said:"May I have the honor of calling on you later, then?"
46774Should he not end his misery then and there, and cheat the hangman?
46774Should it make any difference just because the formal word had not been spoken that was to make us husband and wife?"
46774So she asked,"What did he say, Michael?"
46774Strobel must be freed, but how?
46774Strobel?"
46774Strobel?"
46774Strobel?"
46774Strobel?"
46774Strobel?"
46774Strobel?"
46774Strobel?"
46774Strobel?"
46774Suppose it were Poubalov, what then?
46774Tell me, Miss Hilman, will you not, can you not believe that I tell you the truth?"
46774The girl half raised her head, choked back the sobs and replied,"Who?"
46774The release must be effected by some other hand than his own; but what matter?
46774The spy would have plenty of money, he could have put up at a hotel; why had he not done so?
46774The unhappy man tried to think, not so much to explain how it had happened that the dagger had not done its work, but how should he act now?
46774Then she said in a quiet but not unkind voice:"Lizzie, have you seen Alexander Poubalov this morning?"
46774Then, had he gone voluntarily, might it not be possible that he did not wish her to search for him?
46774There was a marked pause after Louise had gone, Clara waiting for Poubalov, and the spy-- who can tell what was coursing through his mind?
46774They were not direct, but was ever Poubalov direct save when telling a straightforward lie?
46774They were speaking of him; who were they?
46774This was so, and no newspaper could make it otherwise; but how should it happen that the reporters had missed the episode?
46774To put Lizzie White on her guard?
46774Uncle, what do you mean?"
46774Was it not an inevitable inference that Billings had been hired by the Russian?
46774Was it spoken in anger?
46774Was not that the name of the man whom Miss Hilman had mentioned as the driver of Strobel''s second carriage?
46774Was that a groan that she had heard behind one of those doors?
46774Was that he taking another carriage?
46774Was this to be the end of the conversation?
46774Well, Litizki?"
46774Well, what are you going to do now that you are here?"
46774Well?"
46774Were all his railings against superstition and the supernatural but empty words?
46774What attitude might she not take, therefore, in order to carry out her part in the spy''s design?
46774What better, what else could I do?
46774What cared he for details at the very end of his search?
46774What could be done to avert them?
46774What could he be doing in America, and what could have led him to call at just this juncture?
46774What did her uncle''s words mean?
46774What did you think I had come for?"
46774What do you suppose I should do without you?"
46774What does he care how much poor Litizki dogs his steps, so long as the victim of his intrigue and villainy is hundreds of miles away?
46774What else could I do?"
46774What has he got to do with it?"
46774What has he not done that is cruel, barbarous and wicked?
46774What have I found to be the chief requisite of leadership, whether in guiding the state, or seeking to wreck it, or in commerce?
46774What have you done with the man I do love?"
46774What have you found?"
46774What have you seen?
46774What is his purpose?
46774What is it you know, or think of?"
46774What might Paul accomplish?
46774What should a peaceable lodger not do to a man who stealthily enters his house by night?
46774What should he do?
46774What should he do?
46774What stable does he drive for?"
46774What train are you to take?
46774What was the matter?"
46774What was this sense of loss but a relief from the dominating influence of Poubalov''s stronger personality?
46774What would Clara say?
46774What would you say?"
46774When did you first see the coupé?"
46774When is it to be?"
46774When shall I tell him to call?"
46774When, Nicholas Litizki?"
46774Where did you leave your passengers, the persons you took to the funeral, I mean?"
46774Where his devotion to Reason, that false goddess whose dictates had seemed to him infallible?
46774Where is it, and when shall I come?"
46774Where now was all the exaltation of heroism that had sustained him?
46774Where, then, was the long account of the second day''s developments?
46774White?"
46774White?"
46774White?"''
46774Whither should she go?
46774Who is he?"
46774Who would disbelieve me if I should calmly report to the police that you came as a burglar, and that I shot at you in protection of property and life?
46774Who?
46774Why did n''t you let mother write to me the day she received my letter?"
46774Why disguise the fact that Poubalov is a powerful enemy?
46774Why had he presumed to undertake the hopeless task of outwitting Poubalov?
46774Why had he so insanely thrown away his revolver?
46774Why had n''t she mentioned what her clew was?
46774Why had she not heard his report when he was there to make it?
46774Why not continue your frankness, and be strictly open with me?"
46774Why not say it does mean?"
46774Why not tell you then about it?
46774Why should I?
46774Why should n''t he think what other people thought?
46774Will that do?"
46774Will the search and the waiting never end?"
46774Will you be careful, Mrs. White?
46774Will you be there?"
46774Will you begin at once?"
46774Will you care to hear from me from time to time?"
46774Will you come to- morrow?"
46774Will you do that to- night?"
46774Will you get in?"
46774Will you make them for me?"
46774Will you pass the afternoon in your room, Paul?"
46774Will you sit down just a minute longer, Mr. Billings?
46774Will you undertake to look him up?
46774Will you wait here"( they were in the dining- room),"in case I should want you?"
46774Will you, Lou, dear?"
46774Will you, then, love and torture me, too?"
46774With Lizzie''s name in the papers, and everybody believing that she ran away with Mr. Strobel, what should I say?"
46774With the insight he himself had given her into his character, would he not do everything possible to throw her off the right track?
46774Wo n''t you tell me just what you told him?"
46774Would I not dare?
46774Would Palovna, an intelligent man, free from excitement, condemn and ridicule Litizki''s assertions as wild and imaginary?
46774Would he proceed promptly to put into execution whatever design he might have for injuring Ivan?
46774Would it not be madness in us to ignore his information?"
46774Would not the disappointed passion that had led him to all but the commission of suicide now prompt him to murder his prisoner?
46774Would the spy, then,"get away,"and by this manner of exit?
46774Yes?
46774Yet why should Ivan, resident in and prospective citizen of the United States, fear him, an"official agent of a friendly government"?
46774You are familiar with it, and do n''t mind traveling alone for so short a time, do you?"
46774You do n''t know who he is, do you?
46774You perceive the distrust that I can not conquer, but you believe me, do you not?"
46774You remember looking in at the hotel entrance and seeing Dexter, your uncle and a third man walking in the corridor?
46774You said you had read the papers?"
46774You will let me pay for a carriage, wo n''t you?"
46774You''ll take the noon train I suppose?
46774You, was it you?
46774after"what we have done?"
46774and could his going away portend any failure for the plan that Litizki had executed at such heroic self- sacrifice?
46774and that if there were one brought to light, that there might be many others whose identity would ever remain unknown to her?
46774asked Clara;"you could n''t suppose that I was in any danger in Mrs. White''s house, could you?"
46774blustered the passenger,"you wo n''t have your assailant arrested?
46774cried Litizki;"does he ever do anything but spy upon the poor?
46774dear, what can you do?"
46774did you really think that Poubalov''s eyes did not penetrate your flimsy disguise?
46774echoed Bowker with his stare of surprise;"why should you ask that, Miss Hilman?"
46774echoed both his listeners, and"where?"
46774exclaimed Clara eagerly;"but what do you mean?
46774exclaimed Clara, with just a touch of impatience;"do n''t you see that if it had been accident, we should have known of it?
46774exclaimed Lizzie, bitterly, and then in the same breath--"You found it quite possible that he could have come, did n''t you?"
46774exclaimed the good lady;"whatever should I write about then?
46774howled Mike, beside himself with disappointment and rage,"do n''t yees see I''ve got to get aboard?"
46774is that all you can think of?
46774moaned Mrs. White;"why, oh, why has she done this?"
46774notoriety?
46774or was it a mere coincidence of names?
46774replied Mrs. White, with a little gasp;"what made you think so?"
46774responded Poubalov quietly;"you are very sure of that?"
46774said Mr. Pembroke, turning to his niece;"did you tell him you were coming to New York?"
46774said Paul, whose brows had contracted ominously when he heard the name, and who took advantage of the pause to ask,"What Poubalov is that?"
46774she cried;"how could you think such a thing?
46774she repeated,"where should he be?
46774sneered Litizki;"do you forget that there are two women in the case?
46774there''s a side entrance to the Crawford House, is n''t there?
46774to?"
46774what could be worse than the notoriety I have already acquired?
46774what could he do?"
46774what did he say?"
46774what have you to do with it, I should like to know?
46774what will you do?"
46774where else if she heard it?
46774why was not Paul here to tell her just what happened at this point, wherever it was?
46774will you take my business and dispose of it for me?"
46774you did mean business, did n''t you?"
9990A brownstone front?
9990A miser, I suppose?
9990Am I?
9990Am I?
9990And allowed him to keep on striking me?
9990And how did you leave your mother, Robert?
9990And if he wo n''t do it?
9990And what do they say?
9990And what do you think he will care for that?
9990And where did ye get it?
9990And you have made yourself a prisoner here for my sake?
9990Any message from your father?
9990Are they just out of the water?
9990Are you addressing me?
9990Are you going back with us?
9990Are you going out in your boat this afternoon?
9990Are you going to murder me?
9990Are you hurt, sir?
9990Are you quite determined to leave me here?
9990Are you really Ben Haley?
9990But what will become of your mother during that time?
9990But what will we do other days, Robert?
9990But why should he keep back the knowledge? 9990 But you do n''t expect to travel round the world on two hundred dollars, surely?"
9990But you want it yourself?
9990But, suppose you ca n''t find any work?
9990Can you set me across the river?
9990Captain Evans,said he,"is that boy a passenger?"
9990Captain Haley, I believe?
9990Captain Haley,said he, approaching and touching his hat,"will you give me leave to go on shore for the young gentleman that was left?"
9990Could anything be more fortunate?
9990Could n''t I go as cabin- boy?
9990Could n''t you sell your berries, Robert?
9990Did Captain Haley send you for me?
9990Did he ever get off the island?
9990Did he have any reason for striking you, Halbert?
9990Did he say anything about what he had done with this thousand dollars or more?
9990Did he say you might?
9990Did my young friend, Robert Rushton, return with you?
9990Did n''t he ever speak to you on the subject?
9990Did you find any?
9990Did you hit him?
9990Did you not insist on going home with Hester Paine, when I had offered my escort?
9990Did you see him?
9990Did you strike him?
9990Did you suffer much inconvenience from your wound?
9990Did you?
9990Did you?
9990Did your father tell you?
9990Discharged?
9990Do n''t you see their boat?
9990Do n''t you think I might find some stored away in the cellar, for instance?
9990Do n''t you think I might learn after a while?
9990Do they see it?
9990Do you expect me to support you?
9990Do you hold yourself bound by such a promise?
9990Do you know how to fire a gun?
9990Do you know of any good, cheap hotel where I can put up?
9990Do you know to whom you are speaking, boy?
9990Do you know where I can find him?
9990Do you know where he lives?
9990Do you know who did it?
9990Do you mean Robert Rushton?
9990Do you mean it?
9990Do you mean that you have earned ninety cents to- day, Robert?
9990Do you mean to insult me?
9990Do you mean to say that I am not a gentleman?
9990Do you see this?
9990Do you think I am a child? 9990 Do you think I''m made of money?"
9990Do you think it would do any good, Bunsby,he said, after a pause,"to put this receipt in a bottle, as I did the letter?"
9990Do you think there is any chance of my father being yet alive?
9990Do you think they will come for us? 9990 Do you think, if I were alive, I would let any man rob me of the savings of my life?"
9990Does it? 9990 Does that look like going to the almshouse?"
9990Does that look like going to the poorhouse?
9990Does the old fool think he is going to keep me down here?
9990Eu- ro- pean hotel?
9990Good- morning, sir,said she,"And have yez business with me?"
9990Halbert Davis?
9990Has he got any father and mother?
9990Has n''t he got back?
9990Has the ship gone?
9990Have you a handkerchief?
9990Have you any messages to send by me, Rushton?
9990Have you asked him about it?
9990Have you bidden farewell to Hester Paine?
9990Have you brought the money with you?
9990Have you business with me?
9990Have you formed any definite plans about the manner of going?
9990Have you got another cane you''d like to have broken?
9990Have you got the gold with you?
9990Have you made up with him?
9990Have you seen Will Paine''s pony?
9990Have you seen the carpenter about repairing it?
9990Have you?
9990He did n''t tell you how much it was, nor how it was invested?
9990He did not spend the whole of it, did he?
9990Here? 9990 How am I doing it?
9990How are you, Davis?
9990How came he to trust you with the bag? 9990 How came it broken, then?"
9990How came that rock there?
9990How came you here?
9990How came you here?
9990How can I thank you?
9990How can you go?
9990How can you say that, when my father expressly stated it in the letter, written by him, from the boat in which he was drifting about on the ocean?
9990How dared he touch you?
9990How did he get free? 9990 How did it happen?"
9990How did you break it?
9990How did you happen to be at leisure?
9990How do you make that out?
9990How do you sell your berries?
9990How is all this going to end, Bunsby?
9990How is it that father left no property? 9990 How is it?"
9990How is that, captain?
9990How is that?
9990How is that?
9990How is that?
9990How is that?
9990How long ago was this? 9990 How long do you think we shall have to stay here?"
9990How long has he been gone?
9990How long have you been here?
9990How much did it cost?
9990How much do you suppose?
9990How much is it?
9990How much will a new one cost?
9990How so?
9990How soon do you wish to start, Robert?
9990I am sure you will, Robert, But wo n''t you come in?
9990I do n''t know what is a fair price?
9990I hear you are going to boarding school?
9990I hope, Mr. Morgan,he said,"that you have sufficient confidence in me to intrust me I with the command of the_ Argonaut_ on her next voyage?"
9990I see you do n''t know me, Uncle Paul?
9990I suppose that is your only object?
9990I suppose you have read''Robinson Crusoe?''
9990I suppose you understand what I have to say?
9990I suppose you wo n''t take your boat with you?
9990I thought you worked in the factory?
9990I understand then, Mr. Davis,he said, finally,"that you deny the justice of this claim?"
9990I understand you then refuse to pay the money?
9990I wonder how it happened?
9990I wonder how it would seem to live on such an island as this?
9990I wonder if he has any one with him?
9990I wonder if it rains often?
9990I wonder what is the name of this island?
9990I wonder whether he has any business with him?
9990I''ll give you two dollars for the use of it; the next three months?
9990If you have no money, why do you come to me?
9990In what way, sir?
9990Indeed-- how is that?
9990Indeed?
9990Is Mr. Morgan at home?
9990Is Will home?
9990Is he a man you can trust, captain?
9990Is he going to pass it over, I wonder?
9990Is he going to pay the expenses?
9990Is it any business that I can attend to?
9990Is it my own boy talks to me like that?
9990Is not that your name?
9990Is that you, lad?
9990Is that your hatchet?
9990Is there any chance of making Mr. Davis return the money my father deposited with him?
9990Is there any clew to his identity?
9990Is there any one in it?
9990Is there any reason for it, or is it merely a prejudice?
9990Is there no chance of your being on better terms?
9990Is there? 9990 Is there?"
9990Is this mutiny?
9990Is this your final decision?
9990Is this your money?
9990Is your mother at home?
9990It is n''t your fault, Robert?
9990It is something unusual to take passengers, is it not?
9990It was a noble act, my boy; what is your name?
9990It''ll about kill the old man, wo n''t it?
9990It''s about a mile across the river, is n''t it?
9990It''s about the boat, is n''t it?
9990It''s true then, is it?
9990Lend you my boat? 9990 Let me see,"he reflected,"where is he most likely to hide his treasure?
9990May I ask if the boy is a relative of yours?
9990May I ask what is your motive in calling upon me?
9990Mother,said Robert,"did you know anything of this money father speaks of?"
9990Mr. Davis,he said,"if there is no truth in this story, do you think my father, with death before his eyes, would have written it to my mother?"
9990No legal business of your own?
9990No room? 9990 No, no; did n''t I tell you I had n''t got any?"
9990Now where do you think he''s gone?
9990Oh, Robert, what is going to become of us?
9990Perhaps you have got turned out?
9990Robert,said the captain, one day,"how is it that you and Mr. Haley seem to have nothing to say to each other?"
9990Shall I go and look for him?
9990Shall I?
9990Shall we go to market?
9990Shall you miss me much?
9990Shall you want some more to- morrow?
9990Shine your boots, mister?
9990Smash yer baggage?
9990So my simple- minded uncle thinks he has drawn my teeth, does he? 9990 So you''re going to leave town, Rushton?''"
9990So, you''ve been berrying again?
9990Suppose you find yourself without money in a foreign land?
9990Supposing this story to be true,he said, in a half- sneering tone,"you are, of course, prepared to show me my receipt for the money?"
9990Surely, Mrs. Rushton, you do not approve Robert''s scheme?
9990Surely, you will not be so inhuman?
9990That''s your name, is n''t it?
9990The captain did n''t know of your coming?
9990The widow Rushton''s son?
9990Then he is employed in the factory?
9990Then how can you just have received a letter from him?
9990Then it is n''t your boat?
9990Then she wo n''t care about his stealing?
9990Then what have you been doing with your savings all these years?
9990Then where''ll you git the money for me?
9990Then you have not heard what happened at sea?
9990Then you have the receipt still, father?
9990Then you know him?
9990Then you''ll speak to father about it, wo n''t you?
9990Was I? 9990 Was Robert at the boat?"
9990Was that letter received?
9990Well, Robert,said Captain Haley,"how do you like the island?"
9990Well, Robert,said Captain Smith, on their arrival,"what are your plans?
9990Well, captain?
9990Well, what do you want me to do?
9990Well, what is it?
9990Well, will you unlock it now?
9990Were you?
9990Were your father''s adventures as remarkable as yours?
9990What are you going to do now?
9990What are you going to do?
9990What are you going to do?
9990What are you, then?
9990What authority have you for saying that? 9990 What can I do for you, Robert?"
9990What can you mean, Robert?
9990What did he do that for, lad?
9990What did he do that for?
9990What did she say?
9990What do you mean by looking me in the face in that impudent manner?
9990What do you mean by that, sir?
9990What do you mean by that, sir?
9990What do you mean, Bunsby?
9990What do you mean?
9990What do you mean?
9990What do you mean?
9990What do you mean?
9990What do you want for them?
9990What do you want me to do?
9990What does he do with his money?
9990What for?
9990What have I done?
9990What have I to say?
9990What have you done? 9990 What have you done?"
9990What have you got to say about it?
9990What have you there, Jimmy?
9990What have you to say, Robert?
9990What is that, captain?
9990What is the meaning of this foolery?
9990What is to prevent me, I should like to know?
9990What kind of a hotel is that?
9990What made him break it?
9990What made you let him have it?
9990What made you make such a noise?
9990What makes the door stick so?
9990What of that?
9990What put such a thing into your head?
9990What shall I do,asked Robert, in a low voice,"if he comes out?"
9990What shall I do? 9990 What shall we do?"
9990What sort of a place are you going to try for?
9990What will Will Paine say? 9990 What will the sailors say when I do not return?"
9990What would mother say if she should see me now?
9990What''s that?
9990What''s that?
9990What''s the matter, Halbert?
9990What''s the matter?
9990What''s the matter?
9990What''s the matter?
9990What, are you back again?
9990What, do you know about it?
9990What, then, is it?
9990What, were you doing with that candle?
9990What?
9990When will you be home, Robert?
9990When will you see him?
9990Where are you going?
9990Where away?
9990Where did you get your money to pay the passage?
9990Where did you raise money to pay your expenses?
9990Where do you keep your provisions, then?
9990Where have you been all this time?
9990Where have you been?
9990Where is Bates?
9990Where is he? 9990 Where is he?"
9990Where is the boy?
9990Where is the gentleman?
9990Where is your ship?
9990Where shall I go, uncle?
9990Where shall we build our house?
9990Where shall we sleep?
9990Where''s the key?
9990Whereabout would he be likely to land?
9990Which you wo n''t do?
9990Who are you that call me Uncle Paul?
9990Who are you?
9990Who can be writing to mother from Boston?
9990Who do you mane, Johnny?
9990Who do you mean?
9990Who do you mean?
9990Who fired the gun?
9990Who has done this, Captain Haley?
9990Who is going to send me there?
9990Who is it?
9990Who is it?
9990Who is that in the boat?
9990Who tied you to the tree, lad?
9990Who was that man who came across in your boat?
9990Whose is it?
9990Whose money is that, Robert?
9990Why did n''t you catch him?
9990Why did n''t you volunteer, then?
9990Why do n''t you borrow it sometimes?
9990Why do n''t you go after him?
9990Why do you come to disturb me, after so many years?
9990Why do you say that? 9990 Why not?
9990Why not?
9990Why not?
9990Why not?
9990Why not?
9990Why not?
9990Why should n''t we have some?
9990Why will he?
9990Why wo n''t I?
9990Why, then, did you tell me fifteen minutes since that I might buy one? 9990 Why?"
9990Why?
9990Will you count it, and see if it is all right?
9990Will you promise that, father?
9990Will you take care of some money for me until I get a chance to deposit it in the savings bank?
9990Will you take us?
9990Wo n''t I?
9990Wo n''t the letter prove anything?
9990Wo n''t the young beggar be in a precious scrape when it''s found out? 9990 Wo n''t you come in?"
9990Wo n''t you walk in, sir?
9990Would n''t Mr. Davis take you back into the factory if I went to him and told him how much we needed the money?
9990Would you like some of the fish for supper?
9990Would you mind selling it to me if I will give you money enough to buy a new one?
9990You are?
9990You do n''t think this man will betray his trust?
9990You have n''t bought it?
9990You have n''t done anything wrong?
9990You have not found your father?
9990You mean that we shall go fishing?
9990You mean the trees?
9990You stay with me?
9990You think you would like it?
9990You wo n''t desert me, Bunsby?
9990You wo n''t leave me to perish miserably on this island?
9990You would n''t have the heart to chate your ould mother out of her share?
9990You would n''t turn out your sister''s son, would you, Uncle Paul?
9990Your wife does n''t know of it?
9990Your wife knew you had left the money in his hands?
9990After a little unimportant conversation, he said:"Mr. Davis, may I ask the favor of a few minutes''conversation with you in private?"
9990Am I to pay the interest to your wife?"
9990Are you here of your own accord?"
9990Are you not proud of your son?"
9990Arrived at Calcutta, the question arose:"What shall we do with him?"
9990At length he turned to the widow, and said, abruptly:"Do you not know my name?"
9990But Mr. Davis has, no doubt, supplied her with money?"
9990But he was not quick enough, Robert Rushton had already approached Hester, and said,"Miss Hester, will you allow me to see you home?"
9990But how could he even do this?
9990But how is it you are not at the factory?"
9990But is n''t this a sudden idea, your going to school?"
9990But was these no hope of recovery?
9990But, Will, are you in earnest about the boat?"
9990But, after all, was it certain that his father was dead?
9990But, tell me, how came you here?"
9990Can I help you?"
9990Can you oblige me by taking care of the money?"
9990Can you tell me where he went?"
9990Come, this is rather better than dry bread, is n''t it?"
9990Could his eyes deceive him, or was this really the man whom he had so grossly injured?
9990Could it be that he was to die, when life had only just commenced, thousands of miles away from home, in utter solitude?
9990Davis?"
9990Davis?"
9990Did Halbert speak to you?"
9990Did he make you his confidant?"
9990Did he tell you so?"
9990Did n''t I tell you, mother, I would find something to do?"
9990Did you go as a sailor?"
9990Did you think this was the only fish I caught?"
9990Do n''t you hear it?"
9990Do you know me now?"
9990Do you know the name of this island?"
9990Do you remember when the cars came so near running off the track a short time since at Millville?"
9990Do you think there is any chance for us?"
9990Dunham?"
9990For what place did he buy a ticket?"
9990Had he come so far for this?
9990Had such been the case, do you think I would have kept the knowledge of it from your mother so long after your father''s supposed death?"
9990Had the dead come back from the bottom of the sea to expose him?
9990Had they departed?
9990Has she authorized you to speak for her?"
9990Have n''t you got any meat in the house?"
9990Have n''t you got one?"
9990Have n''t you got some somewhere?"
9990Have n''t you heard the news?
9990Have you seen anything in the line of grub here- abouts?"
9990He did not at first recognize him, but said, inquiringly,"Well, my young friend, from whom do you come?"
9990He quickly leaped in, and asked:"What is the matter?
9990He received a good salary, did he not?"
9990He was stopped by a policeman, who demanded,"Whose bag is that, Johnny?"
9990He''s rich, is n''t he?"
9990How could Robert have learned anything of his treachery to his father?
9990How did it happen that Mr. Morgan, one of the merchant princes of New York, had become interested in an obscure country boy?
9990How did you happen to come in advance of the captain?"
9990How long do you want to stay in Calcutta?"
9990How much money did he take away with him?"
9990How much will my passage be?"
9990How much, money do you think I have here?"
9990How soon will the train be here?"
9990How will you make a living?"
9990How''s that?"
9990I suppose you are pretty rich, eh?"
9990I''ll give you three dollars, if you say so?"
9990Is it far?"
9990Is that all you have to tell me?"
9990Is this all you have to say to me?
9990Is your father at home?"
9990Now, how much better off should I have been if I had kept my place in the factory?
9990Now, how would you like to have some fish for supper?"
9990On the day after the funeral, the latter met Captain Rushton and Robert, and said:"Will you come to my office this afternoon at three o''clock?"
9990One day when Mrs. Start addressed him as Mr. Smith, he asked:"Why do you call me by that name?"
9990Paine?"
9990Paine?"
9990Plane''s bill when it comes in?"
9990Rushton?"
9990Shall his act go unrewarded?"
9990Shall it be roast or boiled?"
9990Should he find a boat?
9990So you are going to see a little of the world?"
9990There''s an old man named Nichols lives on the other side, is n''t there?"
9990This is a chape hotel, is n''t it?"
9990Was Captain Rushton still alive?
9990Was his father still alive, or was this letter a communication from the dead?
9990Was n''t he afraid you''d steal it?"
9990Was there any possibility of his averting it?
9990We''ll be company for each other, wo n''t we, Uncle Paul?"
9990What are you going to do about it?"
9990What are you going to do with them?"
9990What do you think of his successor, Captain Haley?
9990What do you think of that?"
9990What have you to say to that?"
9990What if the latter should light on some of his various hiding places for money?
9990What in the meantime would become of his mother?
9990What is his name?"
9990What made you lock me in?"
9990What name shall I say?"
9990What room are you going to give me?"
9990What will a new one cost you?"
9990What will his father say?"
9990What will people say if you turn me out of doors?"
9990What''s that the boy said?
9990When did you get home?"
9990When he finished, he said,"Now tell me where you keep your vegetables, Uncle Paul?"
9990When was it we launched it?"
9990When will you see about it?"
9990Where are you going?"
9990Where did you get it?
9990Where did you pick them?"
9990Where do you want to go?"
9990Where is he, I wonder, and how long have I got to wait for him?
9990Who has done this?"
9990Who then could detect his crime?
9990Why should it?"
9990Will you make your home on board the ship, or board in the city, during our stay in port?"
9990Will you receive it with our best wishes for your continued success as a teacher of penmanship?"
9990Will you take him?"
9990Will you wait a minute while I go and ask her?"
9990Wo n''t you come in?"
9990Wo n''t you need any of this money for present expenses?"
9990Would n''t my wife be surprised if she knew her husband were so rich?"
9990Would your father sell it?"
9990You are sure your mother is well provided for?
9990You do n''t mean to say that you need the whole house?"
9990You have not forgotten?"
9990You prefer to be alone rather than to have me with you?"
9990You remember, before I sailed for Calcutta, I called here and asked you to restore the sum of five thousand dollars deposited with you by my father?"
9990You say there was not only a hole in the bottom, but it was otherwise defaced and injured?"
9990You will come, wo n''t you?"
9990do you dare insult me in my own office?"
9990my dear son, how came you here?"
9990repeated Halbert,"and to whom?"
9990said our hero, surprised,"When did it come?"
34347A new one?
34347A whetstone?
34347About thirteen years ago?
34347Afraid he might run across some of that private stuff?
34347Ai n''t that enough?
34347Ai n''t you going with them?
34347Am I mistaken, or do I see a long canoe filled with men?
34347An''ai n''t it jest wonderful about Dave? 34347 An''did he go through the winder?"
34347An----"Hello, are you awake, Shadow?
34347And Plum was following Hamilton?
34347And do you remember the big cannon cracker we set off in the courtyard?
34347And each was alone?
34347And have n''t you noticed the heat?
34347And how long will it take us to reach Nanpi?
34347And if I wo n''t?
34347And if he wo n''t?
34347And stolen the bark?
34347And what about Shadow Hamilton?
34347And what about you men?
34347And what of the people where we are to stop?
34347And where did he go to?
34347And where is your brother now?
34347And who is going to pay the bill?
34347And yet you ca n''t remember?
34347And you have n''t heard anything?
34347And you know about the loss of some of the class stick- pins about three weeks ago?
34347And you will keep still about this?
34347And your Latin?
34347Any of the other boys?
34347Apologize, to_ you_?
34347Are n''t you afraid Plum will play some trick on you?
34347Are they at that back door?
34347Are they coming here?
34347Are we going down, as that sailor said?
34347Are you all ready?
34347Are you alone?
34347Are you dead certain you were asleep on the river?
34347Are you going to keep your eye on him?
34347Are you ready to sail?
34347Are you sure of that? 34347 Are you sure?"
34347Are you willing to obey me, after this?
34347Are-- are you certain of this?
34347Arrest? 34347 But I ca n''t say that I see anything unusual, do you?"
34347But how much are you willing to give me?
34347But is that Mr. Van Blott over yonder?
34347But not as much as you''d like; ai n''t that so?
34347But not for a bark the size of ours?
34347But supposing some of the men raise a row?
34347But where has the ship gone to?
34347But who am I?
34347But you can help me regarding this stuff to be taken away by Baumann& Feltmuller, ca n''t you?
34347But you used to live with my father, is that it?
34347But you will send your men down to the dock?
34347But, if you took them, why did n''t you return them? 34347 By Rasmer?"
34347Can I hire somebody to take me there? 34347 Can I stay with Roger?"
34347Can it be possible that Shadow is going to the old castle?
34347Can you go ahead?
34347Can you prove this story about being found near a railroad?
34347Can you tell me anything?
34347Can you tell me where I can find him?
34347Can you, Shadow?
34347Captain Marshall, can I speak to you a moment?
34347Captain, are we in the track o''any ships?
34347Coffee they dosed you with?
34347Could he do that?
34347Dat you ship?
34347Dave, did you hear that talk in the back room?
34347Dave, do you want to go to Cavasa Island?
34347Did I? 34347 Did Plum see you?"
34347Did anybody bring that brown book up?
34347Did he ever tell you where he came from?
34347Did he say anything about the vessel?
34347Did he say he might remain away?
34347Did n''t I say I''d bring them, Baumann?
34347Did n''t I warn you against Gus Plum before you ever came to Oak Hall? 34347 Did n''t ye say you wanted one to match?
34347Did n''t you send for us?
34347Did n''t you, Polly?
34347Did they say where they were?
34347Did you ever come here with a man named Dunston Porter?
34347Did you ever get any of the particulars of that treasure?
34347Did you ever know Gus Plum to be interested in stamps?
34347Did you ever see the baby?
34347Did you find any more than this?
34347Did you hear that?
34347Did you hear that?
34347Did you hunt all around the boathouse?
34347Did you know the men?
34347Did you see me on the river?
34347Did you see them a second time?
34347Did you tell the old man?
34347Did you think they were gone?
34347Did your father send you on this trip to spy on me?
34347Do n''t understand what?
34347Do n''t you know that mutiny on the high seas is punishable by death?
34347Do n''t you remember going out to row during the night, Shadow?
34347Do n''t you remember traveling around with your bundle and your satchel? 34347 Do n''t you say so, Dave?"
34347Do n''t you think we are having a pretty big blow, sir?
34347Do n''t you think you''d like the city, Dave?
34347Do n''t you want me to drive, Horsehair?
34347Do n''t you want to tell me about it? 34347 Do what, Dave?"
34347Do you come here often?
34347Do you know a man named Bangor in San Francisco? 34347 Do you know anybody else on the ship?"
34347Do you know his exact address now?
34347Do you know that you were followed?
34347Do you know where I went to?
34347Do you know where this stream leads to?
34347Do you mean a real, live ram?
34347Do you mean to say he stayed away all night?
34347Do you mean to say they have deserted us?
34347Do you really mean it, Dave?
34347Do you remember that day we were on the river, and Gus Plum ran into us with that gasoline launch?
34347Do you surrender?
34347Do you think it is enough?
34347Do you think it possible that somebody stole that collection?
34347Do you think they will be friendly?
34347Do you think we are safe?
34347Do you want your berth made up right away?
34347Do you?
34347Does he keep a dog?
34347Does n''t it look like it?
34347Does n''t work?
34347Does our crowd know about this?
34347Each boy was alone in a boat?
34347Eh?
34347Find him? 34347 Fine night for a ramble, eh?
34347Going out, eh?
34347Going to play some trick on me, were you? 34347 Got here at last, eh?
34347Has Mr. Haskers caught a burglar?
34347Has anybody been washed overboard?
34347Has anybody gone overboard?
34347Has n''t come back?
34347Have we sprung a leak?
34347Have you ever met Captain Marshall?
34347Have you ever met this Van Blott?
34347Have you had enough?
34347Have you no manners?
34347He did n''t say a word about coming back to the United States?
34347He''ll be back soon, wo n''t he?
34347He''s as kind as they make''em, is n''t he?
34347Hello, are you up already?
34347Hello, what''s in there?
34347Hello, where have you been?
34347Hello, you fellows, where are you bound?
34347Hit you? 34347 House- painting?"
34347How can I ever repay you?
34347How could they do that? 34347 How could they get out of the harbor?"
34347How did the ram get here?
34347How do you both feel?
34347How do you do, Ben?
34347How do you do, boys?
34347How do you do? 34347 How do you do?"
34347How do you do?
34347How do you do?
34347How do you like it, now?
34347How do you like staying out?
34347How far is that old temple from here?
34347How is this? 34347 How long do you suppose this storm will last?"
34347How long will this nice weather last?
34347How many poxes vos dere?
34347How much of a crew have you, Captain Marshall?
34347How much?
34347How old should you judge this Dunston Porter to be?
34347How should I know? 34347 How you come dis way?
34347I do n''t know,answered Dave,"unless----""Unless what?"
34347I say, Dave, will you explain something to me?
34347I suppose you are anxious to get to Nanpi, Dave?
34347I suppose you are spreading it right and left, eh? 34347 I suppose you do n''t dare to say anything to him?"
34347I wo n''t?
34347I wonder what he''ll have to say to- morrow?
34347I''ve got them, and the only question is, how am I to get them here, and when are you going to pay me?
34347I-- I-- am a codfish, am I?
34347If I tell you something, will you promise to keep it to yourself?
34347If one tailor''s goose is a goose, what are half a dozen?
34347If there is n''t any opening in the reef, what are we to do?
34347If they wanted us, I should think they would be watching out, would n''t you?
34347If we came over a reef, how are we to get out of this harbor?
34347If you do n''t let us in, do you know what I shall do?
34347If you saw me on the river, what else did you see?
34347In the eastern part of the United States?
34347In the morning?
34347Is Luke going into training?
34347Is Nat Poole in the race?
34347Is Rasmer sure he saw Plum following Hamilton on the river?
34347Is Tapley Island inhabited?
34347Is his wife alive?
34347Is it really burned or not?
34347Is it very bad outside?
34347Is n''t he in town at all?
34347Is n''t here?
34347Is n''t that so, fellows?
34347Is n''t there any opening at all?
34347Is that all you have to say, Plum?
34347Is that all?
34347Is that man in Sobago now?
34347Is that so? 34347 Is the ship really going down?"
34347Is the train in?
34347Is there any boy here who knows anything at all about my collection?
34347Is there any danger?
34347Is this Mr. Dunston Porter?
34347Is this some joke? 34347 Late?"
34347Looks natural, does n''t it?
34347Me? 34347 Me?
34347Mr. Haskers, have you lost your senses?
34347Mr. Haskers, what is the trouble?
34347Mr. Shepley, did you give orders to unload?
34347Mr. Shepley, have you seen Mr. Van Blott?
34347Mr. Shepley, why have n''t you shortened sail?
34347Mr. Van Blott, do you know anything about the captain?
34347Nat Poole, do you mean to insinuate that I am the son of a thief?
34347No, I want----Say, you in the back, give me my hat, will you?
34347Now, please follow me closely, will you?
34347Now, what had I best do?
34347Now, what is he up to?
34347Now, what is his name? 34347 Now, what is it?
34347Of course, you did n''t cover the whole reef?
34347Oh, Dave, you do n''t suppose it was Haskers? 34347 Oh, boys, what can it mean?"
34347Oh, is it you, boys?
34347Oh, it''s possible; but who would be so mean?
34347Oh, so it''s something of a plot against me, eh?
34347Oh, so you called him up, did you?
34347Oh, you do n''t know that? 34347 Only, are you going to let us in or not?"
34347Out for an airing?
34347Out late?
34347Phil, what would you say if I wanted to go with you on that trip to Cavasa Island?
34347Plum and Poole intend to keep us out all night, eh?
34347Plum, do you mean to say you burned that picture up?
34347Really?
34347Reg''lar hotel dinin''-room on wheels, ai n''t it? 34347 Say, but this is great luck, ai n''t it?"
34347Say, what mountain is this we''re goin''under, anyway?
34347See here, Soko,he went on,"can I depend upon your helping me?
34347Send for you? 34347 Shadow, will you ever get done telling chestnuts?"
34347Shall I go down and question him? 34347 Shall we stop at Honolulu?"
34347Shall you leave the rowboats here?
34347Shave?
34347Shot?
34347So I''ve caught you, eh?
34347So this is the game you have been playing on me, eh?
34347So you call this fun?
34347So you really have some goots on board?
34347Steal ship on you? 34347 Stormy?
34347Supposing we should run into something?
34347Tell Jack----Say, get off my toes, will you? 34347 Tell me one thing,"said the rich manufacturer,"Do you think this Dunston Porter is still at Cavasa Island, or in that locality?"
34347That is, if that old sailor gets around so that he can tell a pretty straight story?
34347That means the leak is a bad one, eh?
34347The question is, what made him go to the castle? 34347 The question is, where did the crowd go to from here?"
34347The ram-- what ram?
34347Then is n''t it about time to take in sail?
34347Then this Dunston Porter was your friend?
34347Then what is he doing here?
34347Then why does n''t the mate do so?
34347Then you are not in this mutiny, Sanders?
34347Then you have n''t found any passage through the reef?
34347Then you really mean to drag me into it, eh?
34347Then, where is it?
34347These ca n''t be human bones, can they?
34347Thet beats the dinin''-room, do n''t it? 34347 This is worse nor the Sargasso Sea, ai n''t it?"
34347This looks stormy, does n''t it?
34347Thought you knew more about running a ship than I did, eh?
34347Together?
34347Two hundred, eh? 34347 Very well, tell me what you know?"
34347Was Dunston Porter alone out there?
34347Was anybody else around?
34347We are bringing up a good deal of water, are we not?
34347We''re going to be just like a brother and sister always, are n''t we?
34347Well, did he say that the child was his son?
34347Well, did n''t he come from the poorhouse, and ai n''t he a nobody?
34347Well, did you find a channel?
34347Well, have you found anything wrong?
34347Well, how do you like life on_ Mother Carey''s Chicken_?
34347Well, how do you propose to get that crowd ashore? 34347 Well, if Plum has those lost stamps, do n''t you think he should be made to return them?"
34347Well, supposing I promised to give you some money to spend, Porter, how would that strike you?
34347Well, then, Uncle Dunston, are my father and my sister alone in the world?
34347Well, what do you want to see me about, then?
34347Well, what is it?
34347Well, what is remarkable about that, outside of the fact that he is supposed to get all his letters in the Hall mail?
34347Well?
34347Were the letters addressed to him?
34347Were you alluding to me, Master Morr?
34347Were you drugged?
34347Wha- what do you know about my-- my rowing on the river?
34347Wha- what do you mean?
34347Wha- what''s that?
34347Wha- what?
34347Wha-- what do you mean? 34347 What about you, Polly?"
34347What about you, Shadow?
34347What about you, Van Blott?
34347What are the natives going to do now?
34347What are you driving at, Plum? 34347 What are you going to do about it?"
34347What can I do for you?
34347What can that be?
34347What can you do with the goods?
34347What did he say?
34347What did he say?
34347What do I think of it?
34347What do you know about that?
34347What do you make of it? 34347 What do you make of this?"
34347What do you mean by coming in at this hour?
34347What do you mean by running off with my ship in this fashion?
34347What do you mean by stepping on my foot in that fashion, Nat Poole?
34347What do you mean?
34347What do you think about it, Dave?
34347What do you think of it, Dave?
34347What do you think of it?
34347What do you think of the captain?
34347What good would it have done?
34347What have you got to say, Carson?
34347What is he going to do?
34347What is he talking about?
34347What is it, Chip?
34347What is it?
34347What is it?
34347What is it?
34347What is that?
34347What is the trouble here?
34347What is the trouble?
34347What is this?
34347What is this?
34347What shall I do? 34347 What shall we do?"
34347What time is it?
34347What were they doing, Ike?
34347What would the boys of Oak Hall say if they could see us?
34347What''s gone?
34347What''s that?
34347What''s that?
34347What''s the matter, seasick?
34347What''s the matter?
34347What''s the meaning of this?
34347What''s the news?
34347What''s the trouble with the four?
34347What''s up? 34347 What''s wanted?"
34347What?
34347When did you come away from there?
34347When did you come in? 34347 When do you expect to start?"
34347When you came back to the coast, what did this Mr. Porter do?
34347When?
34347Where am I? 34347 Where are those boys going?"
34347Where are you going?
34347Where did he go?
34347Where did you come from?
34347Where is Billy Dill?
34347Where is Dill to go?
34347Where is he? 34347 Where is he?"
34347Where is the mate?
34347Which is the way out? 34347 Who are you?"
34347Who is in there?
34347Who is it?
34347Who is there, I say?
34347Who knows anything about the proceedings of last night?
34347Who said I was going to move anything?
34347Who wants me?
34347Who would do such a thing?
34347Why do n''t you ask your folks about it?
34347Why do you ask that question?
34347Why do you ask that question?
34347Why not send a long letter to your friends, telling them what you have told me? 34347 Why not?
34347Why, Dave, do n''t you feel it at all?
34347Why, did you tell him anything?
34347Why-- er-- how''s this?
34347Why-- er-- isn''t Mr. Shepley on deck?
34347Why?
34347Why?
34347Will I?
34347Will anybody answer?
34347Will it sink us?
34347Will the ship pull through?
34347Will they come back, do you think?
34347Will you apologize?
34347Will you please explain to me just what a bark is?
34347Will you take me there? 34347 Wonder what he will make us do?"
34347Wonder what this map was for?
34347Work?
34347Wot''s thet?
34347Would it not be better to wait until Captain Marshall returns?
34347Would you give me money, Gus?
34347Would you hit a fellow when he is-- er-- half drowned?
34347Yes, and I want to know if you''ll sell me one to match?
34347Yes?
34347Yo- you''ve been-- following-- me?
34347You Hall boys are the cute ones, ai n''t ye? 34347 You apologize, then?"
34347You are going to punish those boys?
34347You are sure of what you are doing?
34347You ca n''t put out any small boats, can you?
34347You do n''t know? 34347 You do n''t think we''ll have to stay here years, do you?"
34347You know all about the doctor losing that collection of stamps?
34347You mean about the cargo?
34347You mean about unloading?
34347You mean the photo of the man who looks like you?
34347You never saw anything like this, then?
34347You think my real name is Dunston Porter?
34347You would have the name, if he had taken passage from here?
34347You''ll give me a hundred dollars? 34347 You''re a poor boy, Porter, are n''t you?"
34347You-- were you watching me?
34347You-- you dare to talk to me like that?
34347_ Mother Carey''s Chicken_?
34347''Ca n''t you swim?''
34347Ai n''t it pretty slick?"
34347Ai n''t that so, mates?"
34347And how are all the folks at Crumville?
34347And, being poor, some pocket money comes in mighty handy at times, does n''t it?"
34347And, by the way, do you notice how thick he is with Nat Poole since Macklin has refused to toady to him?"
34347Are we to unload, or not?"
34347Boy, who gave you authority to talk to me in this fashion?"
34347But I allow as how none o''you expect to work afore the mast, do ye?"
34347But could n''t I do the looking for you?"
34347But, say, have you fellows heard about Plum''s father?"
34347But, tell me, are we going down?"
34347But-- but----""But what, Jessie?"
34347By the way, have you heard anything more about the farm that belongs to Professor Potts?"
34347CHAPTER XX CAUGHT IN A STORM"Who is there?"
34347CHAPTER XXXII HOMEWARD BOUND-- CONCLUSION"I am the son of your twin brother?"
34347Can anybody speak English?"
34347Can you blame me?"
34347Can you tell me if he shipped from here?"
34347Chadsey?"
34347Dave, it paid to take this trip to the South Seas, after all, did n''t it?"
34347Did Hamilton tell you that story?"
34347Did Phil Lawrence see me on the river?"
34347Did he have his valise?"
34347Did you catch a crab, Roger?"
34347Did you happen to see Professor Potts and the Wadsworths?"
34347Did you travel seven thousand miles to see me, too?"
34347Do n''t you hear?"
34347Do n''t you remember his telling you a story about a crazy nurse and a lost child?"
34347Do you know when your friend Lawrence is to join his father''s ship?"
34347Do you think Shadow and Plum are up to something between them?"
34347Do you think there was a regular mutiny?"
34347Do you understand?
34347Do you want to go to the bottom of the ocean?"
34347Funny, how it slipped my mind, eh?
34347Have n''t you heard of them walking on the ridge pole of a house?
34347Have you any idea where we can find out where Dunston Porter went?"
34347Have you finished up?"
34347Have you seen her?"
34347Have you the records of the goods?"
34347I ai n''t gittin''nobody into trouble,''less I am sure of what I am doin''--that''s nateral, ai n''t it?"
34347I guess you do not remember me?"
34347I hope your father is well?"
34347I reckon I cotched you that trip, did n''t I?"
34347I take it for granted that you have told me the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth?"
34347I wonder why they drugged me?"
34347I-- how did you come to find me?"
34347If he troubles you about this, let me know, do you hear?"
34347If the_ Stormy Petrel_ had really sailed away, not to return, what were they to do, and when would they get a chance to leave the lonely island?
34347If you are going to talk that way, what will you say if we have to stay here weeks, or months, or maybe years?"
34347If you do n''t, do you know what I''ll do?
34347Is he going to blab on us?"
34347Is that the ram?"
34347Is this the shipping firm with which Mr. Lawrence does business?"
34347Lemington?"
34347Let me into the secret, wo n''t you?"
34347Let me see, the name of the firm was Baumann& Feltmuller, was n''t it?"
34347Making me out to be a pauper, like your friend Porter, eh?"
34347Master Day, were you sitting in the window?"
34347Maybe he is some relative of yours?"
34347Maybe you are only joking?"
34347Me under arrest?
34347Now the question arises, how are we to get over the reef again?"
34347Now then, what do you say, Shepley?"
34347Now, how can I communicate with him, Roger?"
34347Now, then, will you apologize or not?"
34347Now, what I want to know is: Do you not think it would be an excellent thing to take this Billy Dill along?
34347Oh, I did n''t tell you about that, did I?
34347Roger, have you got word yet?"
34347Says the college professor,''Can you do sums in algebra?''
34347Shepley?"
34347So these are the young gentlemen to go along?
34347Supposing Mr. Dunston Porter had left Sobago Island for parts unknown?
34347Taking a walk along the river?
34347That made me curious, and I went down to the locker, and there I found-- what do you think?
34347The question is, what''s to be done?"
34347Then you got his letter, Mr. Van Blott?"
34347This ai n''t so nice, is it?"
34347Vot dime you vonts dem, hey?"
34347Want to come along?"
34347Want to see him?
34347Was he the man who had once lost a child through a crazy nurse?
34347What about a tailor''s goose?"
34347What do you know about that firm?"
34347What do you mean?"
34347What do you mean?"
34347What do you think of this job of mine?
34347What do you think they''ll do about it?"
34347What do you want?"
34347What if Plum was really hurt, or in trouble under water?
34347What island is this?"
34347What made you do it?"
34347What shall I do?"
34347What shall we do?"
34347What time is it?
34347What was the meaning of this mystery?
34347What was this man to him?
34347What was your row about?"
34347What were he and Van Blott doing?"
34347What would you advise?"
34347What''s that you''ve got, a broken oarlock?"
34347When?"
34347Where do you come from?"
34347Where he ship?"
34347Which will ye have?"
34347Who put that on the floor?"
34347Who put the ram in my room?"
34347Why did you shave so clean?"
34347Why does n''t he come up?"
34347Why should he mention a lost child-- a boy?"
34347Why, this here train is equipped like a regular ship, ai n''t she?"
34347Will you do it?"
34347Will you listen until I have finished?"
34347Will you stand with the crowd?"
34347Wo n''t you explain?"
34347Wonder if that is what Plum calls winning?
34347Would you go home and see Mr. Wadsworth and Professor Potts first, or go direct to that sailor?"
34347so I am a brute, am I?"
34347to play the scavenger and bring this stuff up here?
34347what''s this?"
34347you are not afraid of those boys, are you?"
13261''Ill chosen''?
13261''We''? 13261 A matter of five metres?
13261And the third man?
13261And what can come to spoil our life for us? 13261 And your sister?"
13261Are you fit to go?
13261Are you going back to town,he asked,"or do you mean to stay the night?"
13261Are you mad?
13261Are you quite mad?
13261Aye, who knows?
13261Bayard?
13261Ca n''t you be quick? 13261 Ca n''t you truly believe what you''ve said?"
13261Ce vieillard?
13261Coira,cried the man,"do you mean that you carried me bodily all that long distance?
13261Did I say''afraid''?
13261Did I see her?
13261Did that sound regretful?
13261Did what I say sound-- disloyal to my father? 13261 Did you notice that girl?"
13261Did you see her face? 13261 Did you speak with Arthur?"
13261Do I seem brutal?
13261Do I seem glad, Coira?
13261Do n''t you understand,he cried,"that life''s only just beginning-- day''s just dawning, Coira?
13261Do you believe my uncle has been responsible for Arthur''s disappearance?
13261Do you call poison nothing?
13261Do you dream of me, Bayard?
13261Do you know any such men?
13261Do you know what this is?
13261Do you know what''s in this?
13261Do you know who that woman is?
13261Do you love this boy?
13261Do you mean to tell me that after all you''ve done and-- and gone through, Helen has thrown you over? 13261 Do you mean,"she said, after a moment--"do you mean that_ you_ are working with him-- to find Arthur?"
13261Do you read Spanish,he demanded,"and Latin, as well as French and English?"
13261Do you realize,demanded Captain Stewart,"what risks we run while that fellow is alive-- knowing what he knows?"
13261Do you really think that? 13261 Do you remember that evening we were going home from the Madrid and motored round by Montmartre to see the fête?"
13261Do you set ambition before love, my Queen?
13261Do you think so?
13261Do you think,said she,"that knowing what I know now I would go on with that until he has made his peace with his family?
13261Do?
13261Has he,she said, slowly,"done even this for me?
13261Has that wretched animal touched your coffee?
13261Have you any reason for thinking that?
13261Have you been in this game, too?
13261Have you spoken of this to my uncle?
13261He is waiting to hear how I feel about it all, is n''t he?
13261He wo n''t go to your father and make a scene?
13261Helen had yellow hair, had n''t she?
13261How dare you question me?
13261How do I know that? 13261 How do I know you''re telling the truth?"
13261How is he? 13261 How is he?"
13261How much have you told him?
13261How''s the leg--_and_ the head?
13261How''s the leg?
13261How? 13261 I beg your pardon?"
13261I seem to start badly, do n''t I? 13261 I suppose I must not ask to see your father?"
13261I suppose you can sit up against your pillows? 13261 I suppose,"he said, rising again--"I suppose when the man comes out of this he''ll be frightfully exhausted and drop off to sleep, wo n''t he?
13261I take it,said he,"that means that you''re-- that she has accepted you, eh?"
13261I''ve always been fair with you, have n''t I?
13261I-- how should I know? 13261 I?
13261Idleness and all? 13261 If this also fails, I think-- well, I think the bon Dieu will have to help us then.--Michel,"he inquired,"do you know how to pray?"
13261If we try to carry him away by force there''ll be a fight, of course, and-- who knows what might happen? 13261 If you''ve that motor here, may I use it?"
13261In Heaven''s name,he cried, shrilly,"why did n''t that one- eyed fool kill the fellow while he was about it?
13261Is Arthur Benham in the house on the Clamart road? 13261 Is Captain Stewart in the house?"
13261Is it believed that I could leap over it?
13261Is it fair,queried Captain Stewart--"is it fair, as a rival investigator, to ask you what success you have had?"
13261Is it not rather foolish,she asked,"to warn us-- to warn me of possibilities like that?
13261Is it so hard as that?
13261Is love all? 13261 Is love all?"
13261Is n''t this new?
13261Is that true?
13261Is young Arthur Benham in the house on the Clamart road?
13261It is my old friend?
13261It sounds rather appalling, does n''t it? 13261 Lady in the blue hat too friendly?
13261Left it at the house?
13261Long before his-- before he left his home? 13261 Mademoiselle, are you telling me the truth?"
13261May I ask whose books these are?
13261May I make a suggestion?
13261More merciful? 13261 My uncle?"
13261Name of a dog, why?
13261Need it be a lie?
13261Nothing?
13261Now?
13261Oh, I?
13261Oh, do n''t you?
13261Oh, you''ve heard of him, too, then?
13261Other matters?
13261Quoi, donc?
13261Rather good-- what? 13261 Real?
13261Rich?
13261Shall I always drag along so far behind him?
13261Shall I never rise to him, save in the moods of an hour?
13261Shall we have a look?
13261She has accepted you, I take it?
13261So old Charlie''s with us to- day, is he?
13261That''s rude, is n''t it? 13261 The flower- gardens, Michel?"
13261The name?
13261The patient?
13261The wedding?
13261Then?
13261There has been no news at all this week?
13261They are before us?
13261They''re lying to him and making him think--What was it they were making him think, these three conspirators?
13261This man, now-- this man whom you saw to- night-- what sort of looking man will he have been?
13261To the east, Monsieur?
13261Was n''t it Richard Hartley? 13261 Was n''t it Richard?"
13261Was young Richard Hartley at your dinner- party?
13261What I want to know,said he,"is how the boy is supporting himself all this time?
13261What about my father? 13261 What are you doing here?"
13261What are you going to do?
13261What chance have I ever had?
13261What d''you mean? 13261 What did my grandfather say to you?"
13261What did the young man look like?
13261What did you come here to do? 13261 What did you say?"
13261What did you say?
13261What do you mean by that?
13261What do you mean--''become of him''?
13261What do you mean?
13261What else?
13261What is her name? 13261 What is it?
13261What is not permitted?
13261What is that? 13261 What is that?"
13261What is the matter with you?
13261What is to be done?
13261What must she think of me?
13261What must she think of me?
13261What right have you to ask me questions about such a thing? 13261 What the devil is it?
13261What then?
13261What time are we asked for-- eight- thirty? 13261 What was that for?"
13261What''s the matter?
13261What? 13261 What?"
13261Where is Arthur Benham?
13261Which is his room?
13261Who are you,the girl cried, in a bitter resentment,"that you should understand?
13261Who has ever talked to you about me?
13261Who is she?
13261Who is there, please?
13261Who said that?
13261Why are you about at this hour?
13261Why could n''t he have been killed? 13261 Why could n''t the fellow have been killed by that one- eyed fool?"
13261Why did I let him go?
13261Why do you tell me things like that?
13261Why have n''t you gone yourself?
13261Why keep up the pretence? 13261 Why my uncle?"
13261Why not live instead?
13261Why not?
13261Why three months?
13261Why?
13261Will you believe,she cried,"that I had nothing to do with this?
13261Would you prefer croissants or brioches or plain bread- and- butter? 13261 Yes, he does go into the world also, does n''t he?
13261You do n''t know Broadway, Coira, do you? 13261 You have an idea?
13261You have heard no-- news? 13261 You knew why I did it?"
13261You like my museum?
13261You mean--?
13261You two are emphatic enough about him, are n''t you?
13261You-- knew Arthur Benham last winter?
13261Your mother? 13261 _ You?_""And why not I?"
13261_ You?_"And why not I?
13261... Not a dream?"
13261A voice, very faint and weary, called:"Who is there?
13261After all, of what use was speech?
13261After all, was she not one to make any boy-- or any man-- forget duty, home, friends, everything?
13261Afterward he smoked a little while in silence, but presently he said, as if with some hesitation:"May I be permitted to offer a word of advice?"
13261Am I a dog, to be beaten?
13261Am I going to lose you, after all... now that we know?"
13261Am I going to lose you... like this?
13261Among themselves they spoke, I think, English, though I do not understand it, except a few words, such as''''ow moch?''
13261And I remember-- Yes, it was odd, was it not, your meeting him like that, just as you were talking of Arthur?
13261And after another little pause he asked:"Was there any reason why he should have gone away-- any quarrel or that sort of thing?"
13261And all the others have given a different date?
13261And as they went along down the Avenue Hoche, he demanded:"Why are you a dolt and whatever else it was?
13261And how much had she told?
13261And so,"she said,"when I met Arthur Benham last winter, and he-- began to-- he said-- when he begged me to marry him.... Ah, ca n''t you see?
13261And the man said,"What is it, Mademoiselle?"
13261And what did he mean by the words which he had used afterward?
13261And yet,"she cried, wringing her hands,"how could I know?
13261And, by- the- way, what are we waiting for?
13261Any help that might come to him must come from outside-- and what help was to be expected there?
13261Are n''t there, though?
13261Are we not all here?
13261Are we to-- simply to go our different ways like this, as if we''d never met at all?"
13261Are you always as silent as this?"
13261Are you ill, or are you making up little epigrams to say at the dinner- party?"
13261Are you keeping back anything?
13261Are you mad?
13261Are you sure he''s all right-- that he is n''t badly hurt?"
13261Because I meet a man at a dinner- party and say I like him, must I marry him to- morrow?
13261Before that?"
13261Believe what?
13261But I was wondering-- would it be better or not to tell Arthur the truth?
13261But after a pause he said:"Could you give me the-- lady''s name, by any chance?
13261But if I succeed--""Then?"
13261But the voice which had accused her said,"If he knew, would he say he loves you?"
13261But what chance have I had?
13261But what-- what?
13261But why am I of course going to fall in love with her?"
13261But you never can tell, can you?"
13261But-- Oh, Lord, who would understand such an idiocy?
13261But-- am I as cold as you say?
13261Ca n''t we sit down for a little chat?
13261Ca n''t you see what it means to me?
13261Can I not have my poor little hour of pretence?
13261Can you realize,"he cried--"can you even begin to think what a great joy it is to me to know at last that you have had no part in all this?
13261Can you think of a name?"
13261Coira, can you love a jilted man?
13261Coira, do you think I might be kissed before I go to sleep?"
13261Could I just see him for a moment?"
13261Could he have lost his head, rushed across the city at once to confront the middle- aged villain, and then-- disappeared from human ken?
13261Could you come for him or send for him to- morrow-- toward noon?"
13261Could you get him on the bed here?"
13261D''you know what I''d do?
13261D''you think I''m a fool?
13261D''you think I''m a kid?
13261D''you think you could let me in?"
13261D''you think you could take me in?"
13261Detective work?"
13261Did he say anything to you about going anywhere in particular the next day-- yesterday?
13261Did he tell you?
13261Did n''t he tell you or write to you what he had discovered, and so set you upon the right track?
13261Did n''t you know I''d understand?"
13261Did n''t you know that?
13261Did the young fool think he was being paid for his efforts?
13261Did you by any chance recognize the other?"
13261Did you notice the little Show medallions with the swastika?
13261Did you think I stumbled in here by accident?
13261Do I seem very ungenerous and wrapped up in my own side of the thing?
13261Do n''t you see that?
13261Do they?"
13261Do you happen to remember Olga Nilssen?"
13261Do you know anything about him?"
13261Do you know what would occur if your father should take a serious turn for the worse to- night-- or at any time?
13261Do you know where he sleeps?
13261Do you mean that you did n''t know it before?
13261Do you mean to tell me that?"
13261Do you remember this lady?"
13261Do you think I might be allowed to stagger about the garden for an hour, or sit there under one of the trees?
13261Do you understand at all?"
13261Do you want anything to eat?
13261Do you want to read it?"
13261Do you wonder that I want to have her free of it all, married and safe and comfortable and in peace?
13261Do you?
13261Do you?
13261Do you?
13261Ducrot?"
13261Eh, what?
13261Eh?"
13261For love of whom?"
13261For my father''s sake, will you listen to me for five minutes?"
13261For was it at all likely that he could succeed in what he had undertaken?
13261Fourteen hours, and at the end of them-- what?
13261Good Lord, you do n''t think he''s funked it, do you?
13261Grateful?
13261Hang it, man, d''you understand?
13261Hartley searched in his pockets, and while he did so the man beneath asked:"Is old David Stewart alive?"
13261Has any of it stuck to her?
13261Has he given me his honor, too?
13261Has he given-- his honor, also-- when everything else was-- gone?
13261Has it cheapened her in any littlest way?
13261Have I the right, I wonder, to give it all up?"
13261Have you any money in your pockets?
13261Have you any more islands for me?"
13261Have you ever fallen in love?"
13261Have you ever heard anything about me which would give you the right to suspect me of any dishonesty of any sort?
13261Have you?"
13261Have you?"
13261He asked:"Is it fair to inquire how long I may expect to be confined here?
13261He came to your party last night, did n''t he?
13261He could have laughed at it in scornful anger, and yet-- What else was she?
13261He cried out:"If I should go back there-- mind you, I say''if''--d''you know what they''d do?
13261He fell into step beside her, and as they ran he said,"You''re going with him?
13261He has n''t tried to walk into the city?"
13261He heard him say:"What''s up in that tree?
13261He looked Olga Nilssen full in the eyes, saying:"It is safe to leave you here with him while I call the servant?
13261He looks rather an ascetic-- rather donnish, do n''t you think?
13261He looks the part, does n''t he?"
13261He might be anywhere for a single day, might he not?
13261He might suspect Stewart of complicity in this new disappearance, but how was he to find out anything definite?
13261He said, gazing up at her:"Is it-- another dream?"
13261He said, standing, to say it more easily:"You know why I came here to- day?
13261He said,"Would you mind waiting a moment?"
13261He said:"And now that you-- imagine yourself to know so very much, what do you expect to do about it?"
13261He said:"Does the young idiot want to rouse the whole place?
13261He said:"Who is there?
13261He said:"You refuse to join forces with us, then?
13261He wo n''t have done that-- for safety?"
13261He wo n''t have left written word behind him, eh?
13261He would come again on the next morning, and then he would begin to be alarmed and would start a second search-- but with what to reckon by?
13261He''s a good old chap, though, is n''t he?
13261He''s rather handsome, is n''t he?"
13261He-- you must know that he went away very angry, after a quarrel with his grandfather?
13261Hein?
13261Hein?"
13261Hein?"
13261How about his friends, when he does n''t turn up to- night?
13261How are we to get back over the wall?"
13261How badly was he hurt?"
13261How can I prevent you?
13261How could I know?"
13261How dare you frighten me so?"
13261How did that happen?"
13261How does one cherish people?"
13261How is he managing to live if your theory is correct-- that he is staying away of his own accord?
13261How many nationalities should you say there are in this room now?"
13261How much did Olga Nilssen know?
13261How old are you by- the- way?
13261How was an ill and tired and wicked old man to fight against these?
13261How was any one to do so?
13261How''s the head?"
13261I asked you, but-- can''t you see?
13261I believe he is to lead you to the place where food is, is n''t he?"
13261I can not, can I?
13261I did bungle it, did n''t I?
13261I do n''t want to seem critical, but is n''t your figure somewhat ill chosen?"
13261I hesitate because I do n''t like people who presume too much upon a short acquaintance-- and our acquaintance has been very, very short, has n''t it?
13261I may call it a game?
13261I ought to know that well enough, ought n''t I?"
13261I sleep like the good dead-- under the trees, not too near the lilacs, eh?
13261I suppose I should n''t find Olga Nilssen there?"
13261I suppose you have no clews to spare?
13261I wonder what''s wrong with him?"
13261I wonder where he is-- Captain Stewart?"
13261I wonder why it is?
13261I wonder?
13261If he were accidentally killed there would be a record of that, too; and, of course, you are having all such records constantly searched?"
13261If you do n''t mind my saying so, sir-- I do n''t want to seem rude-- your trained detectives do not seem to accomplish much in two months, do they?"
13261In the first place, what did the boy mean by"dirty work"?
13261Is Arthur Benham in the house on the Clamart road?"
13261Is it impossible, Mademoiselle?"
13261Is it possible that Stewart has lied to you all-- to one as to another?
13261Is n''t there something odd connected with the family?
13261Is that agreed to?
13261Is that all?"
13261Is that possible?"
13261Is that the word?
13261Is that understood?"
13261Is there not some way-- are there hot some terms under which we could meet without embarrassment?
13261It''s like the garden of the Hesperides, is n''t it?"
13261It''s you?"
13261Madame your mother is well, I hope-- and the bear?"
13261Marie and marry him, are you?"
13261Marie de Mont Perdu?"
13261Marie de Mont- Perdu?
13261Marie has disappeared?
13261Marie in here married a Spanish lady, did n''t he?"
13261Marie is taking a little holiday, do you?
13261Marie with you?"
13261Marie''?
13261Marie, did you undertake this quest-- this search for Arthur Benham?
13261Marie, do you think-- my father-- knew?"
13261Marie, have you?--and finding that he has great charm?"
13261Marie, was it, after all, you?
13261Marie,"she demanded, very soberly,"when they ask you if I-- if Arthur should be allowed to-- come back to me?"
13261Marie,"she said,"why did you never fall in love with me, as the other men did?"
13261Marie,"the individual on the bench across the street?"
13261Marie,"will you promise me something?"
13261Marie-- I mean about Arthur Benham?
13261Marie-- what she is like and-- and how she lives-- and things like that?"
13261Marie--"not the sort of young man to do anything desperate-- make away with himself?"
13261Marie?
13261Marie?
13261Marie?
13261Marie?
13261Marie?
13261Marie?
13261Marie?"
13261Marie?"
13261Marie?"
13261Marie?"
13261Marie?"
13261Marie?"
13261Maries, that you must be forever leading forlorn hopes?
13261May I sit down?"
13261May I?"
13261Mischief of some kind-- bien entendu-- but what?"
13261Must she not shrink from him when she knew?
13261Must we forever glare at each other and pass by warily, just because we-- well, hold different views about-- something?"
13261Must we go on always and never know?
13261Of course, I could n''t do that quite literally, now, could I?
13261Of what use to him is she?"
13261Oh, can nothing be done?"
13261Oh, how about Stewart?"
13261Oh,"she said,"why could I not have died when I was a little child?
13261Or,"said the elderly Belgian, laughing gently--"or perhaps the other thing might do it best-- the more obvious thing?"
13261Ought one to think of nothing but love when one is settling one''s life forever?
13261Out of what misery did they call-- and for what?
13261Over him their eyes met and they questioned each other with a mute and anxious gravity:"What will he do?"
13261Perhaps to- morrow-- you do n''t mind?"
13261Richard, do you believe that my uncle has hidden poor Arthur away somewhere or-- worse than that?
13261Sacred name of a pig, why do you sit there?
13261Shall I have nothing at all?"
13261Shall I leave the books here?"
13261Shall we ever have news of him, I wonder?
13261Shall we ever see him again?
13261Shall we get out, and walk across the bridge and up the Champs- Elysées?
13261She asked the admirable Peters, who opened to her,"Is he awake?"
13261She might have held up her head among the greatest, this adventurer''s girl; but what chance had she had?
13261She said,"Oh, why should I lie to you?"
13261She said:"Why are you wasting your time among these canaille?
13261She thought he had seen something from the window which had wrung that exclamation from him, and she asked:"What is it?"
13261She tried to speak, and he heard a whisper:"Why?
13261The boy wondered about that, too, but abruptly he cried out:"What''s up?
13261The girl''s raised eyebrows questioned him, and when he did not answer, she said:"What thing, then?"
13261The man came to you-- sought you out to tell his story, did n''t he?
13261The situation is rather paralyzing to endeavor, is n''t it?"
13261The tempter said:"My good Michel, would you care to receive this trifling sum-- a hundred francs?"
13261Then he gave a shout of laughter, demanding:"Well, what of it?
13261There is a cabstand near you?"
13261There''ll be no more--?"
13261There''s no news?"
13261They have found no trace?"
13261They never do use a Monsieur or anything, do they?
13261This must be the first time you two have met, is it not?
13261To what pitiful shreds might it not be rent while he who only could renew it was away?
13261To- night?"
13261Twenty- two?
13261Waiting for what?
13261Was it true that one man''s joy must inevitably be another''s pain?
13261Was it you who brought Arthur to us?"
13261Was n''t it Richard who first began to suspect my uncle?
13261Was not the inference plain enough-- sufficiently reasonable?
13261Well?
13261Were you going to speak?"
13261What absurdities could not such a man as Captain Stewart instil into the already prejudiced mind of that foolish lad?
13261What are you going to do to me?"
13261What are you looking at me like that for?
13261What are you looking so solemn about, though?
13261What are you to him?"
13261What but one thing can she possibly think?
13261What can be done?"
13261What can she have seen in him?
13261What can we do, Richard?
13261What can we do?"
13261What could you do that they have n''t done?"
13261What did she know of old David Stewart or of the Benham family?
13261What did you talk about to- day?"
13261What difficulty or trouble could happen to me?
13261What do you know about gods and stars?
13261What do you know of the sort of life I have led-- we have led together, my father and I?
13261What do you mean by that?"
13261What do you mean-- vanished?
13261What do you think?"
13261What do you think?"
13261What do you want?"
13261What does a foolish word like grateful mean?
13261What does he know?"
13261What else?"
13261What has happened to them?"
13261What invisible nets for his feet?
13261What is it?"
13261What is the matter with my head?
13261What is the matter with my head?
13261What is the thing I can not quite recall?
13261What kind do you want?"
13261What merest ghost of a chance?
13261What might it not work with the new thing that had come?
13261What motive could the man have for harming my brother?"
13261What other matters?"
13261What plans were they perfecting among them?
13261What possible chance would you have of success?
13261What possible thing could they make him think other than the plain truth?
13261What struck you so suddenly?"
13261What the devil you looking like that for?"
13261What then?"
13261What was it I had in mind to ask you about?
13261What was it they suffered?
13261What will she think of me?
13261What would she think of him, who had sworn to be true knight to her, if she could know how he had bungled and failed?
13261What would you?
13261What would you?
13261What would you?
13261What would you?
13261What''s he idling about here for?
13261What''s the matter with my head?
13261What, in Heaven''s name,_ did_ you think?"
13261What-- May I ask what sort of an idea?"
13261What?
13261What?"
13261When did he vanish?"
13261When shall we come to get you out-- you and the boy?
13261Where are you going?"
13261Where can he be to- night, I wonder?
13261Where have you been, and who were there?"
13261Where is Captain Stewart?
13261Where is he?
13261Where is it?"
13261Where was it?
13261Where was that splendid frenzy that had been wo nt to sweep him all in an instant into upper air-- set his feet upon the stars?
13261Where, then, the fine, pure fervor that should, at thought of her, whirl him on high and make a god of him?
13261Who do you mean by''we''?"
13261Who is it?"
13261Who is it?"
13261Who is ringing, please?"
13261Who is the Spanish- looking man with him, I wonder?
13261Who is the desiccated gentleman bearing down upon us?"
13261Who knows?
13261Who knows?
13261Who knows?
13261Who knows?"
13261Who knows?"
13261Who knows?"
13261Who knows?"
13261Who wants to see me?
13261Who were there?"
13261Who''d have thought it?"
13261Who''s there?
13261Why afraid?"
13261Why ca n''t I have my little sweet hour?"
13261Why ca n''t he come quietly?"
13261Why could I not have done that?
13261Why could n''t he have keen killed?"
13261Why could n''t he have slipped up behind this fellow and knocked him on the head, instead of shooting him from ten paces away?
13261Why did Arthur Benham leave his home two months ago?"
13261Why did n''t I think of it before?"
13261Why did n''t that shambling idiot kill him?"
13261Why did you ask that?"
13261Why did you come?"
13261Why do you ask me that?
13261Why ill chosen?"
13261Why is n''t he in Parliament, where he belongs?"
13261Why not you and your partner-- or shall I say assistant?"
13261Why should I hesitate?
13261Why was I ever born?
13261Why, what should I do?
13261Why?
13261Why?
13261Why?
13261Why?"
13261Will he believe you?
13261Will that be all right?"
13261Will you believe me?
13261Will you do that?"
13261Will you grant me your pardon for that?
13261Will you sit down for a little while?
13261Will you sit up and have the tray on your knees?"
13261Will you tell him I said that?
13261Will you tell him a little lie for me, Richard?
13261Would he be able to stand against them?
13261Would she ever understand?
13261Would you have me marry one of them-- one of those men?
13261Yes?
13261Yes?
13261Yes?"
13261Yes?"
13261You do n''t suppose that the lady could account for him?"
13261You enchant us all, somehow, do n''t you?
13261You knew it before, though, did n''t you?
13261You know him, then?
13261You looked at him just now through the crack of the door; do you know who he is?
13261You never can tell about people, can you?
13261You were n''t committing any crime, were you?
13261You will hardly presume, I take it, to question your sister''s motive in wanting you to return home?
13261You''d try to make me turn on old Charlie, would you?
13261You''re coming with us?"
13261You''ve been having a fine, low- comedy time laughing yourselves to death at me, have n''t you?
13261You''ve been making sure of the reward down- stairs, I dare say?
13261You-- oh, you did n''t speak to him, you say?
13261_ You_?"
13261a little more of that, and-- who knows?
13261he cried, in a lower tone,"how about this fellow''s friends?
13261he said, aloud, and Michel queried:"Comment, Monsieur?"
13261he said, in a whisper,"if-- old Charlie is rotten, who in this world is n''t?
13261outside?...
13261she cried,"shall we ever have my brother back?
13261she cried--"that, too?"
30372''What''s the matter?'' 30372 A lesson to him?
30372A man in the village here?
30372A pound?
30372Ai n''t we all of us bringing you money every day? 30372 Ai n''t you hungry?"
30372All this for saving your hat? 30372 Although I may be compelled to stay here all night?"
30372And I''ll have it yet, Mrs. Trafton-- do you hear that?
30372And did n''t you find him?
30372And do you ever fish?
30372And he goes into the hermit''s cave?
30372And how much did the work come to?
30372And suppose I am going to the tavern,repeated the fisherman in a defiant tone,"have you got anything to say against it?"
30372And what am I to do, Mr. Jones? 30372 And what will you do with his murderer?"
30372And why would n''t she pay you?
30372And you deliberately left him there, when it would have been no trouble to give him a passage back?
30372And you saved me?
30372And you, Andrew Jackson, what can you take?
30372And you,said the old man abruptly,"what do you do?"
30372Andrew Jackson, did you strike Bill with a whip?
30372Are you afraid of him?
30372Are you crazy, wife?
30372Are you going to stand it?
30372Are you going to stay long in Boston?
30372Are you in a hurry?
30372Are you ready to give me that money?
30372Are you sure of that?
30372Are you the owner of this shop?
30372Are you traveling?
30372Bill Benton,said Mrs. Badger in an awful voice,"did you strike Andrew with a hoe?"
30372Bill knocked you down with a hoe?
30372Boy, where is that money?
30372But I thought you said you had met me at Cook''s Harbor?
30372But have you no friend who will lend you the money?
30372But how am I going to get along without you?
30372But how am I going to get ready your shirts and socks so soon?
30372But how could he get off?
30372But is there any ground for assumption that he is insane?
30372But my aunt?
30372But should I not call the doctor?
30372But what could possibly make him crazy?
30372But what shall I do, Robert, if Mr. Jones comes upon me to pay the mortgage when you arc gone?
30372But what''s to hinder his attacking me when I''m asleep?
30372But why do n''t he come home?
30372But why need you? 30372 But would carry it myself?"
30372But you do n''t expect to be a fisherman when you grow up?
30372But,objected Robert,"how can I build an addition to the house?
30372Ca n''t you tell us, John?
30372Ca n''t, hey? 30372 Can I see her?"
30372Can you give me a clew?
30372Can you tell what was your last name?
30372Carriage, sir?
30372Carry your bag, sir?
30372Could n''t you dig some yourself?
30372Did Mr. Badger send you for me?
30372Did he always drink?
30372Did he buy anything?
30372Did he give it to you, Jane?
30372Did he say where he was going?
30372Did my uncle send you?
30372Did n''t Robert find you here, standin''by the dead body of his uncle?
30372Did n''t feel it, did yer?
30372Did n''t he tell you where he was going to put it?
30372Did you do that, Bill?
30372Did you ever carry a valise for me?
30372Did you ever hear of a man named Charles Waldo?
30372Did you expect to get the boat for nothing?
30372Did you find it in any of my pockets?
30372Did you have a pleasant trip?
30372Did you have a whip in your hand, Andrew?
30372Did you have that money when I saw you coming out of the tavern yard?
30372Did you mean to leave him there all night?
30372Did you strike Bill with it?
30372Did you think I was going to stay on the island?
30372Do n''t his bankers know where he is?
30372Do n''t you think he deserved it?
30372Do n''t you think it''s your real name, then?
30372Do you believe this? 30372 Do you call it a pretty good article?"
30372Do you know him?
30372Do you know the way to the Astor House?
30372Do you know where he has hidden it?
30372Do you know where he is?
30372Do you know where it is?
30372Do you know, Aunt Jane, I sometimes think that brighter days are coming to both of us? 30372 Do you like Robert?"
30372Do you mean it?
30372Do you mean to say that you refused to take him off?
30372Do you mean to say, Mr. Fairfax, that when you had your hand in my pocket just now you were asleep?
30372Do you mind telling me about yourself?
30372Do you often steal in your sleep?
30372Do you own this cottage?
30372Do you refuse to take me in your boat then?
30372Do you see anything to laugh at in me?
30372Do you tarry there?
30372Do you think I am made of money? 30372 Do you think he keeps a good deal of money by him?"
30372Does he get his groceries here or in the city?
30372Does he have much silver in the house?
30372Does he say so?
30372Does he?
30372Does his wife wear diamonds?
30372Does n''t your boy do errands for the hermit?
30372Does the hermit always stay at home in the evening?
30372Does this Irving stay down here himself?
30372For me?
30372For what? 30372 Frank, folks say you''re thinkin''of gettin''married?"
30372George Randolph, do you want to know my opinion of you?
30372Had you any suspicion that your son was stolen?
30372Has Bob been in here?
30372Has anything happened to Robert?
30372Has he got many books?
30372Has my nephew been here?
30372Has n''t come here for his dram, has he?
30372Have n''t I given you three days to stay? 30372 Have n''t you any tea, aunt-- for yourself, I mean?"
30372Have you any money now?
30372Have you any remembrance of your real name?
30372Have you anything for me to do, aunt?
30372Have you been spending any more money?
30372Have you ever thought of life and its uses-- I mean of the uses of your own life? 30372 Have you ever wondered,"asked the hermit abruptly,"why I have left the haunts of men and retired to this out- of- the- way spot?"
30372Have you given Mrs. Trafton any warning?
30372Have you gone crazy?
30372Have you got money to pay your fare?
30372Have you had a difficulty with Bill?
30372Have you had anything to eat to- day?
30372Have you no hope of ever again seeing your son?
30372He is an angel, is he? 30372 Here, you, Bob,"he said,"Is your aunt at home?"
30372How am I impudent?
30372How am I known in the village?
30372How came he there?
30372How came you so far out at sea on a frail raft? 30372 How can I thank you?
30372How can I thank you?
30372How can you advise me to do that, aunt?
30372How can you ask such a thing, John?
30372How can you tell such a lie?
30372How d''ye do, Sands?
30372How dare you talk to me in that impertinent way? 30372 How dare you talk to me in that way, you young fisherman?"
30372How dare you treat my aunt so meanly?
30372How did it happen, sir?
30372How did you come here?
30372How did you find out?
30372How do people call me?
30372How do you feel?
30372How do you know it is the same one?
30372How do you like tacklin''him yourself, my dear? 30372 How does she know I''m young?"
30372How far is it?
30372How is his health?
30372How large is this mortgage?
30372How long ago?
30372How much did you pay me for doin''it? 30372 How much do you charge?"
30372How much does the estate amount to probably?
30372How much is she to pay for the work?
30372How much is the cheapest?
30372How much must I pay for a stateroom?
30372How old would your son be now?
30372How shall I direct you, sir? 30372 How soon will he be able to travel?"
30372How then does he expect to be your heir?
30372How was it?
30372How was that?
30372I believe this young gentleman is Master Herbert Irving? 30372 I could n''t help it, could I?"
30372I could n''t refuse to sell him what he asked for, could I? 30372 I got you off well, did n''t I?"
30372I have n''t said anything impudent to you to- day, have I?
30372I hope you came by the money honestly, Robert?
30372I hope you do n''t doubt it?
30372I suppose Dick is a boy?
30372I suppose you have a berth?
30372I suppose you know where my uncle''s money goes?
30372I suppose you pray for your cousin''s death, then?
30372I suppose you understand what it is?
30372I suppose you''d like to get me on shore so that you might run off with my boat?
30372I suppose your stateroom contains two berths?
30372I suppose your uncle does not find fishing very remunerative?
30372I want to know what business you had with my pocketbook in your hand?
30372I wonder how he found me out?
30372I wonder whether Bill''s asleep?
30372I''m glad you''ve come, pa. Are you goin''to flog Bill now?
30372In gold?
30372Is Robert at home?
30372Is anybody likely to hire it?
30372Is anything the matter?
30372Is he dead, mister?
30372Is he round about home?
30372Is it possible you believe that I would rob you, my kind benefactor?
30372Is it so very lucky to make two dollars?
30372Is n''t your uncle a fisherman?
30372Is she goin''to leave?
30372Is that necessary?
30372Is that the way you repay me for keeping you out of the poorhouse?
30372Is there no stage that goes to that part of the city?
30372Is this stage yours?
30372Is your aunt at home, young man?
30372Is your mother at home?
30372It is his being out of the way that makes you the heir, is it not?
30372Julian,said he,"do you know why I am traveling-- what brought me here?
30372Looks rather mysterious-- doesn''t it?
30372May I ask what is your errand in New York?
30372Mean? 30372 Meaning me?"
30372Mr. Badger, will you allow this young ruffian to accuse your own son of falsehood?
30372Mr. Fairfax,he said,"shall I tell you what I think of your story?"
30372Mrs. Jones did n''t pay you enough to buy all those, did she?
30372No doubt I shall, but surely you did not buy them all for twenty- five cents?
30372No, why should I? 30372 Now what''s to prevent my explorin''this here shanty and makin''off with any valuables I come across?"
30372Now, will you go?
30372Oh, Robert, what shall we do?
30372Oh, that''s it, is it?
30372Oh, you expect me to spend all my time working for my support, do you? 30372 Oh, you will, will you?"
30372Perhaps you''d like to try him yourself?
30372Please, mister,he said,"wo n''t you come quick?
30372Say, boss, shall I carry that v''lise?
30372Say, do you see that man in the doorway?
30372Shall I go for the constable?
30372Shall I speak to him before entering?
30372Shall I take care of it for you, Robert?
30372Shall we send it to you anywhere?
30372Shirking your work, are you?
30372So I am your good man?
30372So you are back?
30372So you sustain him in his impudence, do you?
30372So you turn against your lawful wife, do you?
30372So you want a place?
30372So you''re stubborn, are you? 30372 So you''re talking against me behind my back, are you?"
30372So you''ve got back young man?
30372So your uncle''s burdens have been laid on your young shoulders? 30372 So, my young friend, you arc quite recovered from your bath?"
30372Stop that, will you?
30372Suppose he does?
30372Suppose you find him?
30372Tell me,said Robert,"did you live with a man named Badger in the town of Dexter?"
30372That boy? 30372 Then I may call to see you, sir?"
30372Then suppose we go to sleep?
30372Then the only difference between us is five cents?
30372Then what have you done with it-- lost it, eh?
30372Then where is it?
30372Then why did you try to rob me?
30372Then why is he not here?
30372Then will you follow my advice?
30372Then you forgive me for hitting you with a hoe, Andrew?
30372To Boston? 30372 To find me?
30372To the tavern, I suppose?
30372Tom Scott, are you goin''to see your wife sassed by a boy?
30372Trafton,said he,"where is that dollar you promised to pay me this morning?"
30372Trafton,said the landlord,"do n''t you think you''ve had enough?"
30372Was that all that passed?
30372Was the money yours?
30372Was there any difficulty between Bob and his uncle?
30372Well, Robert,she said abruptly,"what''s wanted?"
30372Well, boy, what do you want?
30372Well, how do you like it?
30372Well, my good man,he said patronizingly,"how much do I owe you?"
30372Well, tell her I''ve come to have a talk with her, do you hear?
30372Were they going to murder me?
30372Were you afraid I would forget to pay you?
30372Were you mistaken about this?
30372What are you goin''to do?
30372What are you going for, Master Herbert?
30372What book have you got there, Bob?
30372What boy?
30372What business had you with my pocketbook, you thief?
30372What business is it of mine that he has to stay on the island all night? 30372 What can I do for ye, Robert?"
30372What can he do?
30372What can that man want of me?
30372What can you remember?
30372What could have brought him here?
30372What did Andrew say to you when you came home from work?
30372What did you do that for?
30372What did your uncle say?
30372What do I mean?
30372What do you call cheap?
30372What do you mean by that, John?
30372What do you mean by that? 30372 What do you mean, Cornelia?"
30372What do you mean, wife?
30372What do you mean? 30372 What do you mean?"
30372What do you mean?
30372What do you mean?
30372What do you mean?
30372What do you prefer?
30372What do you propose, wife?
30372What do you say to the Widder Trafton''s house?
30372What do you think he had the impudence to say to me, mother?
30372What do you want me to do? 30372 What does my uncle owe him for?"
30372What does this mean, Julian?
30372What does this mean?
30372What for?
30372What have I ever done, Aunt Jane, that you should think me a thief?
30372What have you done with Robert, John Trafton?
30372What have you done with him?
30372What have you got for breakfast?
30372What have you got to say, hey?
30372What if she did? 30372 What is a stateroom?"
30372What is it, Andrew?
30372What is it, Robert?
30372What is it? 30372 What is it?"
30372What is my father''s name?
30372What is that?
30372What is this I hear?
30372What is your name?
30372What kind of a suit would you like?
30372What made him attack you?
30372What made you do that?
30372What makes you look so sober, Robert?
30372What makes you so prejudiced against the poor man? 30372 What makes you so sober, my boy?"
30372What makes you think so, Ben?
30372What more do they say of me?
30372What mystery is here? 30372 What next?"
30372What of him?
30372What reason have you for saying that?
30372What shall I do, sir?
30372What shall I ever do without Robert?
30372What sort of business is it that''s going to take so long?
30372What time do you expect he will whip you-- the old brute?
30372What was your son''s name?
30372What will you do about it, I''d like to know?
30372What will your mother say to your taking all this?
30372What young fisherman?
30372What''s that?
30372What''s the matter here?
30372What''s the matter, my darling?
30372What''s the matter?
30372What''s this about John Trafton?
30372What''s wanted, uncle?
30372What''s wanted, uncle?
30372What''s your name?
30372What? 30372 When you got it, why did n''t you come and bring it to me?"
30372Where am I?
30372Where are you going, Bill?
30372Where are you going, Robert?
30372Where are you going? 30372 Where are you going?"
30372Where are you going?
30372Where are you going?
30372Where can he be?
30372Where did you get it then?
30372Where did you get the book?
30372Where did you get this money?
30372Where did you hide it?
30372Where do you want to go?
30372Where have you been living?
30372Where have you been, Robert?
30372Where is Andrew? 30372 Where is Mr. Waldo now living?"
30372Where is it then?
30372Where is my husband?
30372Where is that man staying?
30372Where shall I get a key to my stateroom?
30372Where''d he get the money?
30372Where''s Robert?
30372Where''s that money, you young rascal? 30372 Where?"
30372Where?
30372Whereabouts do you cal''late to live?
30372Whereabouts is his cave?
30372Which is the best berth?
30372Who brought it?
30372Who is that?
30372Who is this rich man you''re talkin''about, Trafton?
30372Who is your aunt?
30372Who says so?
30372Who says so?
30372Who told you so?
30372Who took you off?
30372Who''s taking his part?
30372Why are you glad that I am a boy?
30372Why are you glad?
30372Why did n''t you keep him? 30372 Why did n''t you knock him down?"
30372Why did you tell me this boy wanted a place?
30372Why do you ask that question?
30372Why do you go back at all?
30372Why do you not go out to where he lives and watch him?
30372Why have n''t you? 30372 Why not?
30372Why not?
30372Why not?
30372Why not?
30372Why should I? 30372 Why should he stay over there so long?"
30372Why should n''t I ask for it?
30372Why, ai n''t you goin''to pay me?
30372Why? 30372 Will Robert live with us?"
30372Will he be kind to me?
30372Will it always be so?
30372Will it wear well?
30372Will you answer my question?
30372Will you come to shore and take me into your boat?
30372Will you explain yourself, sir?
30372Will you go with me to my hotel?
30372Will you keep the boy?
30372Will you live here, father?
30372Will you take a stateroom also?
30372Without his breakfast?
30372Wo n''t move?
30372Wo n''t? 30372 You a poor boy, with them clo''es?"
30372You are going to New York, I suppose?
30372You are sure he did n''t give it to you to keep?
30372You do n''t mean it?
30372You do n''t mean it?
30372You do n''t mean to say Bob''s drowned?
30372You do n''t mean to say that I was meddling with your pocketbook?
30372You do n''t mean to say you ai n''t a match for a boy?
30372You do n''t mean to say you''re ready to pay for it cash down, do you?
30372You do n''t mind selling him drink, landlord?
30372You do n''t think my boy is lost?
30372You do n''t?
30372You have n''t come into a fortune, have you? 30372 You have seen me before?"
30372You mean the landlord''s wife?
30372You surely are not going to invite that common boy into the yard?
30372You will be content to live with me, will you not?
30372You wo n''t stand it?
30372You wo n''t take me back there?
30372You would n''t care to stay here, I suppose?
30372You''ll be prudent, Robert, for my sake?
30372You''re doin''well now, Robert, I take it?
30372You''re not going back to the tavern, John?
30372Your uncle-- John Trafton-- is not a temperate man?
30372A pound will last a long time, wo n''t it?"
30372A. L. BURT COMPANY, PUBLISHERS NEW YORK ROBERT COVERDALE''S STRUGGLE CHAPTER I A FISHERMAN''S CABIN"Robert, have you seen anything of your uncle?"
30372Accordingly he stepped up to the boys and demanded with kindling eyes:"Are you laughing at me?"
30372And now, my friends, what are your plans?
30372And so you tried to murder him, you young ruffian?"
30372Any other errands?"
30372Anything more?"
30372Are you in business?"
30372Are you sleepy?"
30372Are you willing to follow in his steps and grow up a fisherman, like your neighbors?"
30372As he was looking about him in rather a bewildered way a colored man employed on the boat inquired:"What are you looking for, young man?"
30372Aunt Jane,"he demanded indignantly,"that I will desert you and leave you to shift for yourself?"
30372Aunt Jane?"
30372Badger?"
30372Badger?"
30372Ben Bence quickly asked:"What do you mean?"
30372Bill opened his eyes and asked in a wondering tone:"Where am I?"
30372Bill, is that your only punishment?"
30372Bob?"
30372But have you formed any plans?"
30372But how came you on the island?
30372But how did he happen to find the fisherman there and what was the object of the latter?
30372But what''s the matter, Bill?
30372But will not your uncle seek to take them from you?"
30372By the way, Mr. Badger, where is the ball of twine?
30372CHAPTER II ROBERT AND MRS. JONES"Are you willing to go to the village for me, Robert?"
30372CHAPTER X ROBERT COMPLETES THE RAFT"What do you want of me?"
30372Ca n''t I buy them just as well as you?
30372Call at the cave?"
30372Can it be true?"
30372Can you recommend me a good hotel?"
30372Carlo?"
30372Could Robert be blamed for regarding his uncle with contempt?
30372Did he ever tell you that I was his enemy?"
30372Did n''t she like the work?"
30372Did n''t you know I wanted to see him?"
30372Did you ever hear of a somnambulist?"
30372Did you give him a floggin''?
30372Did you secure one?"
30372Did your uncle give it to you?"
30372Do n''t you know what he said-- that he wanted to pay a dollar to the tavern keeper?"
30372Do n''t you think that I ought to call and thank him?"
30372Do n''t you want to buy something else?"
30372Do you care for books?"
30372Do you hear that, you young rascal?"
30372Do you hear that?"
30372Do you hear?"
30372Do you know him?"
30372Do you know who it is that has saved you?"
30372Do you live in the village?"
30372Do you think he will flog you?"
30372Do you understand?"
30372Does he live in Boston?"
30372Does he make so light of the flogging which your father has promised him?"
30372For a brief time the hermit gazed at Robert in thoughtful silence and then said:"How old are you?"
30372George paused in his rowing and asked-- for he had not yet caught sight of Robert:"Who calls?"
30372Had he not devoted several hours to constructing the raft he was trying to navigate and should he allow this time to be thrown away?
30372Have n''t I given him the shelter of my roof?"
30372Have you ever formed plans for the future?"
30372Have you had dinner?"
30372Have you no aspirations?
30372He weighed out the tea and then asked:"Is there anything more?"
30372How are you going to help it?"
30372How can I ever repay you?
30372How can a boy like you find your way round in such a great city as Boston?"
30372How could he suppose that the boy before him, dressed as well as himself, was the poor fisher boy of Cook''s Harbor?
30372How dare you speak to me in that way?"
30372How did I know he had a pistol?
30372How did it happen that you allowed him to strike you?"
30372How did the unhappy man come to his death?"
30372How do you expect Robert is going to find the money in the dark?"
30372How do you expect me to buy coffee?"
30372How do you feel?"
30372How do you sell your sugar?"
30372How far is it?"
30372How much did you calculate to pay?"
30372How much did you say it was?"
30372How much will it cost?"
30372How should I?"
30372How soon do you wish me to start?"
30372How will you be able to maintain yourselves?"
30372I did n''t blame them so much, for who''d think of a gentleman cheatin''a poor boy?"
30372I say, have you any idea how the boy came to disappear?"
30372I suppose they are acting under orders from him?"
30372I wonder how that sort of work will suit the young gentleman?"
30372I wonder if they''ll be respectful to her in the poorhouse-- where it''s likely she''ll fetch up?"
30372Is there any water near by?"
30372Is there anybody you want to disappear?"
30372It cost you a dollar, did it not?"
30372Jones?"
30372Jones?"
30372Jones?"
30372Jones?"
30372Jones?"
30372Jones?"
30372Jones?"
30372Jones?"
30372Jones?"
30372Jones?"
30372Julian, how would you like to have a father?"
30372Mr. Conway, will you wait on this young man?"
30372Now, what do you say?"
30372Now, what have you to say for yourself, sir?"
30372Now, when do you want to start for Boston?"
30372Perhaps, however, you have company?"
30372Robert began to understand now, and he replied proudly:"Do you generally ask your customers how much money they have?"
30372Robert thought that the boy''s mind might be wandering, but continued:"Have you no friends in Columbus?"
30372Sands?"
30372Sands?"
30372Shall I start first?"
30372Shall I use your name?"
30372Shall you go out in the boat this morning?"
30372She looked with surprise at the three bundles he brought in and asked:"What have you got there, Robert?"
30372Surely you did not swim there?"
30372The hermit turned to our hero, who stood a little in the background, and said quietly:"Robert, do you think I killed your uncle?"
30372The tavern keeper?"
30372Then, gazing at the strange apartment and the majestic face of the venerable stranger, he said hesitatingly:"Am I still living or was I drowned?"
30372These discoveries cleared the hermit, but the question arose:"Who was this other man?"
30372To whom do you intend to let it?"
30372Trafton?"
30372Was he mad?"
30372Was it possible that this common fisherman was laughing at him?
30372Well, what shall it be?"
30372What brings you here?"
30372What claim had he on me?"
30372What could his sudden unselfishness mean?
30372What difference does it make to you what I do with it?"
30372What do you charge?"
30372What do you mean by that, I want to know?"
30372What do you say to that?"
30372What do you say?"
30372What errand have you got for me to the village, aunt?"
30372What excuse or apology could he possibly offer?
30372What have you heard?"
30372What is your name?"
30372What makes you so pale?"
30372What right has he to look down upon honest people, I want to know?"
30372What will you do with me?"
30372What''ll my father say to that?"
30372What''s he been doin''?"
30372When will you be back?"
30372Where did you get it?"
30372Where did you get the money?"
30372Where did you see him?"
30372Where is Bill?"
30372Who can it be?"
30372Who could have had the heart to kill you?"
30372Who knows but he might have thousands of dollars in the cave?
30372Why, then, did not Mr. Jones foreclose the mortgage instantly and gratify his resentment?
30372Why?"
30372Will you take a seat?"
30372Will you take us aboard?
30372Wo n''t I do as well?"
30372Wo n''t that be a splendid joke?"
30372Wo n''t your cousin play?"
30372Would n''t he like me to travel for him?"
30372Would n''t it be jolly if I could find a keg of gold pieces hidden somewhere about the old wreck?
30372Would n''t you like to try it again?
30372Would you mind rowing over and bringing him back?"
30372You surely do not mean to deprive Robert and me of our home?"
30372You''ll hit me again, will you?"
30372ai n''t that jolly?
30372am I to be defied by a weak woman and a half- grown boy?
30372not the young fisherman?"
30372that''s it, is it?"
30372thought Herbert in great surprise,"and where does this dog come from?"
9983''A hand?''
9983''A little bit slow, eh?''
9983''A little more wine?''
9983''Abundance of malice; but I do n''t think he''s countenanced?''
9983''Ah, Dorcas, why will you misconstrue me?
9983''Ah, the expenses?''
9983''Am I to conclude that you withdraw from your engagement?''
9983''Am I?
9983''And I suppose,''he said,''we are to regard this little conversation, for the present, as confidential?''
9983''And Miss Lake is quite well?''
9983''And am I always to be sick, here in my little bed, Wapsie?''
9983''And how do you do-- quite well, Jim-- and out of place?
9983''And how have you been, Radie?''
9983''And how is Mark?''
9983''And is he in danger, the handsome little fellow?''
9983''And is it from the abyss, Sir, he writes his letters?''
9983''And keep the hall door shut and bolted?''
9983''And may I particularly ask that you will so attend to what I am about to say, as to be able to make a note of it for Mr. Welder''s consideration?''
9983''And now,''said she,''Chelford, ought not we to send for poor Rachel: her only brother?
9983''And pray, Lady Chelford, what do you think of Mr. Mark Wylder?''
9983''And pray, Mr. Larkin, can I be of any use?''
9983''And pray, what does she want you to do, Stanley?''
9983''And so it is really half- past eleven?''
9983''And so,''said the captain, coming to a stand- still,''I''ll bid you good- bye, Larkin; what stay, I forgot to ask, do you make in town?''
9983''And tell me, Dorcas, does he know that he is in danger-- such imminent danger?''
9983''And there is really no secret-- nothing--_tell_ your wife-- nothing you fear coming to light?''
9983''And they ca n''t come_ to- day_?''
9983''And was there no more?''
9983''And what do you call this place?''
9983''And what do you want of me now?''
9983''And what makes you think that, Rachel, darling?''
9983''And what reason can you give?''
9983''And what_ do_ you propose, then?''
9983''And when does he return?''
9983''And where is poor Billy quartered?''
9983''And why do you contradict and thwart me upon business of which I know something and you nothing?
9983''And why not?
9983''And why?''
9983''And would that arrangement of Mr. Wylder''s have satisfied the conditions of the will?''
9983''And you do n''t think_ you_ could have persuaded yourself to repeat that little charm, which obtained her boon and one of his horses straightway?''
9983''And-- and any news in that quarter of Mr. Mark Wylder-- any-- any_ surmise_?
9983''And_ where_, Captain Lake, did it occur, may I enquire?''
9983''Any answer required?''
9983''Any message?''
9983''Are n''t you afraid of being robbed and murdered, Radie?''
9983''Are you better, Dorcas?''
9983''Are you better, dear?''
9983''Are you ill, Dorkie, darling?''
9983''Are you looking for anything, Willie, darling?
9983''Are you sure?''
9983''Are you well, dear?''
9983''Been in Calcutta, Lake?''
9983''Better to- day, Tamar?''
9983''But I think he comes it a little too strong-- two sermons last Sunday, and a prayer- meeting at nine o''clock?''
9983''But Larkin has been corresponding with Mark Wylder up to a very late day, and if this body has been so long buried, how the devil can it be he?
9983''But do n''t you think, Radie, I should do well to marry, that is, assuming everything to be suitable?''
9983''But do you happen, Captain Lake, to know of any of those unfortunate, those miserable connections which young gentlemen of fashion-- eh?
9983''But do you think Mr. Larkin really supposes that poor Mark is dead?''
9983''But he does not look worse?''
9983''But how can you show it?''
9983''But how_ is_ he?''
9983''But tell me, Stanley, how do you want to apply money?
9983''But what is it?''
9983''But you would not give me to him, Wapsie?''
9983''But, my darling, do n''t you know the reversion under the will is a great_ fortune_?
9983''By- and- by; what do you think of Larkin?''
9983''By- the- bye, are you anything of a cricketer?
9983''Ca n''t you touch the bell, Sir?
9983''Call me Rachel; and wo n''t you let me call you Dolly?''
9983''Can I conjecture why he is gone?''
9983''Can I do anything, Radie?
9983''Can I?
9983''Certainly; shall I ask my mother, or will you write?''
9983''Come, Stanley, what do you want?''
9983''Come, Tamar, what do you want of me?
9983''Compulsion, I suppose; you mean constraint?''
9983''Consider_ what_, Sir?''
9983''D-- the dogs, what are they barking for?''
9983''Dead, Sir!--and what the plague puts that in your head?
9983''Dear little Fairy-- where is he?''
9983''Did I?
9983''Did he wish to see no one?''
9983''Did not you_ know_ I was there?''
9983''Did you see Buddle, just now?''
9983''Did you see Stanley?
9983''Did you see that?''
9983''Do I think it may safely be contracted, solely to join two estates?''
9983''Do n''t you think he might take steps to relieve himself considerably?''
9983''Do n''t you think if we said a pound a- day, and your travelling expenses?''
9983''Do n''t you think it had best go at once?--there may be something requiring an answer, and your post leaves, does n''t it, at twelve?''
9983''Do n''t you think possibly Mark Wylder might think us very impertinent?''
9983''Do n''t you think, Mr. Larkin, you could perhaps reduce_ this_, just a little?''
9983''Do n''t you think, Rachel, remembering what I have confided to you, that you might be franker with me in this?''
9983''Do you hear that, Willie?''
9983''Do you know anything of him?''
9983''Do you mean to say you actually think he''s shut up in a madhouse at this moment?''
9983''Do you recollect, Radie, what I said that morning when I first called here, and saw you?''
9983''Do you remember Miss Beauchamp, Radie?''
9983''Do you suppose I am a highwayman in disguise, or a murderer, like-- what''s his name-- Eugene Aram?
9983''Do you think it''s true, Sir?''
9983''Do you think, Lady Chelford, it may be safely contracted, solely to join two estates?''
9983''Do you think, Mr. Larkin, you can write that strong letter to stay proceedings which you intended yesterday?''
9983''Do you think,''said he,''there is much danger of that?
9983''Do you want to wake your people up?''
9983''Do you wish another game?''
9983''Does he really think that Stanley will recover?''
9983''Does he say anything?''
9983''Does he think there is danger?''
9983''Does he?''
9983''Does little Dorkie love me?''
9983''Does she like you?''
9983''Dorcas, darling, you are certainly ill. What is the matter?''
9983''Dorcas, you are changed; have I lost your love for asking so poor a kindness?''
9983''For whom?''
9983''Foul play-- is there?
9983''Ha, is n''t he?
9983''Had you been thinking of him lately?''
9983''Handsome, but so noisy and foolish, and wicked; and is not he vulgar, too?''
9983''Hanged if I know!--what the devil''s that to you or me, Sir?''
9983''Has he lost his wits?
9983''Has he spoken to anyone?''
9983''Has she got your mistress''s directions?''
9983''Have you ever seen Paul''s Eleven play?''
9983''Have you heard anything of Mark, darling?''
9983''Have you heard anything since, Mr. Larkin?
9983''Have you observed how Dorcas has treated me this evening?''
9983''Have you really come all this way, Rachel, to see_ me_ this evening?''
9983''He bears a good character among the townspeople, does n''t he?
9983''He has not appointed another man of business?''
9983''He is distressed for money?
9983''He looks better-- a little better, do n''t you think; just a little better?''
9983''How are you, Lake?
9983''How could I tell he was such a_ fiend_?''
9983''How d''ye do, Larkin?
9983''How d''ye do, Mrs. Dutton?
9983''How d''ye do, dear Larkin?''
9983''How do you do, Margery?
9983''How do you do, old Ruddle-- quite well?''
9983''How do you do?--better, I hope, Radie?
9983''How far is the junction?''
9983''How is Rachel?
9983''How is he, Dorcas?''
9983''How long is all this to go on for, Master Stanley?''
9983''How the-- could he tell?
9983''I believe, Charlie,''he recommenced suddenly,''there is not such an unnatural family on record as ours; is there?
9983''I dare say,''said Wylder, with a sneer,''he was asking affectionately for me, eh?''
9983''I do n''t know; but I think he mentioned Larkins''s house, did n''t he?
9983''I do n''t think, Rachel dear, you heard me?''
9983''I have, indeed, dear; have n''t I?
9983''I know her brother, a little-- that is, Captain Lake-- Stanley Lake; he''s her brother, I fancy?''
9983''I mean of the-- the family arrangements, in which, as Mr. Wylder''s friend, you seem to take an interest?''
9983''I say good- night, old Tamar; and hold your tongue, do you see?''
9983''I say,''said Stanley, addressing the keeper, whom by a beck he had brought to his side,''you do n''t allow him, surely, to go alone now?''
9983''I suppose the world thinks me a very happy fellow, Miss Lake?''
9983''I used to be brave; my courage I think is gone; but who''d have imagined what''s before me?''
9983''I was there, and Hockley was there, and Mark Wylder was there-- was not he?''
9983''I wonder what they''ll think of it at Brandon?''
9983''I''ve a lot of fellows with me; they''ve just run in to luncheon; wo n''t you take something?''
9983''I, Radie?''
9983''In none of your conversations upon the subject with-- with members of your family?''
9983''In the Dutch room, after tea, I suppose?''
9983''Is Larcom there?''
9983''Is Larkin here?''
9983''Is Lord Chelford with him?''
9983''Is he dead?''
9983''Is he so very odd?''
9983''Is he?''
9983''Is it Mr. Larkin, my dear?
9983''Is it Sir Harry Bracton?
9983''Is it thought the writs will follow the dissolution unusually quickly?''
9983''Is she at home?''
9983''Is there a_ Wylder_ vault here, Captain Brandon Lake?''
9983''Is there any vacant bed- room near where you have placed him?
9983''Is there immediate danger?''
9983''Is there no doctor-- I''m very much hurt?''
9983''It ca n''t go beyond five hundred, or say nine hundred-- eh, at the outside?''
9983''Just for the sake of her estate-- it''s the way of the world, of course, and all that-- but, is not it a little bit shabby, do n''t you think?
9983''Just so; and what do you found your opinion about Mr. Mark Wylder on?''
9983''Lake?
9983''London?''
9983''M.P.--eh?
9983''Maybe he has returned?''
9983''Maybe, Rachel dear, you would like to drive a little?''
9983''Miss Beauchamp?
9983''Monstrous hot, Sir-- hey?
9983''Moore''s is a daring morality-- what do you think, for instance, of these lines?''
9983''No good story-- hey?
9983''No headache or fever?''
9983''No, Stanley; nothing unusual, is there?''
9983''No?
9983''No?
9983''Nor to come into any place but this-- the park, I mean?''
9983''Not asleep?''
9983''Not poor William Wylder?''
9983''Not schoolfellows----you are not an Eton man, eh?''
9983''Nothing to Chelford-- nothing particular, I mean?''
9983''Now, Radie, you must be reasonable-- who have I to advise with?''
9983''Now, Willie dear, do you hear that-- do you hear what she says?''
9983''Now, now, we are all friends, are n''t we?''
9983''Objection?
9983''Of Mark?
9983''Oh, Lake Avernus, is it?''
9983''Oh, is there?''
9983''Oh, yes; and how do you do, Mr. Larcom?
9983''Oh?
9983''Oh?''
9983''Or a mystery-- or even a dream?''
9983''Or an elopement?''
9983''Or the other thing, eh?''
9983''Perhaps,''said Mr. Larkin, blandly,''you would permit me to look at the letter you mention having received from the solicitors at Cambridge?''
9983''Personal injury?
9983''Quite so,''said Lake, quietly;''and where is the notice he speaks of here?''
9983''Rachel, Rachel, is it possible?''
9983''Radie not come yet?''
9983''Red ink?''
9983''Red?''
9983''Returned?''
9983''Satisfactory, I hope?''
9983''Saturday, is it?
9983''Say what you will, but keep your temper-- will you?''
9983''Shall we put it off for a little?
9983''She has not cost me much?''
9983''She quite believes her mistress is up stairs, eh?''
9983''Sir Harry who?''
9983''Sir Julius Hockley?
9983''Smith?
9983''So I was; but I arrived here this morning; I''m staying for a few days at the Lodge-- Larkin''s house; you''re going home, I suppose, Radie?''
9983''So that being understood-- eh?--I suppose we have nothing particular to add?''
9983''So you are going to London--_to- morrow_, is not it?''
9983''Stanley, dear, what''s the matter, in Heaven''s name?''
9983''Surely she is woman enough to be fussed a little about her marriage?''
9983''Tamar, they are galloping down the road, I think-- what can it mean?''
9983''That ballad, you know, expresses it very prettily:--"Oh, thou hast been the cause of this anguish, my mother?"''
9983''That?
9983''The blue?
9983''The man, Sir, as you left a note for yesterday, which he desires to see you?''
9983''Then I am to understand, my lord, that I am superseded in the management of this case?''
9983''Then the thing ca n''t go on?''
9983''Then you wo n''t come into the house, you wo n''t drink tea with me, and you wo n''t join me in my little walk; and why not any of these?''
9983''Think he''ll do then?''
9983''This is Brandon?''
9983''This place, I suppose, is confoundedly slow, is not it?
9983''This room, Stanley, dear?''
9983''Upon your honour?''
9983''Very honest fellows, with good looking after-- eh?''
9983''Very impertinent; yes, indeed, Stanley, and so I shall continue to be until----''''Pray how does it concern you?
9983''Very true, quite true, very urgent indeed,''replied the attorney, calmly;''I presume, Miss Lake, I may take a chair?''
9983''Very weak?
9983''Waiting there?''
9983''Was Lord Chelford coming?''
9983''We are all agreed, are not we?
9983''Well, Dorkie, love, what''s the matter?''
9983''Well, Larkin, how d''ye do?
9983''Well, Radie, I know you mean me; but as you wish it, I''ll carry my fangs elsewhere;--and what has become of Will Wylder?''
9983''Well, Tamar, how do you do?--how are all?
9983''Well, Tamar, where''s your story?''
9983''Well, the next possibly, I hope?''
9983''Well, things do turn out very oddly; do n''t they?''
9983''Well, what is he doing, and when does he come back?
9983''Well, what the devil do you mean by refusing to help me, even with a hint?
9983''Well, you know best; but are not there resources?''
9983''Well?''
9983''Were you of age, my dear Sir, when he gave you these books on credit?
9983''What ails her-- is she ill, Master Stanley?''
9983''What are you doing here, Sir?''
9983''What are you laughing at?''
9983''What body?''
9983''What can she see in him?
9983''What can that mean?''
9983''What day of the month is this?''
9983''What do I think of marriage?''
9983''What do you call this, your boudoir or parlour?''
9983''What do you laugh at, Charlie?''
9983''What election, dear?''
9983''What have I heard-- what have I endured?
9983''What is he to do, Rachel?''
9983''What on earth can it be?''
9983''What the d-- has he come down here for?
9983''What the devil are you talking about?''
9983''What the devil difficulty_ can_ there be, Sir?
9983''What the devil do you mean, woman?''
9983''What the devil''s that?''
9983''What then?''
9983''What thing?
9983''What was Mark Wylder''s religion, that I may speak to him comfortably?''
9983''What''s that?''
9983''What''s that?''
9983''What''s your quarrel?
9983''What?''
9983''What_ is_ this law- paper?''
9983''When do you mean to pay Dawlings that bet on the Derby?''
9983''Where is he, darling-- where is Stanley?''
9983''Where is he?
9983''Who are you?''
9983''Who can this be?''
9983''Who have you got in the rooms?''
9983''Who is he?''
9983''Who is that?''
9983''Who knows?
9983''Who''s on the other side?''
9983''Who''s that?''
9983''Who''s that?''
9983''Who''s there?''
9983''Who''s there?''
9983''Who''s there?''
9983''Who, pray, is disputing the husband''s right to rule?''
9983''Who-- what-- what is it?''
9983''Who-- where-- Mark Wylder?''
9983''Who?''
9983''Who?--Lake?''
9983''Why could you not leave me in peace, Stanley?''
9983''Why do n''t you ask Rachel, she''s cleverer than I, and you are more in the habit of consulting her?''
9983''Why do you come so softly, Tamar?
9983''Why do you talk that way?
9983''Why have you come here?''
9983''Why should not_ he_ do as well as another?
9983''Why should you, though?
9983''Why so odious, Rachel?
9983''Why, d-- it, it ca n''t be helped now; can it?''
9983''Why, d-- you, Tamar, ca n''t you listen?''
9983''Why, his Brother Mark could get him cleverly out of it-- could not he?''
9983''Why, my dearest, what on earth could put such a wild fancy in your head?''
9983''Why, you have not sold out?''
9983''Why-- what has Sir Harry done?
9983''Will you be so good, Sir, as to touch the bell?''
9983''Will you come with me for a drive, Radie?''
9983''Will you dance this set-- are you engaged, Miss Brandon?''
9983''Will you give me just a minute, Mr. De Cresseron, in the drawing- room, while I show you a miniature?
9983''Will you take me for your footman as far as the town?''
9983''William Wylder is not selling his reversion?''
9983''Wo n''t you sit down?''
9983''Would you like a messenger?
9983''Yes''m, very tired''m; would he like his precious head lower a bit?
9983''Yes, dear Stanley, much better; but why should you suppose any plot against our title?''
9983''Yes-- signal-- stop him, can you?''
9983''You are better, darling; are not you better?''
9983''You are better, darling; you are rested?''
9983''You are not going to write now, Willie, dear?''
9983''You are staying at Brandon?''
9983''You did, did you?
9983''You do n''t think there''s any really serious annoyance-- you do n''t know the party?''
9983''You do, Radie, and why do you dissemble with me?''
9983''You drove Mr. Wylder to Dollington?''
9983''You have heard, of course, of Mr. Wylder''s absence?''
9983''You have your papers?''
9983''You have, have you?
9983''You know Captain Lake?''
9983''You mean just now?
9983''You mean to come out as an orator, then?''
9983''You seem to be very sensible, Mr. De Cresseron; pray tell me, frankly, what do you think of all this?''
9983''You sit up stairs chiefly?''
9983''You''ll come then?''
9983''You''ll not be angry, Master Stanley, dear?
9983''You''ll not wait for the division on Trawler''s motion?''
9983''You''ve a headache, Miss Radie?''
9983''You_ are_ my man of business-- aren''t you?
9983''_ Oh?_''said the young lady, in that tone which is pointed with an unknown accent, between a note of enquiry and of surprise.
9983''s present place of abode?
9983A poacher, maybe?
9983All on a sudden Dorcas Brandon said--''And pray what do you think of marriage, Lady Chelford?''
9983And I think she offered up a little thanksgiving, she so longed to give him his tea herself; and then she asked--''Is our precious mannikin asleep?''
9983And I think when another such yesterday shall have arrived, where shall I be?
9983And Rachel with a start awoke, and sat up with a wild look and a cry--''What is it?''
9983And does it not strike you that my staying here, on the contrary, would-- would tend to prevent the kind of conversation you speak of?''
9983And how is Miss Rachel?''
9983And if it be as bodies usually are after such a time, how can anybody pretend to identify it?
9983And now, dear,''she said, after a little pause,''you''ll remember your solemn promise?''
9983And pray how do you amuse yourself here?
9983And what is Smith doing or saying?''
9983And what is this job of Martin''s?
9983And why not, dear?
9983And, I suppose, Captain Lake, you received my note?''
9983And-- and how are the family at Brandon-- all well, I trust?''
9983Anything about Raikes''s lease?''
9983Are any of your people going to Brandon this morning?''
9983Are you better?''
9983Are you certain?
9983Are you coming to Brandon this evening?
9983Are you ill, Dorkie?''
9983Are you ill, darling?''
9983Are you in his secrets at all?''
9983As we went out, Wylder enquired, with his usual good taste:''Well, what do you think of her?''
9983At last she placed the picture in my hand, and asked--''Is this really very like her?''
9983Besides, why on earth should either show himself in that absurd way?
9983But do n''t these very wise things sometimes turn out very foolishly?
9983But does Stanley-- he can hardly hope?''
9983But have we no compensation in this, that the love which begets it is often as unreasonable?
9983But no, it could not be; who was there to call at so odd an hour?
9983But perhaps you''ve heard of it?''
9983But the question which next arose was very perplexed-- was the body that of Mr. Mark Wylder?
9983But what can I say-- how can I thank you?''
9983But what was he to do exactly?
9983But what was to be done with mere''London?''
9983But what was to be done?
9983But who in this wide- awake world was better able to take care of himself than the gallant captain?
9983But you are not to go to the Brandon Arms-- you got my note, did n''t you?''
9983But_ you_ do n''t know?''
9983Can I do anything, Captain Lake, for you while in town?''
9983Can I have mistaken the name?''
9983Can he_ know_ anything?
9983Can you conjecture where his address may now be?''
9983Can you conjecture why he is gone?''
9983Can you tell by the sky when it is holiday in hell?
9983Come in and have a chop, will you?''
9983Come, I say, what is it?''
9983Come, Rachel, shall we escape from the spell and the destiny into solitude?
9983Could anything be imagined so mad-- so unaccountable?
9983Could this be the heroine of the pending alliance?
9983D''ye see-- hey?''
9983D-- it, where''s the note?''
9983D-- you-- are you there?''
9983Did either Miss Lake or the captain use the word mad- house?''
9983Did he tell the family at Brandon?''
9983Did the same idea never strike you?''
9983Did you ever see anything so bee- utiful in your life?
9983Did you ever see so pushing a brute?''
9983Did you see him looking up?''
9983Do n''t keep looking at me; look at something else, ca n''t you?
9983Do n''t they often affect indifference, and occasionally even aversion, where there is a different sort of feeling?
9983Do n''t they sometimes actually admire what is repulsive?
9983Do n''t you know very well, in a small place like this, they are all alive with curiosity?
9983Do n''t you remember Robin Hood?
9983Do n''t you remember"Rasselas?"''
9983Do n''t you think people have eyes to see, and ears and tongues in this part of the world?
9983Do n''t you think so?
9983Do n''t you think-- he may have an object-- and not believe I''m in much danger?
9983Do n''t you?''
9983Do n''t you?''
9983Do they entertain the neighbours ever at Brandon?''
9983Do they know anything very bad-- are you in their power?''
9983Do you allude to a legal matter?''
9983Do you happen to know a person at all versed in Gylingden matters-- or, perhaps, a member of your club-- named Smith?''
9983Do you know anything of him?
9983Do you know him?''
9983Do you know his club, Captain Lake?''
9983Do you know, you frightened me?''
9983Do you know?''
9983Do you mean_ that_?''
9983Do you play?''
9983Do you really think so?''
9983Do you really think your friend, Mr. Wylder, cares about me?''
9983Do you suppose I''m quite demented?
9983Do you take me for a fool?
9983Do you think I''ll leave matters to take their course, and sit down here to be destroyed?
9983Do you think they would ever have got their title by any other means?
9983Do you think you could_ ever_ like me?''
9983Does he mean he''ll be here in a week or only to have the papers ready in a week?''
9983Does he speak to you?''
9983Does not brutality in our sex, and even rascality, interest them sometimes?
9983Does she say where she is staying, or her son?''
9983Dorcas looked down and smiled oddly; it was a sad and bitter smile, and seemed to ask whither has that desperate love, in so short a time, flown?
9983Dorcas returned her gaze with one of haughty amazement; and Rachel said,''Well, Dorcas, you promise?''
9983Eh, can he possibly?
9983Eh?
9983Eh?''
9983Go your own way, why ca n''t you?
9983Had Lord Chelford been invoked, and answered satisfactorily?
9983Had he knowledge, public talents, training?
9983Had he patriotism, any one noble motive or fine instinct to prompt him to public life?
9983Had he seen it at all?
9983Had he seen it there at all?
9983Had it actually occurred, that strange confession of Dorcas Brandon''s?
9983Had n''t you a letter from his mother lately?
9983Had not you better turn back to Gylingden, or the Lodge, or wherever you mean to pass the evening, and leave me to my quiet walk and my solitude?''
9983Had she overheard a part of that unworthy talk of Wylder''s at the dinner- table, the day before, and mistaken Rachel''s share in the dialogue?
9983Had you not better enquire, Mr. Crutchleigh; it would seem we have made a mistake?''
9983Had you not better go down and speak to your friend in the water?''
9983Has it not struck you that Mark Wylder may possibly know something of you, you would not have published?''
9983Has there been any real confidence, Captain Lake, upon your part?
9983Have I been consulted?--I put it to you; have I been trusted?
9983Have not you read of straining at gnats and swallowing camels?
9983Have you any idea what they quarrelled about?''
9983Have you considered it?''
9983Have you heard lately from Jim?''
9983Have you seen it, Captain Lake?''
9983He asked Buddle about ten o''clock( having waked up from a sort of stupor)--''what about Jim Dutton?''
9983He brought forth no cigar- case, with the stereotyped,''Have you any objection to my smoking a cigar?''
9983He glanced aside at the tarn where I had seen the phantom, and by which their path now led them--''You remember Parnell''s pretty image?
9983He had made a still better purchase from the vicar; but what would have become of the vicar if he had not been raised up to purchase?
9983He owed him costs, and, beside, costs also to Burlington, Smith, and Co. Was there not Talkative in''Pilgrim''s Progress?''
9983He told me all about it; did not you, little man?
9983He was now saying-- as holding his''Wapsie''s''hand, he capered round in front, looking up in his face--''Why has Mr. Larkin no teeth when he laughs?
9983He, perhaps, can explain; and pray, my dear, what are these?''
9983Her colour was returning, and with a shivering sigh, she said--''Oh?
9983Hey?
9983His lips stirred and his throat, but he did not speak until a second effort brought utterance, and he murmured,''Is that you, Radie?''
9983His_ justice_ being what?
9983Hockley is a very pretty place, is not it?''
9983How are you, William?''
9983How can you go on with it?''
9983How can you tell which was in the wrong?
9983How could he have overlooked that?
9983How could she account for this desperate hallucination?
9983How could she tell what it might or might not portend?
9983How could that ill- omened man have divined her connection with the incidents-- the unknown incidents-- of that direful night?
9983How could you-- how_ could_ you, Stanley?''
9983How dared her husband mask from her what he confided to another?
9983How did it happen-- oh, how?--you such a scholar, so clever, so handsome, my beautiful Willie-- how did you ever look down on poor wretched me?''
9983How do you do, Lake?
9983How do you mean, Larcom?''
9983How had that horrible figure come there-- why was this meeting-- whence his knowledge?
9983How long since that cold crystal had glowed with the ripples of wine?
9983How long was it since lips had touched its brim before, and whose?
9983How long, you say, was Jack''s sword?
9983How on earth do you get over the day, and, worse still, the evenings?''
9983How soon will the doctor be here?''
9983I am-- I think I am-- a little nervous, darling, and you wo n''t leave me?''
9983I beg you''ll collect yourself-- shall I call for water, Miss Lake?''
9983I dare say-- eh?''
9983I do n''t at all like his coming down here after Mark Wylder; what_ can_ he mean?
9983I do n''t know anything about him, and I do know you-- don''t you see?
9983I do not know in the least what had passed before, but Lake said--''How the devil did he come in?''
9983I happen to know what Mark Wylder would have done-- for he spoke very fiercely on the subject-- perhaps he consulted you?''
9983I heard what Miss Radie said; and is not it true-- is not it cruel-- is not it frightful to go on?''
9983I lit a bit of fire in your room, Miss; would you like me to go up stairs with you, Miss?''
9983I look a- head a bit, eh?
9983I often wonder how the Wylder coat came in the centre; who built the old house-- a Brandon or a Wylder; and if a Wylder, why was it Brandon Hall?
9983I only want to explain it, and get your advice, and any little assistance you can give me; and surely that is not unreasonable?''
9983I quite allow I was wrong-- worse than wrong-- but where is the use of attacking me now, when I''m in this dreadful fix?
9983I really ca n''t suspect so monstrous a thing; but,_ unquestionably_, a letter_ has_ been lost-- and who''s to_ take_ it?''
9983I s''pose, Sir, you were viewing the body?''
9983I say, old fellow, come out and have a weed, will you?''
9983I was not thinking of that; but William Wylder was different; and he did not mention_ me_ either?''
9983I''d choose it thyself, only I''m such a bad judge; but you''ll choose it for me, wo n''t you?
9983I''ll come to- morrow and tell you exactly-- maybe to- morrow evening-- will that do?
9983I''ll consult Larkin-- shall I?
9983I''ll go and see you-- upon my honour I will-- to- morrow, or next day, at the Dell; what''s the good of stopping me here?''
9983I''m a quarter past eleven-- what are you?
9983I''m going into the town; wo n''t that be pretty?''
9983I''m sorry I did not take your advice; but how, I say, could I know he was such a devil?
9983In this particular case his entire expenses reached exactly £5 3_s._, and what do you suppose was the good man''s profit upon that small item?
9983Is Mrs. Dutton at home?''
9983Is Stanley shot?''
9983Is Wylder at all definite as to when we may expect his return?''
9983Is he ever angry when he laughs-- is he, Wapsie-- oh, Wapsie,_ is_ he?
9983Is he really too deep for you?
9983Is he very much hurt?''
9983Is it Lady Macbeth?
9983Is it Martin of the China Kilns, or Martin of the bank?
9983Is it a dream?
9983Is it anything about marriage?
9983Is it night yet?''
9983Is it not so?''
9983Is it not, honestly, a mere noise and interruption-- a musical cackling of geese, and silvery braying of tiny asses?
9983Is it witty, or wise, or learned?
9983Is not it odd?
9983Is not it sad?''
9983Is not it?''
9983Is not it_ melancholy_?''
9983Is that the"Times?"
9983It is dangerous, do n''t you see?
9983It is such a darling little thing; and-- look now-- is not it magnificent?''
9983It was never more than a contingency; and now they say Mark Wylder is married, and has children; they tell me he was seen at Ancona?''
9983It was that odious Sir Harry Bracton-- was not it?''
9983Lady Chelford and Miss Brandon, I suppose, in the drawing- room?''
9983Lake addressed the driver--''You come from Johnson''s Hotel-- don''t you-- at Dollington?''
9983Larcom?''
9983Larkin smiled-- the smile said plainly,''what would he have me live upon, and where?''
9983Larkin''s countenance, which struck the vicar, and he said--''You do n''t see any objection?''
9983Larkin, a lawyer of Gylingden?
9983Little Fairy was asking him a question all this time, very vehemently,''How long was Jack''s sword that he killed the giants with?''
9983Look at it, do, Mr. Wylder-- isn''t it like the ace of hearts?''
9983Look in the glass, and then into your own heart, and ask your conscience, next,''Am I really quite a hero, or altogether so lovely, as I am beloved?''
9983Lots of rats, I fancy, Radie, behind that wainscoting?
9983Maddock?''
9983May I say you''ll come?''
9983May I see Wylder''s note-- that is, if there''s no private business?''
9983May I take the liberty to ask you for one moment to look up?''
9983May one hear it?''
9983May we go into the drawing- room?
9983Miss Brandon looked down, and then, with a pale gaze suddenly in Chelford''s face--''He thinks he may die?''
9983Miss Lake again looked down upon the page, and as she did so, Lord Chelford turned and said--''You are a worshipper of Tom Moore, Miss Lake?''
9983Mr. Mark Wylder, perhaps, you refer to?''
9983Mr. Wylder refuses to execute the deed of sale?''
9983Much hurt, old boy?
9983Nothing for me, by- the- way?''
9983Now, the plain question is, do you wish to retain my services?''
9983Now, was it fair to call a peaceable inhabitant like me into the thick of a fray like this?
9983Oh, Stanley, in mercy, tell me was there any other engagement?''
9983Oh, then where is my son?
9983Oh, where was he to turn?
9983Once again, do you promise?''
9983Or Dorcas-- or had Lake, the diabolical sneak, interposed with his long purse, and a plausible hypocrisy of kindness, to spoil Larkin''s plans?
9983Or any other word-- lunatic asylum, or a-- bedlam, or-- or_ any_ other word meaning the same thing?''
9983Or is it that you do n''t care to search him too narrowly, or have not time?
9983Quite well, I hope?
9983Shall I get some water from your room?''
9983Shall I take you to the supper- room?''
9983Shall I tell you?''
9983Shall I write it all in a book, and give it you?
9983She is at home, is she?''
9983She was constantly hinting something of the kind; and begging of him to make a disclosure-- disclosure of what?
9983Should he live to see the evening?
9983Sir, do you pretend to be a gentleman?''
9983So coming down stairs Rachel said,''Is the vicar at home?''
9983So he did, and hid away the note in his despatch- box, and said--''The family all quite well, I hope?''
9983So you wo n''t be frightened?''
9983So''--''_ Do_ they say that Mark is married?
9983Stanley turned his pale glare of fury from Rachel to Dorcas, and Dorcas said again,''What is it, Rachel, darling?''
9983Strong points, eh, Charlie?
9983Take my arm; I''ll go as far as I can, but it is very late you know-- and you are sure you are not afraid?''
9983Tamar to be sure-- why, of course, I know you; but what the devil brings you here?''
9983That odd look I detected in the mirror-- what did it mean?
9983The Town Clerk pressed his arm with a significant side nod and a wink, which seemed to say,''I understand him; ca n''t you let me manage him?''
9983The Wylders are all well, I hope?''
9983The attorney had just said''_ there_, please,''in reply to the vicar''s question,''Where do I write my name?''
9983The morning-- yes, the morning-- what then?
9983The_ law_ being what?
9983Then came the thought-- perhaps they understood one another, and that was the meaning of Stanley''s unexpected visit?
9983Then he thought he heard a rustling of the leaves near him, and he hallooed,''Who''s there?''
9983Then, you really think there is a conspiracy-- formed_ by_ him or_ against_ him, which?''
9983There was the rub; who could it be?
9983There''s a good girl; wo n''t you?''
9983They steer no more, but drive before the wind; and what care they for wreck or drowning?''
9983They think he wants to get them into a fix-- hey?
9983This is our secret-- yours and mine-- and we''ll forget it; and I could not bear to lose your friendship-- you''ll be my friend still-- won''t you?
9983Was he still abroad, or had he arrived?
9983Was it credible?
9983Was it credible?
9983Was it elation, or was there not something wildly bitter gleaming in that smile?
9983Was it possible that the letter had been sent by mistake to Brandon-- to Captain Lake?
9983Was it possible to hold to both, or must he cleave only to one and despise the other?
9983Was it watchfulness?
9983Was she very wise, or at all learned?
9983Was there no mode of''hedging,''so that whether Mark Wylder were living or dead the attorney should stand to win?
9983Was this doomed house of Brandon never to know repose or fraternity?
9983Well, do you take my offer?''
9983Were slumbers sweet as of old ever to know it more?
9983Were you twenty- one years of age?''
9983What about Radie?
9983What are you driving at, Stanley?''
9983What are you standing there for?''
9983What can he gain from children''s talk?
9983What can it now be to you or me-- why?
9983What can the child mean?''
9983What could all the world do to harm him in free England, if he were innocent, if he were what he seemed-- no worse than his social peers?
9983What could be the motive for this elaborate and hideous fraud?
9983What could old Tamar do?
9983What could they do to him, or why should they hurt him, or what had he done to excite either the suspicion or the temper of the firm?
9983What did it portend?
9983What do you mean by standing?''
9983What do you mean?
9983What do you mean?
9983What do you mean?''
9983What do you say?
9983What do you think of my old plan of the valleys and lakes of Wales?
9983What does Doctor Buddle say?''
9983What does Mrs.---- the housekeeper, say?''
9983What does_ it_ say?''
9983What dreams were henceforward to haunt it?
9983What good can it possibly do you?
9983What had I best do?
9983What has brought you here; my little man?''
9983What is he doing now?''
9983What is his ailment?''
9983What is it that makes your dog so charming a companion in your walks?
9983What object could he gain, for instance, by the fib he had just told me?
9983What object on earth can I have in impairing the estate?
9983What of her?''
9983What on earth_ can_ he mean?
9983What particular good can it do us in this unpleasant uncertainty?''
9983What pretty little tea- cups, Radie-- quite charming-- old cock china, is n''t it?
9983What shall I say?
9983What shall I say?''
9983What sort of beings must those be who hate it?
9983What state had I really been in, when I saw that long- chinned apparition of the pale portrait?
9983What the d-- is it all about?''
9983What was it?''
9983What was it?''
9983What was that to the purpose?
9983What was the peculiarity in that slight movement-- something in the knee?
9983What was this secret?
9983What was to be done?
9983What will be thought?--what will the world say?--what will your friends say?
9983What''s that horrid work of art against the wall?''
9983What, then, did Rachel mean by all that escaped her, when he was in danger?
9983What_ can_ he want of Mark Wylder?
9983Where have you left him?''
9983Where have you put him?''
9983Where is that girl Margery?''
9983Where is the woman who will patiently acquiesce in the reserve of her husband who shares his confidence with another?
9983Where shall it be?''
9983Where will you keep that note?
9983Where''s the station- master?''
9983Who could have fancied any such stupid hurry?
9983Who could tell exactly the cause of his dismissal, and why the young lady had asserted her capricious resolve to be free?
9983Who is to advise you, if not your husband?
9983Who is with you?
9983Who knew to what it might conduct?
9983Who made you a prophet?
9983Who were the witnesses?
9983Who''s that?''
9983Whom have I defrauded?
9983Why could he not put his head in at the door and call him?
9983Why did time limp so tediously away with him, prolonging his anguish gratuitously?
9983Why do n''t you ask_ her_?
9983Why does mamma say he is a good man, Wapsie?''
9983Why had he not spoken to him?
9983Why have not you a spare engine at a place like this?
9983Why is his work so ill done, when he ought most to exert himself?
9983Why is that fellow so supine?
9983Why one place is as well as another; and what the devil have I to do with secrets?
9983Why should Dorcas be so earnest to convince her handsome cousin that there was nothing in this rumour?
9983Why should I like your company?''
9983Why should he be retained in that ghastly existence?
9983Why should he dread this cabal, as he called it, even though directed by the malignant energy of the absent and shadowy Mark Wylder?
9983Why should it be necessary to buy off the conspirators whom a guiltless man would defy and punish?
9983Why should not I share in the profit-- if such there be-- by getting my hand too upon the instrument of compression?
9983Why should she fear Stanley, or what could it be to her whether he was beside her in her homeward walk?
9983Why should the world be cheerful?
9983Why should they both object merely to receive and fund his money?
9983Why will you not believe me?
9983Why wo n''t you credit what I say?''
9983Will nothing content you?''
9983Will the people come_ to- day_?''
9983Will you be good enough to explain yourself?
9983Will you come, Rachel?''
9983Will you have a cigar?''
9983Will you just look at that-- it''s the''Globe''--only six lines, and tell me what_ you_ make of it?''
9983Will you read the note?''
9983William Wylder rightly conceived you, when he so stated your meaning to me?''
9983Willie, darling, do n''t you wish him to come in?''
9983Wo n''t that do?
9983Wo n''t you send for William Wylder and Chelford, and tell all you know of Mark?''
9983Wo n''t you shake hands?''
9983Wo n''t you sit down-- no bad news?
9983Wo n''t you trust me?''
9983Would it not be a more convenient course, as well as more merciful to put him to death?
9983Would you dislike my smoking a cigar, Radie?''
9983Would you let him whip me, if I was naughty?
9983Wylder?''
9983Wylder?''
9983You always have a purpose-- will you ever learn to be frank and straightforward, and speak plainly to those whom you ought to trust, if not to love?
9983You are corresponding with him-- aren''t you?''
9983You are looking pale-- you have not been ill?
9983You are not very tired, are you?
9983You dear old witch, how the plague could you take any such frightful nonsense into your head?
9983You do n''t drink?''
9983You do n''t?''
9983You have heard, then, from Mr. Wylder, my dear Dorcas?''
9983You have succeeded already in filling Dorcas''s mind with surmise and speculation, and do you think the Gylingden people are either blind or dumb?
9983You know Rachel Lake?''
9983You know Sir Julius, do n''t you?''
9983You know this goes under ground all the way to Vallambrosa?''
9983You mean Wylder, of course?''
9983You remember my poor mamma, do n''t you, very well?''
9983You see exactly what I mean?''
9983You told me so, I think; and if it is not too much trouble, dear Radie, would you allow me to see it?''
9983You understand me clearly, Tamar?''
9983You understand?''
9983You used to be accurate, Tamar; may I depend upon you?''
9983You''ll take care of me in your will, Nunkie, wo n''t you?
9983You''re a very odd girl-- why wo n''t you believe me?''
9983You''re near forty, eh, Nunkie?
9983You''re not ailing, Nunkie, are you?
9983You''ve been hurt in the foot, eh?
9983Your other client is not ill-- nothing sad about Mark Wylder, I hope?''
9983_ Do_ you promise?''
9983_ How''s_ this?''
9983_ I_''m not half good enough for such company-- and the place is growing rather cold-- is not it?''
9983_ Mark_?''
9983_ Wo n''t_ you believe me, darling?''
9983a message, or business?''
9983an answer, is there?''
9983an expensive house--_where_ was this, now?''
9983and Wylder''s confusion about Captain Lake-- what was that?
9983and can take my turn at the wheel-- eh?''
9983and have no grounds for ill- will-- eh?''
9983asked the good vicar, with a very anxious smile,''and you think him better, dear Miss Lake, do n''t you?''
9983bless you, dear Miss Radie, where should I find a story?
9983did I say?
9983did they?
9983did you?''
9983five- and- thirty, years since then?''
9983had he crossed him yesterday by the down- train, and was he by this time closeted with Larkin in the Lodge?
9983he answered quietly,''why on earth should you think so?''
9983here?''
9983how can I help it now?''
9983how is your sister, Captain Lake, have you seen her to- day?''
9983is it you?''
9983is not it sad?''
9983is that Fairy?
9983retiring; and what does he propose doing then?''
9983something in the elbow?
9983something in the general character?
9983there-- I say-- a passenger for the"White House?"''
9983was it suspicion?
9983what are you now?''
9983what do you say-- eh?''
9983what was_ it_?
9983when did you come?''
9983who are_ they?_''said the attorney, and his dove''s eyes were gone again, and the rat''s eyes unequivocally looking out of the small pink lids.
9983why does he wait for you there?
9983why has he sent you here?
9983why, why, why did you ever come?''
9983you have?
9983you know, what was to be said?
9983you''re a heroine, Radie; and why the devil,''he continued, in a changed tone,''do you apply those insolent terms to what I purpose doing?''
59828''And do n''t know whether I am yet sensible or not?'' 59828 ''And has she not inquired after me since?''
59828''And if I should not, what will become of all those fine things that you have told me of? 59828 ''And now, sir, will you inform me in what way I can serve you?''
59828''And she did n''t do anything for me?'' 59828 ''And why do you think they would have done so?''
59828''Are you not contented?'' 59828 ''But will it hold enough?''
59828''Did n''t Mrs. Carter the other day say that my aunt left me a fortune?'' 59828 ''Do n''t you know what good fortune has lately fallen into your lap?
59828''Do you think so?'' 59828 ''Fall,''said I;''who said it was a fall?''
59828''How far is that off?'' 59828 ''In a few days, then?''
59828''Is she so bad as that?'' 59828 ''Is your name Fogg?''
59828''Leave home,''I said;''where shall I fly? 59828 ''More than my father and mother?''
59828''My fortune,''said I;''what fortune?'' 59828 ''Oh, I will tell you; now, can you be at the corner of Grosvenor- street, near Park- lane?''
59828''Putting her into a madhouse?'' 59828 ''Shall I ever get out?''
59828''She takes it kindly, eh? 59828 ''So she may; but who attends to the ravings of a mad woman?
59828''Then they would sooner I should die than live?'' 59828 ''Then we understand each other, eh?''
59828''Then we will consider that settled?'' 59828 ''This:--suppose a horse falls, and is hurt, or an upset-- would you stand the racket?''
59828''Very well,''said I,''how is your throat?'' 59828 ''Well, Mary, what do you want to tease me about now?''
59828''Well, Miss Impudence!--I told the truth, what then?'' 59828 ''Well, Miss Mary,''she said,''and so you have come round again?
59828''Well, then, what if I did, child?'' 59828 ''Well, will you go to the village inn?''
59828''Well,''said I,''how do you find yourself, now?'' 59828 ''Well,''said I,''what is your pleasure, sir?''
59828''Well,''said he,''how do matters go on here?'' 59828 ''What are they?''
59828''What can I do?'' 59828 ''What deed?''
59828''What do you mean, minx?'' 59828 ''What have you heard about them?''
59828''What is the child dreaming about?'' 59828 ''What is the matter with the child?''
59828''What makes you think so?'' 59828 ''Who has it?''
59828''Why not,''I inquired;''why may I not tell who told me about it?'' 59828 ''Why, do n''t you know that when your poor aunt died you were her favourite?''
59828''Will you have any water, or anything to cool your throat?'' 59828 ''Yes, it is,''said I;''my name is Fogg-- what is your pleasure with me, sir?''
59828''You do not mean to betray me?'' 59828 ''You?''
59828133?
59828A cheer,said Ben;"do you call that a cheer?
59828A chisel? 59828 A christening?
59828A constable?
59828A couple of guineas?
59828A dog?
59828A fancy for Todd?
59828A few hundreds? 59828 A good night''s rest, Charley?"
59828A good plan, too,said Todd;"Charley, some hot water; that''s a good lad-- and-- and-- Charley?"
59828A good what?
59828A joke was it? 59828 A joke?"
59828A little, perhaps; but with this carving knife, do n''t you think we might make things pleasant?
59828A little-- eh?
59828A pie? 59828 A pint?"
59828A shave, I presume, sir? 59828 A shave?"
59828A string of pearls, great happiness?
59828A warning o''what, mum?
59828A what, sir?
59828A what, sir?
59828A what?
59828A what?
59828A what?
59828A what?
59828A what?
59828A what?
59828A what?
59828A witness?
59828A-- a surgeon? 59828 A-- a-- letter?"
59828About?
59828Advantages?
59828Advice?
59828Afraid? 59828 Afraid?
59828Ah, Green, are you looking for me?
59828Ah, Miss Oakley, will you deny me your friendship?
59828Ah, Pison, Pison, why did you come here, you good for nothink feller you? 59828 Ah, Sir Richard Blunt,"he said,"is that you?"
59828Ah, charmer, how do the fates get on with you?
59828Ah, how can I be otherwise than delighted, when I am assured by such a saint upon earth as yourself that I am one of the elect?
59828Ah, indeed?
59828Ah, sir, what is poverty when we shall be together?
59828Ah, what news, my boy?
59828Ah, where indeed?
59828Ah, who''s that? 59828 Ah, yes, sir; and yet--""Yet what, Tobias?"
59828Ah, you ran away? 59828 Ah, you will then have to attend upon me while I am here, my dear, I presume?"
59828Ah,he said,"so the narcotic has taken that effect, has it, upon Mrs. Lovett''s representative?
59828Ah,she said,"has true love any reservations?
59828Ah?
59828Ai n''t I a- going with you? 59828 Ai n''t it?
59828Ai n''t they a- coming, mum?
59828Ai n''t this a barber''s shop?
59828Ai n''t you well, sir?
59828Ai n''t you well, sir?
59828Air? 59828 All on it, sir?
59828All ready?
59828All right?
59828All right?
59828All the doors fastened upon me,he said,"what can it mean?
59828All what?
59828All? 59828 All?
59828All? 59828 All?"
59828Alone?
59828Alone?
59828Alone?
59828Am I a prisoner?
59828Am I asleep?
59828Am I never to succeed,she muttered to herself,"in finding one with whom I can make my escape from this sea of horrors that surrounds me?
59828Am I really? 59828 Am I safe?
59828Am I safe?
59828Am I saved, or am I not?
59828Am I saved?
59828Am I sufficiently unlike myself,he said,"to trust an appearance in the village?
59828Am I sure? 59828 Am I to be a prisoner here,"said Todd,"while that infernal dog sits in the shaving chair, howling?"
59828Am I truly doomed to die? 59828 America?
59828An hour and a half, you say?
59828An odd taste?
59828An old woman, Ben?
59828And I suppose you since, then, made up your mind to be a bachelor for the rest of your life, Ben?
59828And Mark himself-- if that were so?
59828And Mr. O.,cried Mrs. Oakley,"what business is it of yours, I should like to know?
59828And against Todd?
59828And all this was in your dream?
59828And are any plans to be placed in competition with my life and liberty? 59828 And are you really to do nothing?
59828And can you not?
59828And did you catch him?
59828And did you think so lightly of my friendship that it was to be entrusted with nothing but what wore a pleasant aspect? 59828 And have n''t I told you, Mr. Oakley, twice that number of times that he shall come to tea?
59828And have no accidents ever happened?
59828And have you no idea of what has become of him, madam?
59828And have you really no hope-- no innate lurking supposition in your mind, that you may be doing her an injustice in your suspicions of her faith?
59828And he did no mischief?
59828And he did? 59828 And he was never heard of?"
59828And how did you get acquainted with Julia Hardman?
59828And how do you feel now, sir, if you please?
59828And how long will it take you?
59828And how much do you suppose, my friend, there is?
59828And if he does?
59828And is he happy?
59828And is it possible,added the old man, straightening himself up,"that I am disguised so well that even you do not know me, Johanna?"
59828And is this all?
59828And is this your defence?
59828And now for how long,said the cook,"am I to pine for freedom from this dreadful place?
59828And now, Miss Wilmot, will you allow me to hope that what I have said to you may not be all in vain? 59828 And pray who and what is Flukes?"
59828And pray, Sir Richard, when did you consider you had that proof?
59828And pray, sir, who are you that you dare reject such a proposition for furthering the ends of justice?
59828And pray, then, am I to sleep all night, if I do n''t know the rights of it, I should like to know? 59828 And pray?
59828And she?
59828And so he is out?
59828And so it has come to this?
59828And so that is all, Charley?
59828And so this is your little boy? 59828 And so you do love me, Minna?"
59828And so you have come on to me with this monstrous tale?
59828And so you slept there?
59828And so you sold them all?
59828And so you will let this little disappointment of the heart, place you in your youth quite beside all possible enjoyment? 59828 And that is, if you would prefer to have a sum of money down, and not trouble me any more?"
59828And that''s all you know of him?
59828And the milk? 59828 And they are clear off?"
59828And they leave it, I suppose, as usual?
59828And this dream of leaving off business would vanish?
59828And this little girl, ma''am?
59828And was he to have come yesterday to me?
59828And was it all in vain?
59828And what are your customs?
59828And what became of the wolf?
59828And what did you do, then, upon making such a discovery as that in so very odd and unexpected a manner?
59828And what did you do? 59828 And what does he want to say to me?"
59828And what followed?
59828And what is he doing?
59828And what is that?
59828And what is to be the end of all this? 59828 And what made you come?"
59828And what,he said,"is to dissipate the doubt?
59828And where is your farm, mum?
59828And why do n''t she hear you now? 59828 And why do n''t you like soap, my little man?"
59828And you are Mr. Todd''s_ boy_?
59828And you are really bold enough?
59828And you found her?
59828And you have not been peeping and prying about, have you?
59828And you have seen nothing?
59828And you heard them fire a gun?
59828And you meant him?
59828And you think to hang me?
59828And you think,said another voice,"we shall get a good view of it from the old church tower?"
59828And you were helpless?
59828And you wo n''t mention it to no one?
59828And you, then, only walked away?
59828And your own?
59828And-- and how long is the little lamb to be left there?
59828And-- and when the police- boat is past, will you then come and take me off again?
59828Another what, Johanna? 59828 Any fortune there?"
59828Any luck?
59828Any news?
59828Anybody been?
59828Anything else,he said,"in a small way that you''d like?
59828Arabella, can you forgive me? 59828 Are kings happy?"
59828Are there, sir?
59828Are they coming back?
59828Are we not all brothers in the Lord?
59828Are you a surgeon?
59828Are you busy?
59828Are you content, Johanna?
59828Are you decidedly pious?
59828Are you fond of animals, sir? 59828 Are you going, my dear Charley?"
59828Are you human?
59828Are you ill?
59828Are you in present fear of death?
59828Are you mad?
59828Are you mad?
59828Are you mad?
59828Are you mad?
59828Are you quite sure you have made a tight job of that?
59828Are you quite sure? 59828 Are you rested now?"
59828Are you sure of that?
59828Are you sure you saw him, sir? 59828 Are you sure?"
59828Are you sure?
59828Are you though? 59828 Are you, too, mad?
59828Are you? 59828 Armed?"
59828Arrant boy?
59828As yet,she said to herself,"what has been done towards arriving at a solution of the mysteries of this dreadful place?"
59828Ashamed?
59828At Todd''s-- opposite-- in-- boys-- clothes? 59828 At once what?"
59828At the barber''s in Fleet- street?
59828At two, mum?
59828Ay, and why not, Harry?
59828Barber at home, eh? 59828 Be quiet will you?"
59828Be this Mister Todd''s?
59828Begin? 59828 Ben,"she said,"will you come with me, and see me a part of my way home?"
59828Ben-- Ben?
59828Ben?
59828Ben?
59828Between her and Mrs. Ragg, you mean? 59828 Bills?"
59828Black?
59828Bless me, and where does he live?
59828Bless the girl,said a female voice--"What can she want?"
59828Bless us, who''s that?
59828Bless you, gentlemen, what''s the use of that if my poor boy is killed?
59828Boats? 59828 Breakfast; do n''t you understand that, old cock?
59828Brother Oakley, is sister Oakley within?
59828Burn down the church, sir? 59828 But Johanna, Ben-- there is Johanna?"
59828But Johanna? 59828 But ai n''t you afeard, Martha, he may come in?"
59828But can I endure this dreadful suspense?
59828But do you apprehend any hostile attack from the natives?
59828But good gracious what am I to hush about? 59828 But has he not sent many trunks and packages to the ship?"
59828But how are you to live, and what do you mean by a fatal candlestick?
59828But how came he here?
59828But how came he to leave his dog behind him?
59828But how came you here, out in the river on the dredging- barge? 59828 But how can we?"
59828But how does Mrs. O. behave to you?
59828But how will you make us believe it? 59828 But if there be reason, Johanna?"
59828But mind gentlemen, you must take a good draught, if you drink my toast-- Will you?
59828But not here of course, my friend; and who knows what difficulties we may find in our way before we reach your nice little hoard? 59828 But not of restoring him to us?"
59828But surely it was a good motive to spare you pain?
59828But that little?
59828But the matter left a suspicion upon your mind?
59828But was he not going by the Hamburgh packet before day- dawn? 59828 But what am I to do?
59828But what can you do, my dear Johanna? 59828 But what do they say you have done?"
59828But what do you do here?
59828But what do you think of all that I have told you? 59828 But what is Pison?"
59828But what is it Tobias, that you know?
59828But what lodger, mother?
59828But what say you to coming with me to the Temple?
59828But what will you do?--what can you do, Ben?
59828But what''s a pie to Johanna Oakley? 59828 But what''s it all about?"
59828But who is he, and what''s he done?
59828But who is this? 59828 But why not come to me and get my signature?"
59828But will nothing be done? 59828 But would not that be dangerous?"
59828But you are not so unhappy?
59828But you do not know it for a fact?
59828But you do offend me, you nasty insinuating, sneering wretch.--What were you thinking about? 59828 But you had youth and health?"
59828But you have heard of such cases?
59828But you have some opinion, Crotchet?
59828But you were mistaken?
59828But, Mr. Ben,said Mark,"I may look sometimes?"
59828But, my dear, surely you are not annoyed at a dream?
59828But, oh deary me, what makes him look so old and so strange now? 59828 But, really, Mr. Todd, do n''t you know me?"
59828But, why so serious, Johanna? 59828 But-- but you do not intend to open it?"
59828But-- but,said Ben, rather hesitatingly, as if he were only putting a doubtful proposition,"was n''t it rather unusual?"
59828By the Thames?
59828By whom?
59828Ca n''t people come at reasonable times? 59828 Ca n''t what?"
59828Ca n''t you come on?
59828Ca n''t you see where you are going?
59828Ca n''t you?
59828Can I assist you?
59828Can I part with you again?
59828Can not you hang the woman without my help?
59828Can we not land upon this side of the bridge?
59828Can you ask me to say yes, Tobias?
59828Can you ask me to say yes?
59828Can you fetch your blessed breath, sir?
59828Can you forgive me as your father has done?
59828Can you form any opinion as to his probable recovery?
59828Can you hide me?
59828Can you not leave me a light?
59828Can you pardon me for thus tormenting you with my grief?
59828Can you particularise any instance?
59828Can you spare a bill, my friend?
59828Can you walk?
59828Care about it?
59828Carry him off?
59828Cautious, sir? 59828 Certainly, certainly, a very proper arrangement, your grace; may I ask the nature of the proffered security?"
59828Certainly,said Mr. Mundel,"she is a very illustrious lady, I presume?"
59828Certainly,said Mr. Oakley,"certainly, have what you like, Ben; just say the word before Mrs. Oakley goes out; is there anything else?"
59828Charles?
59828Charley, my dear,he said;"you will save papa''s life some day, wo n''t you?"
59828Charley? 59828 Charley?"
59828Cling to me? 59828 Cold?
59828Colonel,he said,"do you know a boy named Tobias Ragg?"
59828Come here, Pison, will you? 59828 Come home?
59828Come home?
59828Come into my room then,said Fogg,"and we can talk quietly.--Do you think-- that-- that--""What?"
59828Come on, then, sir,said Crotchet;"I feel''s what you call''s a sort of a-- Oh, dear me, what is it?
59828Come, Joe, are you coming?
59828Come, Mother O., stir your old stumps and be alive, will you? 59828 Come, old fellow,"said the man,"you do n''t want to be shaved, do you?"
59828Considered?
59828Convinced of what?
59828Cook, sir? 59828 Could that be done with safety?"
59828Could you make me a wig?
59828Curses on you,muttered Todd,"who are you?"
59828Damn it, what do I care about it? 59828 Danger?
59828Dare I go in here?
59828Dare I rush out now into Fleet Street, and by taking the other direction to that in which this man has gone, try to find safety?
59828Dare not?
59828Dare we believe him?
59828Dead?
59828Dead?
59828Dear Ben,said Johanna,"do you really imagine we can eat a tenth part of all this?"
59828Dear me!--ain''t she my daughter likewise?
59828Dear me, sir,she said in the blandest possible accents;"have you indeed had a dream?
59828Dear me, when?
59828Dear me, where can the tract be? 59828 Dear, dear,"said the old man,"what is the matter with the girls?
59828Delighted?
59828Derange your what?
59828Did I not tell you,he continued,"that I would have no prying-- no peeping-- no remarking about this or the other?
59828Did he name the dog?
59828Did he say when he should return?
59828Did he tell you his reason for leaving me?
59828Did he though? 59828 Did n''t I tell you he was going away when I saw him?
59828Did n''t you say,''Ah, poor thing?'' 59828 Did she, sir?"
59828Did she, though? 59828 Did this dog come with him?"
59828Did what?
59828Did what?
59828Did you call, sister Oakley?
59828Did you ever see a house on fire, my boy?
59828Did you ever, my dear, know such a strange man?
59828Did you give it him?
59828Did you hear it?
59828Did you say Gravesend?
59828Did you say a red waistcoat?
59828Did you say pearls?
59828Did you say we were drifting to shore?
59828Did you say, be quiet, brother Oakley? 59828 Did you see his master on the day when he came here?"
59828Did you think for one moment that I could have left you?
59828Did you think that one driven to such desperation as I am, would be conquered so easily?
59828Disappear without coming down stairs?
59828Distresses you, sir?
59828Do I deserve such a charge,said the colonel,"even by implication?"
59828Do I love you? 59828 Do I think?
59828Do I?
59828Do it? 59828 Do it?"
59828Do n''t I? 59828 Do n''t you know, Ben?"
59828Do n''t you think a more obscure place,suggested Todd,"would be better for us, as we do not by any means court popularity?"
59828Do yer love your Ben?
59828Do you call any witnesses,asked the junior counsel,"for the prosecution?"
59828Do you doubt it?
59828Do you doubt the Colonel''s friendly feeling towards you?
59828Do you happen to know the craft out yonder?
59828Do you hear those words?
59828Do you know a Mr. Oakley, who lives somewhere in London, and is a spectacle- maker?
59828Do you know him?
59828Do you know me?
59828Do you know the house, sir?
59828Do you know what it is?
59828Do you know, this is very good brandy- and- water?
59828Do you mean to say, ma,said Julia,"that there''s a gentleman asleep in the next room in the bed?"
59828Do you not know me?
59828Do you not know then that-- that--"That what? 59828 Do you plead guilty or not guilty to the charge here made against you?"
59828Do you really love me?
59828Do you really think so?
59828Do you recollect any more, Tobias?
59828Do you see him?
59828Do you see that, Johanna?
59828Do you speak to me?
59828Do you think he may likely have enough about him,whispered Todd,"to pay our expenses for the day?"
59828Do you think me so foolish as for one moment to credit you?
59828Do you think now that I am such an idiot as to take a drain of anything in your place? 59828 Do you think she does n''t, sir?"
59828Do you think so, sir?
59828Do you think so? 59828 Do you think so?"
59828Do you think that Sweeney Todd would leave such relics within such easy acquisition and inspection? 59828 Do you think your friend Thornhill was a man likely to talk about the valuable pearls he had in his possession?"
59828Do you think, Mark, that any poor souls will be wrecked to- night?
59828Do you think, your worship, there''s a chance of such a fellow as Todd staying long here?
59828Do you think,said the other,"that I would really interrupt business in this way?
59828Do you understand me, dear Johanna?
59828Do you understand that, Mrs. Ragg? 59828 Do you want anything?"
59828Do you want to be my ruin?
59828Do you want to go through the bridge, master?
59828Do you wish the murderer to be lost sight of? 59828 Do you, then, think likewise that that is upon our track?
59828Do you? 59828 Do you?"
59828Do you?
59828Do-- do you think he did so see her?
59828Does he know his catechism and his belief?
59828Does he reside in Norfolk Street, Strand?
59828Does he? 59828 Does he?
59828Does he?
59828Does she really? 59828 Doing,"said Tobias, with animation;"do you think he will be hung?"
59828Done what?
59828Duck indeed? 59828 Easy?
59828Eh? 59828 Eh?
59828Eh? 59828 Eh?
59828Eh? 59828 Eh?"
59828Eh?
59828Eh?
59828Eh?
59828Eh?
59828Eh?
59828Eh?
59828Eh?
59828Eh?
59828Eh?
59828Eight, did you say?
59828Escaped?
59828Escaped?
59828Every public- house?
59828Everything?
59828Exactly, sir, I comprehend; you are quite alone in London?
59828Excuse us, Mr. Todd,said the shoemaker,"I assure you we only meant--""What?"
59828Fears? 59828 Few?
59828Finished what?
59828Finished what?--Finished pleading for my life? 59828 Five hundred?"
59828Fleet Street? 59828 Flukes-- a tailor?
59828Flukes-- a tailor?
59828Fogg''s, not Fogg?
59828For how long,said the madhouse- keeper,"do you think this malady will continue?"
59828For who, then?
59828For you to cut my throat?
59828For-- for what?
59828Forgetful?
59828Forgive you, mother? 59828 Fried what?"
59828Friend,said one, who sat near him,"how came you here; are you known here?"
59828From a what?
59828Full?
59828Funny?
59828Gentlemen,he whispered,"have we seen enough?"
59828Glad to see me?
59828Go on-- go on,said Johanna;"what more?"
59828God bless me,said Todd,"you do n''t mean that?
59828Going back, mum?
59828Going?
59828Good gracious, Ben, you do n''t mean that?
59828Good gracious, is there anything else?
59828Good gracious, what''s it all about? 59828 Good that, Watson, ai n''t it?"
59828Governor here?
59828Gracious Providence,said Mrs. Oakley,"who is to cook it?"
59828Gracious bless the beasteses,said Ben,"is your house made of glass?
59828Greenwich? 59828 Had you forgotten, Arabella Wilmot?
59828Hair cut?
59828Hang Pison? 59828 Has anything new occurred, Johanna, to produce this feeling?"
59828Has he awakened?
59828Has he brought yours?
59828Has he done it?
59828Has he really, though?
59828Has he really?
59828Has he? 59828 Has it then really come to this?"
59828Has it? 59828 Has not the creature, then, fallen a victim to Todd''s malevolence?"
59828Has the fright killed him? 59828 Have I not cause for despair?"
59828Have I not said enough? 59828 Have what out?"
59828Have you any idea yourself as to terms?
59828Have you any legal adviser?
59828Have you any more to add?
59828Have you any objection to America?
59828Have you any objection to my being a spectator?
59828Have you any reason for asking that question concerning Thornhill?
59828Have you been in any of the meadows?
59828Have you finished?
59828Have you found him in the garden? 59828 Have you heard o''the suicide in Norfolk Street?"
59828Have you tried?
59828Have you?
59828He did?
59828He will be hanged on Monday, of course?
59828He would have had me back again, then?--What could that be for?
59828Hector? 59828 Help you?
59828Here are plenty of boats?
59828Here?--here?
59828Hilloa, Sir Richard, where are you?
59828His mind, I mean, has not withstood the shock of what he went through while he was in Fogg''s establishment?
59828Horrid, is it?
59828How about London Bridge?
59828How are we to trust you not to say that we are here?
59828How are you now?
59828How came you to think that I had any friends?
59828How can I thank you?
59828How can you go on so to your Ben?
59828How could it? 59828 How dared you interfere, I should like to know, you monster in inhuman shape?"
59828How deep do you suppose it lies?
59828How did the Pompadour coloured coat and the velvet smalls do, eh?--Fit well? 59828 How did this get here?"
59828How did you know that?
59828How do you feel after your tumble?
59828How do you make that out?
59828How do you mean about giving way?
59828How do you mean to proceed?
59828How do you mean, Crotchet?
59828How does he know?
59828How far have we got to go now?
59828How indeed, Tobias?
59828How is it possible? 59828 How is it that you know me?"
59828How is that?
59828How long has he been gone?
59828How much do I owe you?
59828How much longer am I to bear this load of misery?
59828How old are you, Sarah?
59828How old is he?
59828How old is the lad?
59828How on earth am I to convince you?
59828How should I know?
59828How the devil,he said,"came that door shut, I wonder?"
59828How very droll? 59828 How was it possible,"he said,"that the prisoner at the bar could be furnished with such a weapon at a time like this?"
59828Humph, brother Oakley; you have a daughter-- Johanna?
59828Hush, stop a moment-- what if it be Tobias?
59828I ask you what Todd said to you?
59828I could take my oath; and what conclusion can we come to?
59828I did, sir,said Johanna, and she said it with a look that added the query,"did you say your''s?"
59828I do n''t know, Mr. Lupin; but do n''t you think it would be better to take some other opportunity?
59828I have got you, have I?
59828I have him there,thought Mrs. Lovett;"what human heart is proof against the seductions of flattery?
59828I have no doubt of that, sir, but-- but--"But what, Tobias?
59828I have the honour,he said,"of speaking to Miss Johanna Oakley?"
59828I heard him a chirping for me just now-- didn''t I?
59828I hope I do n''t intrude upon you, sir, but I was so very anxious to know if the tea was just as you like it, sir?
59828I hope, Mr. Ben, that do n''t mean that you will dine off her some day when you are married?
59828I mean nothing at all,said Todd, suddenly turning upon his heel;"what''s that scratching at the door?"
59828I means that I wo n''t stand it; did n''t I tell you, more than three weeks ago, as you was the object of my infections? 59828 I really am afraid that I am sadly intruding upon your time, by letting you come with me?"
59828I reconciled? 59828 I say, for you to cut my throat?
59828I shake? 59828 I suppose you never trust him out alone in the streets?"
59828I tell you what it is, Miss Arabella W., I''m disappointed in you; ai n''t you ashamed to look me in the face?
59828I tell you, Ben? 59828 I tell you, woman, you will be my ruin, my absolute ruin; and then where will your supplies come from I should like to know?
59828I think you know exactly what we mean?
59828I think you said it was the front room?
59828I think,he said,"if I were to manage to get a good thick stave off some tree, it would help considerably in digging, would it not?"
59828I understand all that, madam,said Williams,"but how does it get there?"
59828I''m so aggravated.--Is he pious?
59828I, sir?
59828I-- I?
59828I?
59828If I only thought you sincere--"And why not?
59828If you will come with me Mr.--a-- a-- what''s your name?
59828Impossible, sir?
59828In a moment--"You will?
59828In bed in the next room?
59828In case I want to say anything?
59828In joke?
59828In what name, your grace,he said,"shall I draw a cheque upon my banker?"
59828In what respect, my lord?
59828In what respect?
59828In what way, my dear friend? 59828 In what?"
59828Indeed I do; do n''t you see?
59828Indeed!--and of a criminal character?
59828Indeed!--does he rave?
59828Indeed, Crotchet?
59828Indeed, Tobias?
59828Indeed, sir, whom mean you?
59828Indeed, sir? 59828 Indeed, sir?"
59828Indeed?
59828Indeed?
59828Indeed?
59828Indeed?
59828Indeed?
59828Indeed?
59828Indeed?
59828Indeed?
59828Indeed?
59828Indeed?
59828Indeed?
59828Indeed?
59828Is Mr. Todd at hand?
59828Is Mr. Todd in, my little man?
59828Is Mr. Todd in?
59828Is Mr. Todd within?
59828Is Sir Richard within?
59828Is all right, Crotchet?
59828Is all right, Crotchet?
59828Is all still?
59828Is fancy, after all, only playing me such tricks as she might have played me twenty years ago? 59828 Is he dead?"
59828Is he dead?
59828Is he dead?
59828Is he following?
59828Is he gone?
59828Is he ill, madam?
59828Is he much altered?
59828Is he no more? 59828 Is he very ill?"
59828Is it a trick upon us, do you think, Sir Richard?
59828Is it dangerous?
59828Is it far off?
59828Is it furnished?
59828Is it in gold?
59828Is it interesting?
59828Is it likely, sir?
59828Is it possible that you can give your mind in this way to the Philistines? 59828 Is it possible,"he said"that I shall be able to make such delicious pies?
59828Is it possible?
59828Is it possible?--Can such things be? 59828 Is it quite impossible to aid them?"
59828Is it? 59828 Is it?
59828Is it?
59828Is it?
59828Is she a woman, or the devil in petticoats?
59828Is she dead?
59828Is sister Oakley within, brother?
59828Is that our friend, the King of the City?
59828Is that possible?
59828Is that the colonel?
59828Is that you, Susan?
59828Is that your child?
59828Is that your dog?
59828Is that your idea?
59828Is there a chance now of escape,said Todd,"if I could only make up my mind to it?
59828Is there any danger?
59828Is there anything particular in it?
59828Is there danger? 59828 Is this Todd''s, the barber?"
59828Is this an accident?
59828Is this danger, or only the appearance of it? 59828 Is this here keg of turpentine for you?"
59828Is this him?
59828Is this horrid charnel- house sort of smell always here?
59828Is this the hat that you saw with the dog in Fleet Street?
59828Is this the hat? 59828 It has succeeded?"
59828It is the same lad he called Tobias-- shall we speak to him?
59828It is true, then?
59828It''s all right, then?
59828It''s melancholy, sir, is it not?
59828Jarvey,he said,"what will you take me to Peckham Rye for?"
59828Johanna, Johanna, my dear, do you know what time it is? 59828 Johanna?"
59828Johanna?
59828Kill him, you mean?
59828Kills''em?
59828Know him? 59828 Know me?"
59828Know nothing, sir?
59828Know you, dear? 59828 Like what?
59828Looking for anything, sir?
59828Lor, sir, will you?
59828Lor, sir,said Crotchet,"what''s the use of fretting and pining about it?
59828Lord bless me, sir, is this you? 59828 Lord bless your pretty eyes, I hate you?
59828Lovett? 59828 Madam,"he said,"is not my child-- my Johanna-- here staying on a visit with Arabella?"
59828Madam,said the colonel,"how much is owing to you for sleeping here a few hours?"
59828Madhouse?
59828Man, do you hear me?
59828Match it?
59828May I ask what at?
59828May I hope that you will not think so harshly of me as you have done?
59828May I hope,he added,"that I have not lowered myself in your esteem, Miss Oakley, by what I have said?"
59828May I presume to ask, sir, what he is?
59828Me-- me? 59828 Me?
59828Me?
59828Me?
59828Me?
59828Me?
59828Me?
59828Mean what, you old sinner?
59828Mercy!--what the devil do you mean by mercy? 59828 Mistake, sir?"
59828Monstrous tail?
59828More? 59828 Mr. Brown, what are you talking about?"
59828Mr. Oston,he said to a man behind the counter,"is your parlour vacant?"
59828Mr. Todd''s this is, ai n''t it?
59828Mrs. Lovett do you mean?
59828Mrs. Ragg, I believe Todd told you that he had placed Tobias in a madhouse, did he not?
59828Mrs. Ragg,said the colonel,"can you cook?"
59828Murder of whom?
59828Murdered his wife? 59828 Must I say that, Ben?"
59828Must we pass again?
59828My God,she thought,"was that the last sound that rung in the ears of my poor Mark, ere he bade adieu to this world for ever?"
59828My charmer, do you think I hesitate? 59828 My cousin, t''other''un is; ai n''t you Bill?"
59828My dear Mrs. L.,said the major,"what made you laugh in that sort of way?
59828My dear sir,she said,"are you awake?"
59828My dear son, you do n''t know he used to-- to-- what did he call it, Johanna?
59828My dear, my dear,he cried,"who is he?
59828My duck, how can you say so?
59828My evidence? 59828 My eye,"said the coachman,"has the gemman had a drop too much?"
59828My friend, sir?
59828My good woman, you do n''t surely take me for the devil? 59828 My mother?
59828My private ear?
59828My tooth, sir-- it''s been aching for some hours; did you ever have the toothache? 59828 Nailed you?"
59828Nay, who says you are mad, Tobias? 59828 Nay; is not that assuming too much?"
59828Nearly?
59828Never to leave it?
59828New book?
59828Newgate?
59828News?
59828No better?
59828No boat,said the colonel,"could reach her?"
59828No doubt; and now, Tobias, how came you in the street by London Bridge so utterly overcome and destitute?
59828No news of Todd yet, Sir Richard?
59828No, Arabella, why should you wish it unsaid? 59828 No, will you though?"
59828No; but why will every one persist in fancying Thornhill and Ingestrie to be two persons, when I am convinced they were but one? 59828 No?
59828No? 59828 No?"
59828Not at home, Ben?
59828Not dead? 59828 Not go?"
59828Not have me? 59828 Not here?
59828Not like it?
59828Not looking even into that cupboard, I suppose, eh? 59828 Not stay with such a respectable man?"
59828Not such a one as Colonel Jeffery?
59828Not-- not guilty?
59828Not_ wus_? 59828 Nothing to do, sir?
59828Nothing, did you say? 59828 Nothing?
59828Now my dear, who is in the house besides you?
59828Now was there ever such a piece of cool rascality as this?
59828Now was there ever such an incorrigible woman as this?
59828Now, John Figgs,said Todd''s counsel,"could you identify that hat again among five hundred hats like it?"
59828Now, Tobias, can you tell us what sort of a man the man with the dog was?
59828Now, mum,said Crotchet to Mrs. Lovett,"did n''t I say I''d bring yer to the old stone jug as safe as ninepence?"
59828Now,he said,"can you climb up by it, do you think?
59828Now,said Crotchet to the coachman,"are you as bold as brass, and as strong as an iron file?"
59828Now,said Lupin in a low voice--"Now, my little dear, have you got it?"
59828Oakley, are you a man, that you stand by and see me treated in this way by this big brute?
59828Oakley, are you going to see me murdered before your eyes?
59828Objection?
59828Of what?
59828Off? 59828 Offence, my dear fellow?
59828Officers?
59828Oh, Ben,she said, as the tears coursed each other down her cheeks,"how could you torture me as you have done?"
59828Oh, Charley my dear,he said,"does a gentleman want me?"
59828Oh, I beg your pardon, Mr. Todd,said a woman in widow''s weeds, as she entered the shop,"but they do say that-- that--""What?"
59828Oh, I can conclude so? 59828 Oh, Johanna, can you say that of me?"
59828Oh, Johanna-- Johanna--"Well, Arabella, why do you pause? 59828 Oh, Mr. Todd,"said the woman,"can you spare a trifle for the little ones?"
59828Oh, Sir Richard, is that you? 59828 Oh, Sir Richard,"said the churchwarden,"what have you seen?"
59828Oh, am I, you infernal vagabond? 59828 Oh, and did she leave any message, madam, in case Mr. Todd from Fleet Street should call?
59828Oh, can you?
59828Oh, damn it, what''s the use of all this round- about nonsense between us? 59828 Oh, father, you do not mean to tell me that my mother is no more?"
59828Oh, how can I thank you?
59828Oh, is he, my little man? 59828 Oh, is it?"
59828Oh, is that all?
59828Oh, is that it; then why do n''t he say Poison? 59828 Oh, nothing partickler; only had n''t we better grab him at once?"
59828Oh, sir, why do you doubt me? 59828 Oh, sir, you are quite sure--""Sure of what?"
59828Oh, tell me, some one,he then said,"what does it all really mean?
59828Oh, that''s it now, is it? 59828 Oh, that''s it, is it?"
59828Oh, that''s it, is it?
59828Oh, that''s the caper, is it?
59828Oh, then I am to understand that you rest the case for the prosecution upon a bone?
59828Oh, what am I to do? 59828 Oh, what is it?"
59828Oh, what is that?
59828Oh, who is it?
59828Oh, who knows? 59828 Oh, why do n''t you kill me at once?
59828Oh, will it?
59828Oh, yer is remarkably bad, is yer? 59828 Oh, yes, of course: what is it, sir?"
59828Oh, yes, who shall take upon them to say that I may not escape them yet? 59828 Oh, yes, yes, but I was only thinking--""Thinking of what?
59828Oh, you allude to your pushing her into the river this morning near London- bridge?
59828Oh, you are a tailor?
59828Oh, you are in jest, are you?
59828Oh, you do n''t like that? 59828 Oh, you got on without me, did you?
59828Oh, you great wretch, do you want to take his life?
59828Oh, you have made that discovery, have you?
59828Oh, you were very fortunate indeed?
59828Oh, you will, will you? 59828 Oh,"said Mrs. Lovett,"and am I to understand that I am accused of any participation in Todd''s crimes?"
59828Old friends?
59828Old?
59828On the nail? 59828 One of my officers?"
59828One week?
59828Onions?
59828Only two?
59828Only? 59828 Out, sir?"
59828Pearls, sir?
59828Peckham Rye-- you and the boy-- there ai n''t any more of you waiting round the corner, are there--''cos, you know, that wo n''t be fair?
59828Peeping and prying, sir?
59828Peeping, sir?
59828Perhaps not;--shall we go away, now?
59828Perhaps you would be equally obliged to this monster, whom you call your friend, if he would turn me out?
59828Pie, sir?
59828Pies ready?
59828Poor fellow!--why, what''s the matter with him?
59828Pray how long have you been here?
59828Pretty well? 59828 Property-- property?
59828Pursued?
59828Quiet, sir? 59828 Quite easy, sir?"
59828Quite?
59828Rather an unusual taste after it''s down, do n''t you think, sir?
59828Ready for what?
59828Ready for what?
59828Really like them? 59828 Really, Mr. Otton,"he said,"do n''t you think, after all, it would be better to leave this affair alone till the morning?
59828Really, sir,said Mrs. Lovett--"I wish you would not come here, I am all alone, and--""Alone?
59828Really, sir? 59828 Really?"
59828Reject?
59828Resisted you?
59828Reverend sir,she said,"what mean you?"
59828Safe, father?
59828Say you so?
59828Selfish?
59828Sha n''t we call anywhere for you, my lord?
59828Shall I admit him, sir?
59828Shall I apologise to him?
59828Shall I begin, sir?
59828Shall I go back,he said,"or escape?"
59828Shall I lay hold of her,thought Todd,"and choke her the moment she comes into the room, or shall I answer her, and let her go again?
59828Shall I leave at once, or stay till to- morrow night, that is the question?
59828Shall I not? 59828 Shall I take him?"
59828Shall we continue our watch?
59828Shall we do so?
59828Shall we have him up here?
59828Shaved and dressed, gentlemen?
59828Shaved or dressed sir?
59828Shaved or dressed, sir?
59828Shaved or dressed? 59828 Shaved this morning, sir?"
59828She looked up into my face, and shuddered; but she said in a calm voice, looking round her--''Where am I?''
59828She must go down, then?
59828She what?
59828She? 59828 Shelf?
59828Should you, my duck?
59828Since he what?
59828Sir Richard Blunt-- Blunt-- oh, you mean the magistrate?
59828Sir?
59828Sir?
59828Sir?
59828Sir?
59828Sir?
59828Sir?
59828Sir?
59828Sister Oakley, truly you will be a great brand snatched from the burning-- How much money have you got?
59828Sister Oakley, will you be so good as to rise, and go to the corner of the next street on a little errand for me?
59828Slick-- Slick? 59828 So I thought; and so you will deny seeing me, or knowing ought of me, for your child''s sake?
59828So it is; but have you never any run of luck in your line? 59828 So many?
59828So many?
59828So the rascal is still at large?
59828So then,said the captain,"it is quite clear that Mr. Thornhill was murdered by that rascal of a barber?"
59828So you are not contented,said Todd,"to cage me as though I were some wild animal, but you must load me with irons?"
59828So, do you want it already?
59828So,cried Mrs. Lovett,"this is the way you employ your time is it, while I am away?"
59828So,muttered the barber,"he has fainted, has he?
59828So,she said,"he is out-- is he?"
59828Some gratitude, my darling? 59828 Some time about what?"
59828Speak to him, Mrs. a-- a-- what''s your name?
59828Sticks to the table?
59828Stop,he said;"what''s the use of going to Mr. Coventry?
59828Sure that I am a victim? 59828 Sure?
59828Surely you can not hesitate to tell one, who has run some risks to befriend you, who you are?
59828Suspicions?
59828Take it easy, ma''am; the devil-- what''s this?
59828Tell me what I can do, for my heart and brain are nearly distracted by my sufferings?
59828Tell me,she said,"when did this man come, and what did he say to you?"
59828Thank me?
59828Thank you; but I was going to say--"A little more sugar?
59828That infernal dog,he muttered,"will be the death of me yet; and so, Charley, the malignant beast flew at you, did he?
59828That is the question-- what shall I do? 59828 That she is quite dead?"
59828That we shall be lost?
59828That''s true, sir; but do you know the reward that is offered for him by the Secretary of State?
59828The Roman Catholics?
59828The Temple?
59828The barber at home?
59828The barber''s boy,she thought,"who went over the way and found his father there?
59828The barber? 59828 The barber?"
59828The best what?
59828The bugle? 59828 The chaplain?
59828The coach you say is waiting, Crotchet?
59828The dog?
59828The face of my daughter, Johanna?
59828The feeling, I presume, was reciprocal?
59828The gentleman?
59828The matter with me? 59828 The matter?
59828The sailor belonging to the ship you mean?
59828The tooth- ache?
59828The whiskers as they are, sir?
59828Then Johanna, in boy''s cloathes, is now--"Now? 59828 Then give him that letter, little chap, will you?"
59828Then he-- he is not dead? 59828 Then how much will purchase my liberty?"
59828Then it will be scarcely necessary, during that time, to watch him, poor fellow?
59828Then no one need follow, sir?
59828Then she is not from home? 59828 Then we are foiled?"
59828Then we can get no further?
59828Then what would you propose to do? 59828 Then why did you laugh in such a way that it reached even my ears above?"
59828Then why do you do it?
59828Then you are satisfied?
59828Then you do n''t trouble the patients with it?
59828Then you have it here?
59828Then you have property?
59828Then you still think, Sir Richard, of going personally after the notorious ruffian?
59828Then you want to keep him in his shop another day?
59828Then you will all try a drop more ale?
59828Then you will be mine?
59828Then, pray who did you come to see, you big ugly monster you? 59828 Then, she may go down in deep water yet?"
59828Then, tell him I want him at once, will you?
59828Then, then you have only to add that you love her still?
59828Then, what, in the name of all that is devilish, has got possession of you?
59828Then, why, in the name of all that''s tantalising, did you not do so?
59828There is some mystery at the bottom of all this,muttered Todd; and then raising his voice, he added--"How did you come by the dog?"
59828They are sufficiently common, not to be positively rare and curious in the profession?
59828They will use the watch- word?
59828Think you so? 59828 Think you so?"
59828Think you so?
59828This conduct is unbearable,cried Mrs. Oakley;"am I to have one of the Lord''s saints under my own roof?"
59828Those who love me-- who is there to love me now?
59828Throttle her, sir?
59828Tired? 59828 To Todd''s house?"
59828To Todd''s?
59828To Todds?
59828To be shaved?--By him?
59828To be sure it is; and, once for all, do you want to be shaved, or do you not?
59828To death?
59828To do what, Tobias?
59828To see what, my dear?
59828To what?
59828To- night, sir?
59828Todd is in Newgate? 59828 Todd is in Newgate?"
59828Todd''s?
59828Todd, do you say?
59828Todd?
59828Todd?
59828Trifling, do you call it?
59828True, true; and as for poor Johanna and her friend Arabella, what could they do?
59828Twenty pounds?
59828Until to- morrow?
59828Used it to be pleasant to you, Minna?
59828Very good, he shall have them; but do you mean to leave such valuable clothes without getting the money for them?
59828Very good, where can any money be got hold of?
59828Very good; by everything else being satisfactory, I presume you mean the security offered?
59828Very good? 59828 Wager?
59828Was he?
59828Was it only a thought, then?
59828Was it the gentleman who was hung last Monday, sir?
59828Was that all?
59828Was there ever anybody so mad?
59828Was you, though? 59828 Was your friend finished off here, sir?"
59828Watson?
59828We all hear that; is it not so, gentlemen?
59828We are lost, then?
59828We want to know if any one having the appearance of an officer in the navy came to your house?
59828We will not tax you too hardly, depend upon it: who are you?
59828Weep? 59828 Well off?"
59828Well then, sir, what colour do you propose now?
59828Well, Charley,he said,"how goes it with you, my lad?"
59828Well, Crotchet,said Sir Richard, as he encountered that individual,"Have you been to Newgate this morning?"
59828Well, I never,said Crotchet,"I hope I have n''t hurt you, old man?
59828Well, I''ll be hanged,said the man,"if this do n''t beat everything; you do n''t mean to tell me he is a barber, do you?"
59828Well, Jervis,said the magistrate,"so Todd has a customer, has he?"
59828Well, Jiggs,said one of the legal fraternity to another,"how are you to- day, old fellow?
59828Well, Tobias, how are you now?
59828Well, and if I am, what then?
59828Well, and what is you going to be arter now?
59828Well, but how was it, Ben, that you did not marry this Angelina you speak of?
59828Well, but is there any danger?
59828Well, but you found your girl all right, I suppose?
59828Well, but you know that even a few drops will settle him?
59828Well, did yer ever know sich a feller?
59828Well, gentlemen, shaved, or cut, or dressed, I am at your service; which shall I begin with?
59828Well, gentlemen,he cried,"what is it?"
59828Well, gentlemen,said Todd,"what is it you require of me?"
59828Well, how would you apply that line to the present circumstances?
59828Well, is there anything now?
59828Well, madam, candidly speaking, should I be far wrong by so doing?
59828Well, mother?
59828Well, my dear, I came by the barber''s, and what do you think?
59828Well, my dear, perhaps you wo n''t mind getting up and just running towards the corner for a bunch of water cresses? 59828 Well, my friend, what do you think of all this?"
59828Well, old''un,he replied,"what do you bring it in-- Wilful Murder with the chill off, or what?"
59828Well, sir?
59828Well, sir?
59828Well, the reason, then-- the reason?
59828Well, then, my dear, what is it?
59828Well, they are good; of course we know that, Tobias; but do you mean to say you are going to be a barber?
59828Well, what is that to me? 59828 Well, what now?"
59828Well, you do seem the most melancholy wretch ever I came near; what''s the matter with you?
59828Well,added Todd, after a pause,"you are a man of judgment Mr. Lupin, and all I want to know now, is what you mean to do?"
59828Well,he said,"have you come to any understanding about that military man in the Temple Gardens?"
59828Well,said Colonel Jeffery,"what do you think of that?"
59828Well,said Mrs. Oakley,"if he is dead, pray what hinders you from listening to the chosen vessel, I should like to know?"
59828Well,said Sir Richard, as he opened his desk,"since you are not to be knocked down by poverty, what say you to riches?
59828Well,said Todd,"well, any one been?"
59828Well,said Todd,"what then?"
59828Well,said one man, who had been examining the pearls,"and did the lapidary find out they were not real?"
59828Well-- well.--Fiend in female shape, what would you with me? 59828 Well-- well?"
59828Well?
59828Well?
59828Well?
59828Well?
59828Well?
59828Were you here, madam, when she left home?
59828What about the gentleman with the dog?
59828What am I to do now?
59828What are you about?
59828What are you saying Mr. Ben? 59828 What became of the hat?"
59828What can I do?
59828What can he do? 59828 What can it be?
59828What can it be?
59828What can it be?
59828What can it mean?
59828What can it mean?
59828What can they mean by looking in such a manner at my shop? 59828 What can this most dreadful secret be, which it is impossible to exaggerate?
59828What did you remark, my dear sir?
59828What did you say, Sir Richard?
59828What disturbance is this?
59828What do yer mean?
59828What do you advise, Crotchet? 59828 What do you call a handsome profit?"
59828What do you do here?
59828What do you do with them?
59828What do you mean by polishing him off?
59828What do you mean by that laughing? 59828 What do you mean by that, you idiot of a boy?
59828What do you mean, Susan? 59828 What do you mean, Tobias?"
59828What do you mean? 59828 What do you mean?"
59828What do you mean?
59828What do you mean?
59828What do you mean?
59828What do you mean?
59828What do you mean?
59828What do you mean?
59828What do you mean?
59828What do you mean?
59828What do you propose then?
59828What do you propose to do?
59828What do you say to taking me with you?
59828What do you say, sir?
59828What do you say?
59828What do you tell me?
59828What do you think of that, Crotchet?
59828What do you think of that, Hector?
59828What do you think, Crotchet? 59828 What do you want here?"
59828What do you want here?
59828What do you want?
59828What do you want?
59828What does he do here?
59828What does it all mean? 59828 What does this mean?"
59828What duke, sir?
59828What for? 59828 What for?"
59828What for?
59828What fun?
59828What give those to a child? 59828 What goes?"
59828What has happened? 59828 What has happened?--what has happened?"
59828What have I done that I should be made such a victim of? 59828 What have I done?
59828What have I done?
59828What have you come down here for?
59828What have you got there?
59828What have you to say to me?
59828What is a long time?
59828What is all this about?
59828What is all this? 59828 What is he staring at?"
59828What is it he says he calls the dog?
59828What is it like, my lord?
59828What is it then?
59828What is it you have to say to me, Sweeney Todd?
59828What is it, Martha?
59828What is it, sir?
59828What is it?
59828What is it?
59828What is it?
59828What is it?
59828What is it?
59828What is it?
59828What is it?
59828What is it?
59828What is it?
59828What is our wealth, Todd?
59828What is pleasant?
59828What is that you say?
59828What is that, I say? 59828 What is that, sir?"
59828What is that? 59828 What is that?"
59828What is that?
59828What is the matter, cousin?
59828What is the matter?
59828What is the matter?
59828What is the meaning of all this? 59828 What is the meaning of all this?"
59828What is the meaning of all this?
59828What is the meaning of this confusion?
59828What is the meaning of this?
59828What is the time?
59828What is this, Davis?
59828What is this?
59828What is this?
59828What is this?
59828What is this?
59828What is your name?
59828What kind of man?
59828What leads you to suppose, Sir Richard,said the architect,"that this place will show us anything?"
59828What makes you think that?
59828What mean I? 59828 What mean you, Johanna?"
59828What now?
59828What odd noise was that?
59828What on earth can be the matter with this man?
59828What on earth do you mean?
59828What paper?
59828What shall I do?
59828What shall I do?
59828What shall I do?
59828What shall I do?
59828What shall I do?
59828What shall I do?
59828What shall I do?
59828What shall I do?
59828What shall I do?--What ought I to do?
59828What shall I do?--what shall I do?
59828What shall I do?--what shall I do?
59828What shall we take the gemman for, Bill?
59828What sort of a dog was it?
59828What sort of man, sir?
59828What the deuce is up now?
59828What the devil is all this about?
59828What then happened, Tobias?
59828What time?
59828What was it?
59828What was that?
59828What was that?
59828What was that?
59828What was that?
59828What was the value of the watch- cases your husband had with him, Mrs. Cummins, when he disappeared?
59828What were you going to do just now?
59828What will become of me now? 59828 What will you do now?"
59828What will you do then, Crotchet?
59828What will you give?
59828What will you give?
59828What would you like to have, sir?
59828What''s a joke, sir?
59828What''s a joke? 59828 What''s cool?"
59828What''s in yours, Crotchet?
59828What''s that to you? 59828 What''s that to you?"
59828What''s that, eh?
59828What''s that, my friend?
59828What''s that? 59828 What''s that?"
59828What''s that?
59828What''s that?
59828What''s that?
59828What''s that?
59828What''s that?--what''s that?
59828What''s the matter now?
59828What''s the matter with the dress?
59828What''s the matter, my dear?
59828What''s the matter, old gentleman?
59828What''s the matter? 59828 What''s the matter?"
59828What''s the matter?
59828What''s the matter?
59828What''s the matter?
59828What''s the matter?
59828What''s the matter?
59828What''s the meaning of it? 59828 What''s the meaning of that, Bill?"
59828What''s the news?
59828What''s the odds,said Crotchet,"as long as you are happy?"
59828What''s the row? 59828 What''s this?
59828What''s to be done now?
59828What''s to be done?
59828What''s you, Mr. Ben? 59828 What''s your name?"
59828What''s your name?
59828What, Crotchet?
59828What, Johanna''s husband?
59828What, Sir Richard?
59828What, Todd?
59828What, another idiot? 59828 What, anything amiss?"
59828What, colonel, did again? 59828 What, is he in eternity?
59828What, on that shelf?
59828What, sir?
59828What, sir?
59828What, the fellow that killed all the people in Fleet Street, and made them into pies?
59828What, to court?
59828What, wretched? 59828 What,"said Todd,"would you charge me more for carrying a letter than King George the Third does, you extortionate rascal?"
59828What-- what is it?
59828What-- what was it?
59828What-- what? 59828 What-- what?"
59828What-- why-- what--? 59828 What?
59828What? 59828 What?
59828What? 59828 What?"
59828What?
59828What?
59828What?
59828What?
59828What?
59828What?
59828What?
59828What?--what?
59828What?--what?--who?
59828What?--who?
59828When Johanna was disguised?
59828When did she go?
59828When shall we see you, Sir Richard?
59828When you send ashore, will you permit me to accompany the boat''s crew?
59828When?
59828Where am I?
59828Where are we now?
59828Where are you going to take me? 59828 Where can the boy be?"
59828Where did it come from, Tobias?
59828Where did you find it?
59828Where do you want to go to?
59828Where do you want to go to?
59828Where does it lead to?
59828Where have I heard that voice before? 59828 Where is Tobias?"
59828Where is he?
59828Where is it, then?--where is it? 59828 Where is my dear father?"
59828Where is that night glass that some one had here a little while ago?
59828Where is the puzzle now?
59828Where to, mum?
59828Where''s the dog''s master?
59828Where''s the dog?
59828Where''s the fiend in the shape of a dog?
59828Where''s the t''other little one?
59828Where, Ben?
59828Where?
59828Where?
59828Which way has he gone?
59828Which way is the tide, boy?
59828Which will surely not be permitted?
59828Whither are you going?
59828Who am I to cling to but you?
59828Who and what are you?
59828Who and what are you?
59828Who are you, eh?
59828Who are you,he said,"that you address me by my name, woman?"
59828Who are you? 59828 Who are you?"
59828Who are you?
59828Who are you?
59828Who are you?
59828Who are you?--what do you want?
59828Who can that be hammering with such devilish perseverance at my door? 59828 Who can we get?"
59828Who did it, sir?
59828Who do I seem, then?
59828Who ever heard of a pulpit groaning?
59828Who is Ben?
59828Who is it?
59828Who is it?--who can it be? 59828 Who is that keeps dodging past the window each moment, and peeping in at every convenient open space in the glass that he can find?"
59828Who is that man, and what does he say?
59828Who is that?
59828Who is there?
59828Who is this Todd,said the surgeon,"that he continually speaks of, and shudders at the very name of?"
59828Who is to cook it, ma''am? 59828 Who is without?"
59828Who killed the dog''s master? 59828 Who knows,"she thought,"that I shall ever see him in life again?"
59828Who on earth can this be?
59828Who on earth would have thought of vaults like these in such a situation?
59828Who speaks to me?
59828Who speaks?
59828Who told you what I wished, or what I did not? 59828 Who will stop me,"he said,"with the feeling that will possess me?
59828Who''d a thought o''seeing of you?
59828Who''s that?
59828Who''s the letter from?
59828Who''s there? 59828 Who''s there?"
59828Who, sir? 59828 Who,"he thought to himself,"for the world''s wealth, would have this woman''s memory of the past?"
59828Who? 59828 Who?
59828Who?
59828Who?
59828Whose blessed veskut is that you as got?
59828Whose hat is it, or was it?
59828Whose voice?
59828Why Hector,said his master,"what''s the matter?
59828Why am I placed here? 59828 Why did I yield even for a moment,"she said,"to such a load of superstition?
59828Why did n''t you nab him at once?
59828Why did you not wait for us when we first called to you?
59828Why did you say to Brown that our union was to take place?
59828Why do n''t you go, Bill?
59828Why do n''t you go?
59828Why do n''t you laugh if it''s funny? 59828 Why do n''t you throw her in?"
59828Why do you come to a stop in such a place as this?
59828Why do you cry alas?--Have you any more sad news to tell me?
59828Why do you laugh?
59828Why do you not answer me?
59828Why do you say humph?
59828Why do you say, Humph, Ben?
59828Why do you think that?
59828Why does that boat linger there upon the spot where she went down? 59828 Why is she dead?"
59828Why is this?
59828Why not, Arabella? 59828 Why not, madam?"
59828Why not? 59828 Why not?
59828Why not?
59828Why seven thousand five hundred only, when you mentioned eight thousand pounds?
59828Why should I be tortured thus? 59828 Why should you grudge me the means of death,"said Todd,"when you know that you have brought me here among you to die?"
59828Why would you wish to add to your sorrows, by again looking upon that shop?
59828Why, Tobias, my dear, what are you talking about? 59828 Why, do n''t you know me?
59828Why, do n''t you see it is by its size and looks? 59828 Why, ma''am, are you not a widow?"
59828Why, no ma''am, they have not; but I hope we are going to resume business again in the old way?
59828Why, sir, who would have lived in it? 59828 Why, suppose, mum, we ask Mr. Todd, next door, to give us leave to go up into his attic, and get out at the window and look in at yours, mum?"
59828Why, what do you call them, Ben?
59828Why, what else could I come in for?
59828Why, what have we done?
59828Why, what''s the matter with you,said the man,"that makes you so mighty mysterious, eh?
59828Why, what''s the matter with you?
59828Why, what''s the matter?
59828Why, what''s the row?
59828Why, what''s to become of the half- past one batch?
59828Why, yes,said Todd,"I did; but, I suppose, you are all afraid to earn a couple of guineas?"
59828Why, you do n''t mean to say that you are a prisoner?
59828Why-- why, what''s all this? 59828 Will I deal with you?
59828Will a hundred pounds content you?
59828Will any gentleman who thinks it a shame, be so good as to step forward and say so a little closer?
59828Will anybody keep him quiet?
59828Will he awake soon?
59828Will her friends not miss her?
59828Will that do, sir?
59828Will there be a storm, Mark?
59828Will these''osses, if they is frightened a bit, cut along quick?
59828Will three guineas be enough, Jane, just for the present occasion?
59828Will we? 59828 Will you be so good as to show me the rooms, madam?"
59828Will you both come with me, then?
59828Will you deal with me or will you not?
59828Will you excuse me a moment, Mr. Grant? 59828 Will you get up, Mr. Ingestrie?
59828Will you give half a guinea?
59828Will you look at mine?
59828Will you look at the pearls I have?
59828Will you pardon me for saying all this to you?
59828Will you state to the court and jury, the grounds upon which you arrive at that conclusion?
59828Will you take upon your self to swear that that boy, or lad, or whatever he may be called, is in his right senses?
59828Will you trust Johanna with me to- night, and perhaps to- morrow night?
59828Will you, or shall I, speak to him?
59828Will you? 59828 With whom?"
59828Wo n''t anybody be so good,he said,"as just to try and pick a little bit of something?"
59828Wo n''t you give me a kiss, you darling, before you go?
59828Would it, do you think, hold two men?
59828Would the Port of Havre in France suit you?
59828Would you like one with a hivory handle, mum? 59828 Would you mind him, sir, sitting outside the door and waiting for you, if it''s all the same?
59828Wretch, I find that money will purchase anything in this house; but am I surprised at that? 59828 Wretch-- beast,"muttered Todd;"what does he want here at this time of day?"
59828Yes, Mrs. Ragg, we does; but as you was a saying?
59828Yes, and why not?--why not? 59828 Yes, but, what I meant was, were you aware of the sort of adventure he embarked in to the Indian seas?"
59828Yes, it would seem so indeed; but what are pearls to me? 59828 Yes, madam, that is Flukes--""Who?"
59828Yes, or to shape the question perhaps more to a woman''s liking, how young are you? 59828 Yes, positively ashamed?"
59828Yes, sir; and you are Mark Ingestrie''s messenger?
59828Yes, to be sure; is a fellow to stay in a place with his hair continually standing on end, I should like to know? 59828 Yes, what do you mean?"
59828Yes, yes, there he is; do you not see him? 59828 Yes, you see that cluster of bushes?"
59828Yes-- what then?
59828Yes: do you knock folks''brains out when they come to be shaved?
59828Yes; but did Mr. Todd tell you?
59828Yes; but, father, why should Mr. Grant seek to force him to the study of a profession he so much disliked?
59828You and your brother, sir?
59828You are afraid that I should escape?
59828You are his boy, are you not?
59828You are of that opinion, Sir Richard?
59828You are quite sure she did n''t laugh at you?
59828You are sure no one has been here peeping and prying, and asking questions which you would be quite delighted to answer, eh?
59828You are sure of it, now? 59828 You are-- a-- a-- donkey, do you say?"
59828You ca n''t mean that? 59828 You care not?--what do you mean by that?
59828You compelled?
59828You could n''t show a fellow the way up to Smith''s_ hattic_, I supposes?
59828You did? 59828 You did?"
59828You do n''t know? 59828 You do n''t know?
59828You do n''t like the picture?
59828You do n''t like touching the razors, Charley?
59828You do n''t mean it, sir?
59828You do n''t say so, sir?
59828You do n''t say so? 59828 You do n''t say so?
59828You do n''t say so?
59828You do n''t say so?
59828You do n''t say so?
59828You do n''t say so?
59828You do n''t want it?
59828You do n''t want to hear it? 59828 You do n''t?"
59828You do not doubt?
59828You don''t-- you do n''t? 59828 You doubt me?"
59828You dreamt it?
59828You had? 59828 You have no doubt, sir, but Thornhill perished by the hand of Todd?"
59828You have no passenger?
59828You have no staves, then?
59828You have seen him?
59828You hear him?
59828You hear-- you hear?
59828You heard that?
59828You here, Arabella?
59828You here, sir?
59828You kill your own, mum, then, I suppose?
59828You know him well?
59828You know it, sir?
59828You laugh?
59828You only what?
59828You quite understand me, Tobias? 59828 You really know me, Tobias?"
59828You really think so, Ben?
59828You really think so?
59828You really think so?
59828You really think, then, Mr. Peter, that-- that his intellects--"His what?
59828You recollect meeting us in this street, Ben?
59828You said something about the weather, did you not?
59828You say you have lost pearls?
59828You say you have money?
59828You say, he wishes to speak to me?
59828You think you will have him again?
59828You understand me, Todd?
59828You understood my message?
59828You want me with you?
59828You went?
59828You were what?
59828You will desert me? 59828 You will meet me then, as I request of you, to hear if I have any news for you?"
59828You will save me?
59828You will spare my child?
59828You will venture that?
59828You will, old fellow?
59828You would arrest him to- night?
59828You would not probably have expected it of me, Mr. Ben, would you now?
59828You would, really?
59828You would, sir?
59828You, I believe, Sir Richard Blunt, give these people in charge?
59828You-- you do n''t want me?
59828You-- you? 59828 Young man, do you call me?
59828Your duty, sir?
59828Your duty?
59828Your good genius, if I save you from doing anything rash; who and what are you? 59828 Your name?"
59828Your own name?
59828_ Conwulsions!_exclaimed Otton,"what can I do?"
59828''Now, how am I to do about getting back to London to- night?''
59828''Will you give me this deed as a security that you will keep your word?''
59828***** Was it not a world of wonders that amid all this, Johanna did not go mad?
598283d.?
59828A boy howled out from the shop--"Did a gentleman order two gallons of half- and- half here, please?"
59828A chisel?
59828A close shave, sir?
59828A little man with a constable''s staff in his hand, rushed before Ben, crying out--"What is it?
59828A man stood upon the threshold with quite a smile upon his face, as he said--"Busy, I suppose?"
59828A mere idea will make me quite ill.""Will it, really?"
59828A nice little set up that would be, sir, for any one, would n''t it, sir?"
59828A pretty boy, sir; is he not?"
59828A regular garden of, what do you call it, my dear?
59828A slight change of colour came over her face, as she said--"Shall I see Todd?"
59828A strange booming noise came across the sea at this moment, and the colonel cried out--"Is that a gun, or is it thunder?"
59828A- hem-- Charley?"
59828Afraid?
59828After some few moments''silence, Sir Richard spoke, saying--"Well, Crotchet-- what do you think of the affair now?"
59828After this, who could ask any further questions?
59828After this, who will be hardy enough, my dear, to dispute the fact with you and I?
59828Ah, if I could only persuade you to go from L to B--""Sir?"
59828Ah, what is that?"
59828Ai n''t I Sweeney Todd''s apprentice, and ai n''t that enough to make anybody sing all day long?"
59828Ai n''t I a constabulary force, I should like to know?
59828Ai n''t it rather late to be shaved?
59828Ai n''t there butchers enough?"
59828Ai n''t you well, sir?
59828Ai nt that it, Tobias, my bud?"
59828Alas, poor Tobias, will your young intellects yet stand these trials?
59828All right, eh?"
59828Am I going mad?"
59828Am I really getting superstitious now?"
59828Am I really in a place where, by some frightful ingenuity, murder has become bold and familiar, or can it be all a delusion?"
59828Am I suspected?--am I watched?
59828Am I to be poisoned by your soap- suds?
59828Am I to believe the evidence of my own eyes, or am I not?"
59828Am I to endure all this?"
59828Am I to grow old and grey here, a mere pie machine?
59828Am I to lose another £8000?
59828Am I, at my time of life, to be made the slave of such a demon in human shape as this woman?
59828And did you find a place to sleep at cheaply and decently, my good lad, eh?"
59828And have you forgotten what Mr. Ben, your friend from the Tower, told you?"
59828And how did you manage that matter?
59828And now what was to become of her?
59828And now, Arabella, will you, and can you accompany me this evening to the Temple Gardens, to meet Colonel Jeffery?"
59828And so it is one guinea that I am to give you, eh?"
59828And so you saved the child''s life, did you?
59828And so your father is quite well-- eh, my fine lad?
59828And what did you do to deserve such a severe chastisement?
59828And who are you, sir?"
59828And yet how far was he from safety?
59828And yet who, to look upon her now, could fancy that she was ever other than what she seemed?
59828And yet, if such had been the case, would he not have written it?
59828And you really think you have nothing in this world now to live for?"
59828Another glass?"
59828Any news?"
59828Any one been?"
59828Are there any large cupboards in the shop?"
59828Are they not delicious, Tobias?"
59828Are we near it now?"
59828Are we near?"
59828Are you coming, my boy?"
59828Are you dead?
59828Are you going far?
59828Are you going, Charley?"
59828Are you going, Charley?"
59828Are you happy?"
59828Are you hurt?
59828Are you in fetters?"
59828Are you mad to go on talking so?"
59828Are you mad?"
59828Are you men or fiends that you will condemn me to it?
59828Are you out of your mind?
59828Are you ready?''
59828Are you?"
59828As they passed through the gate opening into Fleet- street, the porter, who knew the barber well by sight, said--"Hilloa, Mr. Todd, is that you?
59828At any rate, I understood you that by the manner in which you had dogged him, you had thoroughly ascertained that fact?"
59828At length he said--"Where now, if I were hiding anything, would I select a place in this shop?"
59828At length the colonel spoke-- and he did so in a tone of excitement, saying--"My friend, have we waited here for nothing now?
59828At length, somewhat mastering his emotion, he said--"What-- what''s that?"
59828At this they all took to flight; but at the door they encountered a man, who called out--"What''s the matter?
59828At what time shall we go together, to- morrow morning, to Mr. Black''s in Abchurch Lane?"
59828Away went Johanna, but before she got half way down to Fleet Market she met Sir Richard, who said--"What is it?"
59828Back, back you grinning fiends-- why do you look at me when you know that it is not real?
59828Be quiet, will you?
59828Be quiet, will you?"
59828Beadle?"
59828Beadle?"
59828Before he could utter even an oath the shop door was opened, and a man''s voice cried--"Has n''t nobody seen nothing of never a great dog nowheres?
59828Begin what?
59828Ben gave a chuckle as he replied--"Have you though, really?
59828Ben merely said"How is you?"
59828Ben?"
59828Ben?"
59828Ben?"
59828Ben?"
59828Benjamin Blumergutts, would you like to take a glass of wine?''
59828Besides, how was he to conveniently set fire to his house, unless he was off on the moment that the flames burst forth?
59828Bless me, my child, when did you begin to call your old kind friend sir?"
59828Bless us, who is here?
59828Bring the woman in and-- and, Watson?
59828But I presume, Sir Richard, that you have some orders for me?"
59828But arter all, Mr. Fogg, what was it all about?
59828But as you was a saying?"
59828But ca n''t the peruke be brought here, sir?"
59828But come now, Todd, you charming creature, could you not manage to crawl a little way further?"
59828But have you faith in my inspiration now sufficient to induce you to believe anything that I may tell you?"
59828But hoarser tones soon came upon his ears, and he heard the loud, rough voice of a man say--"What, do you want the whip so early this morning?
59828But how came you in this state, ma''am?"
59828But how comes the shop in such confusion?"
59828But if any one should come to be shaved while you are in the parlour, what shall I say to them?"
59828But is he better?
59828But just while we are sipping our wine, now, could n''t you tell me something that would not be betraying anybody''s confidence?"
59828But now that I have been so candid, pray who are you?"
59828But stop, are you in a very great hurry for two minutes, sir?"
59828But tell me in what way you attach such serious importance to this piece of paper, Johanna?"
59828But tell me, are you comfortable in your situation?"
59828But then she heard the kind, although not very musical voice of Mrs. Ragg from within, say--"But, my dear, you will give her time to come?"
59828But then there he was.--Who but he could be accused?
59828But there is more?"
59828But was Todd going to trust these two porters from out his own immediate neighbourhood, with the secret of the destination of the boxes?
59828But what am I saying?
59828But what companions had I?
59828But what did he do it for?"
59828But what is it, sir?"
59828But what was it, what could it be, and what was to be done to get rid of it?
59828But what will lull such suspicion as Sweeney Todd had in his mind?
59828But where do you want to go to sir?
59828But where to?
59828But who have we here?
59828But why do you all come to me and leave Todd''s cell tenantless, except by himself?
59828But wo n''t you give me a drop of the brandy?
59828But wo n''t you have a glass, Jane, to drink it out of?
59828But yet--""What is it now?"
59828But you do n''t mean to go through the surf, sir?"
59828But you said something of a ship in distress, did you not?"
59828But, after all, what where all these little disagreeables, provided he, Todd, fairly escaped?
59828But, amid all the trials, and perplexities, and anxieties that beset the dramatis personà ¦ of our story, who suffered like Johanna?
59828But, gentlemen, is that enough?
59828But-- but--""But what?"
59828Buttered rolls, perhaps, and a glass of something good?
59828By- the- by, did Black give me a receipt, or did he say it was not usual?
59828By- the- bye, what am I to pay you?"
59828Ca n''t you be quiet when you is told?"
59828Ca n''t you guess?"
59828Ca n''t you take a joke, Mr. Otton?
59828Ca n''t you tell a fellow what the blessed row is-- eh?"
59828Can I do it?
59828Can we refuse him?"
59828Can you bear to paint such a picture-- does it not seem to you as though you stood upon that scaffold, and heard those shouts?
59828Can you come to his house?"
59828Can you deliberately swear that this is the hat in question?"
59828Can you find a glass, madam?
59828Can you forgive me?"
59828Can you gather from it any hope?"
59828Can you not inform me, sir?"
59828Can you pass it through?"
59828Can you tell me what vessels are off the Port?"
59828Charley, ai n''t it near breakfast time, my good lad?"
59828Charley?
59828Charley?"
59828Come away, Pison, will you?"
59828Come home, will yer?
59828Come, I want a drop of brandy; where is it?"
59828Come, Rathbone, what do you think?
59828Come, have you any change-- about a sovereign will do, because I shall want change on the road?
59828Come, now, colonel, I am glad to see that we understand each other better about this business; you have heard, of course, of Sir Richard Blunt?"
59828Come, what do you say, at once; are we to do business or are we not?"
59828Come, will you take something to drink?
59828Come-- come, my lambkin of a Julia-- when shall we be married?
59828Confound you, what have you filled my mouth with soap- suds for?"
59828Confound you, why did n''t you speak before, and save me the last hour''s work?"
59828Conwulsions!--ain''t there lots of poor people in the world?
59828Could he ever know peace again?
59828Could she not hide in the very pew that she had for a long time called her own?
59828Could she resolve upon staying where she was, and trusting to an escape in the morning?
59828Could they be real?
59828Could you get this young girl to come to tea, for instance, with you, without telling her what else she is wanted for?"
59828Could you not go right through the house, my good Watson, and at once-- eh?"
59828Crotchet, who have you got outside?"
59828Cummings?"
59828Cummins?"
59828Curses on both you and him; how came he here?"
59828Damme, is this seat a fixture?"
59828Dare I give it a name?"
59828Dare you go back again, Johanna, to that place?"
59828Dear me, what am I thinking of?"
59828Dear me, what did the colonel say he had with his vision-- could it be-- a something_ afixity_?
59828Dear me, where can it be?
59828Dear me, where can it be?"
59828Despair?
59828Did Arabella think the colonel would run after her and say something?
59828Did I hear a man''s voice?"
59828Did Martha Jones mean profanity?
59828Did Todd get two letters?"
59828Did a mother''s tears ever fall upon his or her cheek, in sweet gratitude to God for such a glorious gift?
59828Did he abscond from his wife with them, or was he murdered?
59828Did he leave the barber, or did he not?"
59828Did it mean that?
59828Did n''t I hear one of them say that he would look in this very place?"
59828Did n''t I tell you that when aunt died, I should come in for the soap and candle business, and make you my missus?"
59828Did n''t you notice, sir, what an old humbug he was before, when we was a- coming here on the hunt about Todd and that beautiful creature Mrs. Lovett?
59828Did she believe his title, or his wealth, and his common honesty?
59828Did she believe in the story of the purse and of the two guineas that were to be paid to the poor glover because he wanted them?
59828Did she expect that her idol would turn out to be anything but a common brazen image?
59828Did she think he would be loath to part with her upon such terms as they had seemed to part?
59828Did that relate to the disposal of Todd?
59828Did the reader think that she saw anything attractive in the satyr- like visage of Todd, with its eccentricities of vision?
59828Did they think to hold me with these chains?
59828Did you call when you came from home?"
59828Did you ever have a fight for it?"
59828Did you ever have the tooth- ache, sir?"
59828Did you ever hear of a young girl as was neglected by her mother-- her mother who of all ought to be the person to attend to her-- turning out well?"
59828Did you ever hear of such a villain?
59828Did you ever, in all your life, see such a coat for a barber?"
59828Did you give up your love?"
59828Did you hear it, mum?"
59828Did you hear what a shriek she gave, Bill?
59828Did you never hear of a gent talking to a pretty gal in the street?"
59828Did you not expect to find me dead?"
59828Did you not hear it, Minna?"
59828Did you not hear what the letter said upon that point?"
59828Did you not hear what the man said?
59828Did you not take ten pounds some time ago, and promise to come near me no more?"
59828Did you say Mark?"
59828Did you tell of Todd?"
59828Did you, Jane?"
59828Do I love eating and drinking?
59828Do I love fighting?
59828Do I love honour-- glory?
59828Do I love myself?"
59828Do I not know perfectly well that when a person is found too idiotic for ordinary duties he is made a chaplain of a jail?
59828Do I not owe it to you that I escaped the death that without a doubt was designed for me by Todd?
59828Do I not owe to you my life?
59828Do I not say that it is in poor Mark''s own handwriting?
59828Do I stand upon a mine?
59828Do dare you, you devil''s cub, to ask me what I said?
59828Do n''t it make folks careful of going into a strange barber''s shop, let me ask you that?"
59828Do n''t most folks have friends of some sort or another?"
59828Do n''t you hear how it''s blowing?"
59828Do n''t you know that old Todd is a busting to do you an ill turn some o''these days?
59828Do n''t you know, now, as well as I do, that that barber will do you a mischief yet, you great blockhead you?
59828Do n''t you remember when your dear, good, pretty Johanna won all hearts?"
59828Do n''t you see as the dust has got into a crevice as is bigger nor all the other crevices, and goes right along this ways and then along that ways?
59828Do n''t you see there is a gap that you have only to push through, and there you are?"
59828Do n''t you think Miss Wilmot might as well come with us?"
59828Do n''t you think it is?"
59828Do n''t you think so?"
59828Do n''t you?"
59828Do we breathe blood, and only fancy it air?
59828Do you believe that dreams ever really shadow forth coming events?"
59828Do you belong to her?"
59828Do you belong to the prison, or do you not?"
59828Do you bring me freedom?"
59828Do you call that a little frailty?"
59828Do you comprehend me, Tobias?"
59828Do you ever go to court?
59828Do you feel any confusion in your head now?"
59828Do you find the prisoner at the bar guilty or not guilty of the crime laid to his charge in the indictment?"
59828Do you forget there was such a person as Thornhill in the world, Johanna?"
59828Do you fully understand?"
59828Do you hear me?
59828Do you hear me?"
59828Do you hear that?
59828Do you hear, that he tried to kill me?
59828Do you hear?
59828Do you know a young lady named Johanna Oakley?"
59828Do you know him well by sight?"
59828Do you know my mind misgives me that something has happened amiss?
59828Do you know that strange- looking young man?"
59828Do you know what is the most nourishing thing you can give to your children?"
59828Do you know where Todd has gone?"
59828Do you know where the governor is?"
59828Do you know where you are?"
59828Do you know, Mr. Barber, he makes such comical remarks at anything, that it''s worth one half the fun to hear him?
59828Do you make half a veal?"
59828Do you mean the Elephant and Castle?"
59828Do you mean to meet this colonel?"
59828Do you mean to say you draw pictures?"
59828Do you mean to say you have been in the city before you came here, sir?"
59828Do you not expect him back here to sleep?"
59828Do you not hear the oven?"
59828Do you not hear them now?"
59828Do you not see them, or does your tears, and your fears together, blind you?"
59828Do you now know of anything that might exercise a strong influence over him?"
59828Do you now, as a woman of the world, Mrs. Ragg, think that she has an affection for poor Tobias?"
59828Do you really think you are strong enough to go home yet?"
59828Do you remember our last conversation?
59828Do you remember that I can hang your mother when I please, because, if you do not, I beg to put you in mind of that pleasant little circumstance?"
59828Do you see her, colonel, like a tub upon the water?
59828Do you see these tears?
59828Do you speak French?"
59828Do you think I am in love with these cold walls?
59828Do you think I am not sharp sighted enough to see that razor partially hidden in your sleeve?
59828Do you think I would step into a place of yours without something in the shape of a friend with me?
59828Do you think Sweeney Todd will be hung, or will you die in the cell of a madhouse?"
59828Do you think any other but a madman would have done the deeds with which you charge me?
59828Do you think he can?"
59828Do you think he has any money, sir?"
59828Do you think he would know you again?"
59828Do you think that yours will prove the exception?
59828Do you think the servant will be able to find your father?"
59828Do you think you could manage a pistol, if you had one?"
59828Do you think you would have courage sufficient to dress yourself again in my cousin''s clothes, and go to Todd''s shop?"
59828Do you think, Crotchet, there is anything else in this attic to beware of?"
59828Do you understand me?"
59828Do you understand me?"
59828Do you understand that, Mr. Bill White?"
59828Do you understand that, Sweeney Todd?
59828Do you understand that?
59828Do you understand that?"
59828Do you want a pie, sir?"
59828Do you want to buy or sell?"
59828Do you want to drive a fellow out of his mind?"
59828Do you wish to insult me, Mr. Dilki?
59828Do you wish to see him?"
59828Do you, now, Julia?"
59828Does he linger yet sufficiently long in the vaults, to enable me to take refuge among the pews?"
59828Does he think that going to prayer is incompatible with such a life as Todd''s?
59828Does it not seem very strange that you permitted him for some weeks to go on just as usual?"
59828Does not all the world do it?
59828Drive on, will you?"
59828Dunstan''s?"
59828Dunstan''s?"
59828Dunstan''s?"
59828Dunstan''s?"
59828Dunstan''s?"
59828Eh?
59828Eh?"
59828Eh?"
59828Fogg?"
59828For a few moments they looked at each other in silence, and then Todd said--"Alone?"
59828For how long will it be?"
59828From the country, I suppose, sir?"
59828Gentlemen of the jury, what would you think of a man who should produce a brick, and swear that it belonged to a certain house?
59828Get out of my way, will you?
59828Ghost, may I have this cloak, if you please, as you ca n''t possibly want it?''"
59828Go on-- go on, unless you have said all?"
59828God of Heaven, who are you?"
59828God, is this enchantment?
59828Good God, why do n''t you go?"
59828Good gracious, do you want to skin me?"
59828Good gracious, what more do you want?
59828Good- day to you, sir-- shaved, I suppose?
59828Had he not done the deed with the weapon of his handicraft that he had brought to the house?
59828Had she borrowed it from Todd?
59828Had she not heard Lupin denounced by one who knew him well as a murderer-- an allegation which he had not even in the faintest manner denied?
59828Had the well in the garden ever before received a victim?
59828Had you forgotten your father?
59828Hardman?"
59828Has Todd been here?"
59828Has any one called, Charley?"
59828Has any one come into your place, or have you seen a tall man pass the cottage?"
59828Has anybody anything to say to me here?
59828Has anybody got the rope ready for the lady?"
59828Has anything been heard of him since?"
59828Has anything happened-- is she well?
59828Has he been here?
59828Has he never yet in his mundane experience met with a case of sanctimonious villany?
59828Has no such feeling ever crossed you?"
59828Has she gone to the sea- side?"
59828Has that pure and gentle spirit recovered from its fearful thraldom, and once again opened its eyes to the world and the knowledge of the past?
59828Has the godlike spirit of reason come back to the mind- benighted boy?
59828Has the scaffold any charms for you?"
59828Have I all along been mistaken; and is there such a thing as an invisible world of spirits about us?
59828Have I been preserved from death under many adventurous and fearful circumstances, at last to die here like a rat in a hole?"
59828Have I disappointed you of a single batch of those execrable pies?"
59828Have I failed in doing your bidding here?
59828Have n''t I been brought up among the wild beasts in the Tower all my life?
59828Have n''t we, Bill?"
59828Have n''t you got lots o''air?
59828Have they been a grabbing of the Communion plate?
59828Have we not for so long carried on our snug little business in safety, merely because we were good friends?"
59828Have you a mind for a game of cribbage to- night, Governor?
59828Have you any means of knowing the time of day in your prison?"
59828Have you any objection to take him with you?"
59828Have you any other tools beside the files, for they are not much use now to us?"
59828Have you any special reasons for such a thought?"
59828Have you anything to say why sentence of death, according to the law, should not be passed forthwith upon you?"
59828Have you cut her throat like you did the woman''s by Wapping?"
59828Have you gone mad in earnest?
59828Have you got any change in your pocket?"
59828Have you got him with you-- and is he tolerably quiet?"
59828Have you got that ere little article with you?"
59828Have you no thought for me?
59828Have you not now?"
59828Have you not some secret hoard of cash, upon which we can make ourselves comfortable, when we get out of this mousetrap?
59828Have you seen Fletcher?"
59828Have you seen the paper to- day, sir?"
59828Have you the iron frame which will enable you to say--''I shall revel for years in the soft enjoyments of luxury stolen from a world I hate?''
59828Have you yet many years before you in which to enjoy the fruits of our labours?
59828Have you your pistols in good order?"
59828Have you, by any chance, heard anything more of him?"
59828He closed the door again; and then when he was alone, he placed his two hands upon his head for a few moments, and said--"What does it mean?
59828He could but kill me?"
59828He could not resist uttering an exclamation of terror, and then he added--"What is it?
59828He could stand the delay no longer, and bouncing into the shop, he cried--"What the devil is the meaning of all this?
59828He expects you there, I believe?"
59828He had talked of only going to the corner of the court, and how did she know that he had even gone so far?
59828He held them before the ravished and dazzled eyes of John Mundell, as he said--"Were they like these?"
59828He is a villain, and neither could nor would project anything good; but what can I do?
59828He passed into the parlour; but in a moment, with a glance of fury, he looked out, saying--"You tried this door?"
59828He rung a hand- bell, and, when a man appeared in answer to the summons, he said--"Is Mrs. Long within?"
59828He spoke in a low, anxious tone,--"Are you, from your knowledge of the river, quite sure that that is a police- boat?"
59828He then handed it to the sailor, and said--"Who has a good hold of the end of this rope that is about me?"
59828He tried hard to pierce with his half- shut eyes the intense darkness, but he could not; and muttering to himself--"Not yet dead-- not yet dead?"
59828Henry!--if you knew where I was, would you not fly to my rescue?
59828Hilloa, look, is that the fellow with the half- and half?"
59828His laugh too?
59828How are you, eh?"
59828How are you, my fine fellow-- eh?"
59828How came he to dream of going there?
59828How came he to know the people of that house?
59828How can I carry on business without you?
59828How can I give you the document?"
59828How can he harm me now?"
59828How could he tell now one moment from another when some one might come to the church- door?
59828How could it come here unless he brought it?
59828How could she prevent him?
59828How could you suppose that it would be other than most agreeable to me to have with us such valued friends?"
59828How could you tell but that your friend had got to London, and had actually given her the Pearls with your message appended to them?
59828How could you think of such a thing?
59828How dare you come and tell me such a thing?
59828How dare you tell me to my face that you wo n''t have what I offer you?"
59828How dare you use such language to me?
59828How did I get in before, when you would have given one of your ears to keep me out?
59828How did he know but that Sir Richard Blunt might, after all, have some sort of suspicion that he was not far off, and be listening close at hand?
59828How did yours taste, eh, old fellow?"
59828How different now was its aspect?
59828How do I look in the cloak and hat?"
59828How do you both like your new house?"
59828How do you bring it in, mum, in a general way?"
59828How do you do business-- by the job, or by the year?''
59828How do you do, Mr. Grant?
59828How do you do?"
59828How do you feel, madam?"
59828How do you like it?
59828How do you like your place?"
59828How do you make out any such relationship, I should like to know?"
59828How do you mean to do it, eh?"
59828How do you suppose that any girl under forty- five would waste a word upon you?
59828How do you think he would taste?"
59828How do?"
59828How far away from the contents of that bill which she held before her face, were her thoughts?
59828How have you passed the time in my unavoidable absence upon a little business?"
59828How is the chosen vessel, Mother O.?
59828How is the patient?''
59828How is you, Miss O.?
59828How is you, mum, in yer_ feelin''s_ this here nice evening?--Eh mum?"
59828How is your father, my lad-- eh?"
59828How is your friend, sir, who was so kind as to recommend my shop?"
59828How long has she been from the shop?
59828How long were you peeping through the door before you came in?"
59828How many does it make?
59828How much blood have you in you now to shed?
59828How much money am I to have when I have finished the brandy?
59828How much money does your grace require on these pearls?"
59828How much will you stand, now?"
59828How old is this girl?"
59828How old may you be, sir?''"
59828How poor a thing, by way of recompense for the dark and terrible suspicions he had of her, was his heaped up wealth?
59828How say you?
59828How true it is that flesh is grass;--and so the gentleman cut his throat with my razor, did he?"
59828How was Todd to escape the seeming inevitable cold- blooded murder?
59828How was it to be avoided?
59828How was she, without his cognisance, to get her share of the funds which had been placed in the hands of a stock- broker?
59828How-- why?"
59828I afraid of being kept out by you?
59828I afraid of you, indeed?
59828I am ill-- ill. Oh, what is this?
59828I ask you as men, gentlemen of the jury, if you could do that with the consciousness that you had committed a murder?
59828I ask you what is he to me?
59828I ask you, do you understand that?"
59828I believe you murdered a woman, did you not?"
59828I ca n''t go to bed comfortable without a clean shave, do you see?
59828I do not attempt to deny your claim upon me, and what is to hinder us working together, and making a good thing of it?
59828I do wonder, now, if that old Todd will be caught soon?
59828I had to take down the shutters myself this morning, and what do you think for?
59828I have been so anxious that I can not help--""Why should you be anxious?
59828I have no one that I care to leave a sixpence to, and therefore what need I trouble myself to hoard?
59828I have not seen him; but will you tell him, Crotchet, why I think it''s better for me to be scarce for a day or two?"
59828I hope I am not offending you, colonel, by my plain speaking?"
59828I hope I have not kept you waiting long?
59828I hope Mrs. Oakley is quite well this morning?"
59828I hope that neither of them have been at all indisposed?
59828I hope the knife you have got with you has a good edge to it?"
59828I hope you said your prayers last night, Charley?"
59828I hope your love is prosperous, Ben?"
59828I hope, gentlemen, you have not made a mistake and put anything out of the way in your own glasses instead of mine?"
59828I hoped you liked the pie?"
59828I just want to go up to your front attic, and--""What?"
59828I only wonder you ai n''t afraid, after the proper punishment you had on the occasion of your last visit, to show your horrid face here again?"
59828I say, old boy, where are you?"
59828I say, what harm can they do us?"
59828I shall be murdered here, because I know too much; what can save me now?
59828I shall not be long before I have finished this gentleman off-- perhaps you would like to call in again in a few minutes?"
59828I suppose it was remorse did all that?"
59828I suppose this fellow will hang?"
59828I suppose you are a young shaver?
59828I suppose you are the love of a passenger that the captain brought on board?"
59828I suppose you did n''t come to London alone, sir?"
59828I suppose you felt cold, my dear, eh?"
59828I suppose you know all about it, and what it arises from?"
59828I tell you what it is; out of compliment to you, of course, I could eat anything, but the pies are delicacies.--Where do you get your veal?"
59828I think Tobias is dead too-- why not?
59828I think you said the whiskers were to be left just as they are, sir?"
59828I think, Mr. Todd, that was our last little transaction; what can I do now for you, sir?"
59828I think, however, as I came in you said something about refreshment?"
59828I thought of tearing this miserable quilt into strips, and making a sort of rope of it; but then how was I to get it on the wall?
59828I wants to know how you are to stop it, ma''am, when you gets it to your mouth?
59828I will fetch it for you, if you wish it, Tobias?"
59828I will have half of your hoarded up gains, or--""Or what?"
59828I wonder if it will hold two of my men?
59828I wonder if they have left the church- door open, or, rather, only upon the latch?
59828I wonder what Mrs. Lovett''s cook is about?"
59828I wonder what he will say next?
59828I wonder where he is?"
59828I wonder, now, if a lodging in the Old Bailey would be a good thing?
59828I wonder?
59828I''d say,''Old fellow, was this your cloak?''
59828I''ll-- I''ll-- would you like to be shaved?"
59828I''m in difficulties, and I suppose a man may do his best to escape the consequences?"
59828I-- I only--""Hoity toity, are we going to have a disturbance, Mr. B?
59828I--""You what, madam?
59828If I have murdered him, where is the body?"
59828If all our friends are well, how can there be bad news?
59828If he had, what on earth could have saved him from absolute madness?
59828If there was to be anything of the sort done, could n''t it have been done somewhere among the free sittings, I should like to know?"
59828If we are not true to one another, what can we expect from others?
59828If we get into this kind of talk, who is to say where it will end?
59828If you really want to nab him, why do you waste time here talking to us?
59828If you wants to be murdered, ca n''t you get it done quietly, without alarming of all the parish?
59828Immediately his face was full of smiles, as he cried--"Ah, Jenkins, is that you?
59828In about half an hour the barber returned, and his first question was--"Have any things been left for me?"
59828Indeed!--Flukes-- a tailor?
59828Indeed, that do n''t suit you, Master Tobias?
59828Ingestrie?"
59828Ingestrie?"
59828Into what mischief could you have tortured my meaning?
59828Is Fletcher keeping an eye on the shop?"
59828Is Todd to be a devil, because you were thoughtless once?
59828Is all this cock- and- a- bull story about some boy in the street, who happened in your eyes to bear a resemblance to my child?"
59828Is he a steady sort of a man, Crotchet?"
59828Is he not a kind master to you, that you seem so unhappy?"
59828Is he not dead?--my poor friend?"
59828Is he the sort of man, think you, to expose himself to such danger?
59828Is he to come in, now?
59828Is idleness so much in request in other countries, that it receives such a rich reward, my dear?"
59828Is it a dream?"
59828Is it a fire?
59828Is it a light?
59828Is it agreed?"
59828Is it an understanding that we go halves?"
59828Is it broad daylight?
59828Is it even manly?"
59828Is it here?
59828Is it hot?"
59828Is it inconsistent with your regulations for me to have a box of clothes brought me from my home?"
59828Is it indeed all done now?"
59828Is it like you?"
59828Is it pleasant, or the other way?"
59828Is it possible that he can have presumed so far as to have searched the house?"
59828Is it possible?"
59828Is it really so?"
59828Is it the first floor?"
59828Is it the same you found at Todd''s door?"
59828Is it worth looking at?"
59828Is it worth while to follow this seeming clue to Highgate?"
59828Is it you, Joe?
59828Is it?
59828Is me a constabulary force, or is me not?"
59828Is my ancient cunning deserting me?
59828Is my brain no longer active and full of daring?"
59828Is n''t it a shame that anybody so intimate with the Lord should have the hiccups?
59828Is not that it, Johanna?
59828Is not that lovely?"
59828Is not this Newgate?"
59828Is not this backsliding?"
59828Is she at home?"
59828Is she married?"
59828Is she not there to see to some of her father''s comforts?
59828Is she one of those who drag about them in this world the heavy chain of unrequited affection?
59828Is she there now?"
59828Is that Hampstead where the lights are, to the left, there?"
59828Is that all you can say to it?
59828Is that gentleman present?"
59828Is that gone, likewise?"
59828Is that letter for him?"
59828Is that right?
59828Is that the idea?"
59828Is the pure love of that young creature scattered to the winds?
59828Is the reader surprised?
59828Is the secret of this expedition entirely confined to you and to Miss Oakley?"
59828Is the sun shining?
59828Is the tea all right?"
59828Is there a stairs close at hand?"
59828Is there any hope for me?
59828Is there any news stirring, sir?"
59828Is there any one with whom I dare advise?
59828Is there anything which a hen- pecked husband dares say he will not do, when the autocrat of his domestic hearth bids him do it?
59828Is there no lightning to strike me dead?"
59828Is there no such thing as night, under cover of which black deeds are done?
59828Is there not, indeed, a prompt retribution in this world?
59828Is there one in all the world who cares if she be alive or dead?
59828Is there one who will stir six steps to find out what has become of her?
59828Is there really a reward for him?"
59828Is there yet time?
59828Is this blood upon my hands?
59828Is this it?
59828Is this the way to treat a military man?"
59828Is this wise, sir?
59828It is all a fable?"
59828It is quite a joy to find you-- you are really my mother?"
59828It may appear very dreadful-- very dreadful indeed-- but what else was I to think?
59828It''s funny, ai nt it, sir, that the dog did n''t go away with his master?"
59828It''s only five minutes to nine, do n''t you see?
59828It''s only half a pint, and what''s that?
59828It''s very extraordinary; what can have become of it?
59828It''s-- it''s-- what is it?"
59828Johanna drew a long breath of relief, and then Mark Ingestrie cried in a voice of surprise--"What?
59828Johanna held out her little child- like hand to the colonel, and looking appealingly in his face, she said--"Can you forgive me?
59828Johanna made up to her at once, and throwing her arms round her neck, said--"And will you say a kind word to me?"
59828Johanna stood like one transfixed for a few moments in the middle of all this tumult, and then she said with a shudder--"What ought I to do?"
59828Johanna trembled, for certainly Todd looked suspicious, and yet what could he have seen?
59828Johanna, I say, my dear, are you going to get up?
59828Johanna, my dear, do you hear me?"
59828Johanna,"said Arabella,"does it not seem as though--"She paused, and Johanna looked enquiringly at her, saying--"What would you say, Arabella?
59828Julia, is that your mother just arrived, do you think?"
59828L., could you lend me a couple of guineas until I have the happiness of seeing you again?"
59828Let me ask you what you can hope to do, if you give way to such an amount of distress as this?"
59828Let me get you a glass now?"
59828Let''s go in, and ask if anything is the matter?"
59828Light the fire quickly, you young hound, will you?"
59828London my birth place, is yourn the same?
59828Look alive-- look alive, my little man, will you?"
59828Look, Mr. Oakley, is that not Ben?"
59828Lor''bless us, sir, how should I know as you was Sir Richard?
59828Lor''bless you, sir, did n''t I say from the first, as Todd smugged the people as comed to him to be shaved?"
59828Lord bless you, sir, who do I see?"
59828Lovett?"
59828Lovett?"
59828Lovett?"
59828Lupin?"
59828Lupin?"
59828Mark Ingestrie, Mark Ingestrie, dare I hope that you live when all else have perished?"
59828Mark Ingestrie, for it was indeed no other, sprang to his feet, exclaiming--"Are you man or devil, that you know what I have never breathed to you?"
59828May I have the pleasure of conducting you to it?"
59828May I likewise be an auditor?"
59828May the bitterest curse of-- but, no matter, I--""What, sir?"
59828Me go afore a blessed churchwarden?
59828Me go down into the vaults with this gentleman?
59828Might not the message about the eggs be merely a pretended one, to see what she would do?
59828Minna looked up at him through her tears, as she said--"Is he very-- very ill?"
59828Miss Mary, what has happened to you, that you sit crying so bitterly on the stair head?
59828Money rules even here, does it?"
59828Mr. Crotchet gave a slight whistle, and then said--"Wery good; but did you leave a_ hindevidel_ in the shaving crib, to be done for?"
59828Mr. Thornhill, how do you do?
59828Mr. Todd, is it you?
59828Mr. Todd, why do you look at a man so?
59828Mrs. Hardman was not very clear about what he would be a warning of, so she got out of the difficulty by saying--"What''s that to you, stupid?"
59828Mrs. Lovett looked at him scrutinisingly as she said--"And do you really like the pies, or do you only eat them out of compliment to me?"
59828Mrs. Lovett paused, after opening the lock of the cupboard, and in a strange, sepulchral sort of voice, she said--"Has he done it?"
59828Mrs. Lovett, you charmer, I hope you have ordered enough pies to be made to- night?
59828Mrs. Oakley affected to lift up her hands in amazement, as she said--"How dare you speak so disrespectfully of a chosen vessel?
59828Mrs. Oakley heard him open the window of his room, and in a voice of stifled anger cry--"Who is there?
59828Mundell?"
59828My child-- my beautiful, why did you not wait until I was dead before you left me?
59828My dear child, what has happened?
59828My family pew, where I every Sunday enjoy my repose-- I mean my hopes of everlasting glory?
59828My mind is too full of the fate of Johanna even to permit me to reject in the language taught--""Reject?"
59828My wife--""Your what?"
59828Nay, had you forgotten the brave Colonel Jeffery?"
59828No further!--Not dead?--not dead yet?
59828No rummaging in odd corners, and looking at things that do n''t concern you, eh?"
59828No wonder that Johanna rubbed her eyes, and asked herself if she were really awake?
59828No, I''m only a druggist; but is that any reason why a second Goliath should come into my shop and destroy everything?"
59828No, madam, I have not the pleasure of knowing you; and may I again ask why I am honoured with the visit?"
59828Not any one to arrest me?
59828Not come in?"
59828Not dead?"
59828Now stupid, who are you?"
59828Now you understand me,--I''ll cut your throat from ear to ear,--do you understand me?"
59828Now, Tobias, where did you encounter this Fogg and Watson?"
59828Now, are you not a happy dog?"
59828Now, for me to set foot within your parlour would be tantamount to the commission of suicide, and I am not yet come to that-- you understand me?"
59828Now, madam, you see that even your dear friends here, from Lincoln''s Inn-- Are you from the Inn, small boy?"
59828Now, sir, will you listen to me?"
59828Now, young man, mind what you say, because if you call me a hidiot, I shall be bound to do--""What?"
59828Now, young man, what''s for you?"
59828O.?"
59828Oakley''s?"
59828Oakley?"
59828Oakley?"
59828Of course, as a religious man, I love my enemies, and feel myself bound to do so-- eh, Charley?"
59828Of whom?
59828Off?"
59828Oh, God, where am I?"
59828Oh, Johanna, are you distracted?"
59828Oh, Lord, what was that?"
59828Oh, blessed liberty, am I not to hail you yet?"
59828Oh, dear yes-- I tries to take it easy but I can''t-- I''m-- I''m--""What, Ben?"
59828Oh, gracious, where is he?
59828Oh, is this it?
59828Oh, my poor mother, if it were not for you--""What then?"
59828Oh, sir, let me go home now?"
59828Oh, sir,--I-- I--""What would you say?"
59828Oh, what can I think?--what excuse can I now give myself for an unbelief, without which I should have gone quite mad long-- long ago?"
59828Oh, what is it?"
59828Oh, what shall I do?
59828Oh, what, Arabella-- what did he tell me that I should remember?"
59828Oh, why did I ever advise you to come upon such an enterprise as this?
59828Oh, why do they not kill me at once?
59828Oh, why have you not sent me some token of your existence, and of your continued love?
59828Oh, why should I not know you, Minna?
59828Once or twice things very nigh infected me, and how should he stand up agin''em?
59828One of the results of that feeling was a self- question to the effect of,"What will be the result of an open quarrel with Todd?"
59828One of them spoke at once, saying--"Is the beadle of St. Dunstan''s in the church?"
59828One of them, however, seeing Todd pause, went up to him, and spoke--"You did n''t want a boat, did you, sir?"
59828Only acting, after all?"
59828Only the barber?
59828Or am I mad, and the inmate of some cell in an abode of lunacy, and all this about pies and letters merely the delusion of my overwrought fancy?
59828Others have escaped from Newgate, and why should not I?
59828Perhaps I only fancy it; but you both seem-- seem--""What do we seem, father?"
59828Perhaps Mrs. Lovett, you''d like to see the Governor?"
59828Perhaps a blunderbuss would suit you?
59828Perhaps you have not had much experience at prison- breaking?"
59828Perhaps you think she''s been seeing to the old man''s comforts a little-- airing his night- cap, and so on-- Eh?
59828Perhaps you''ll say it''s me?"
59828Pison, is you here?"
59828Pray what do you want?"
59828Pray who is the best to judge of such things?
59828Pray, Colonel Jeffrey, what unfortunate animal is that you are dragging out of the water?"
59828Pray, in what service are you a major?"
59828Pray, what has that to do with the death of one Francis Thornhill?
59828Pray, what sort of man was he?
59828Providence is good, of course, to its own, and I have--""What-- what--?"
59828Pull away, Bill; do n''t you see her?
59828Quite well, for what have I to fear now?"
59828Ragg, how are you?''"
59828Ragg?"
59828Rise, idiot, rise, and tell me if you can, why I should not cut your throat?"
59828Rum?
59828Scratch!--scratch!--scratch!--His face turned ghastly pale, and his knees knocked together as he whispered to himself--"What is that?--what is that?"
59828Shall I accompany you?"
59828Shall I be wanted?"
59828Shall I call again?"
59828Shall I go first, or will you, Sir Richard?"
59828Shall I not?
59828Shall I take him away?"
59828Shall she return to it, or fly at once and seek for refuge from all the sorrows and from all the horrors that surround her, in the arms of her father?
59828Shall we be one too many yet for Todd?"
59828Shall we seek him now?"
59828Shaved or dressed, sir?"
59828Shaved, I suppose?"
59828Shaved, sir, I presume?
59828She is to go there, is she?
59828She started up, exclaiming--"Drat the fleas, ca n''t a mortal sleep in peace for them?"
59828She was the nice creature who lived in Bell Yard, was n''t she, and accommodated the folks with pies?"
59828Should he open it for such a purpose?
59828Should he unbar and unbolt at the risk of he knew not what?
59828Should he, at that green and unripe age, get rid of hope?
59828Sir Richard Blunt quickly replied to Todd''s question, by saying--"Oh, yes, quite alone; except the drovers I had no company with me; why do you ask?"
59828Sir Richard Blunt stepped up to the man, and said--"Do you know me?
59828Sir Richard rose from the arm chair into which he had thrown himself, and said--"''Miss Oakley?''
59828Snow''s in Paper- buildings?
59828So there are two of you, are there?
59828So, Sir Richard Blunt, who is called an active magistrate, is to know of my little adventure here?
59828So-- so you thought, did you, to get the better of Sweeney Todd?
59828Some more of that fine grease for the hair, I suppose, madam?"
59828Somebody in the shop?
59828Speak, what is it to be?"
59828Speak-- what of my dear Johanna?
59828Stag?"
59828Stop-- stop, will you?
59828Summoning all her courage, she said--"My dear sir--""Sir?--sir?
59828Suppose we put him on to the first craft we come along- side of in the river, that is moored, and has got no one on board?
59828Surely he could not let her go without some kinder, softer, word that he had last spoken to her?
59828Surely it was better to do so than-- than-- to--""Than to go without any?"
59828Surely you would not like so notorious a criminal to find a loop- hole of escape, from the want of your evidence?"
59828Sweeney Todd?"
59828T.?"
59828T.?"
59828Tell me is she saved-- oh, is she saved?"
59828Tell me what you have to say?"
59828Tell me-- how many men there are in this great city who do not worship gold far more sincerely and heartily than they worship Heaven?"
59828Tell my mother?
59828Thank you my dear-- you will take two pence from the till, Charley, and get yourself somewhere about the market a-- Well now?"
59828That must satisfy her, for what can she say to it?"
59828That run has made me first hot and then shivery all over; but who knows what luck may be in store for us?
59828That would be a little better, sir, than the paste- pot, would n''t it?"
59828That, I think, will be the best arrangement that I can come to-- what do you say?''
59828The Governor of Newgate leant forward, and said--"Do you wish to say anything?"
59828The Lord Mayor gave a very odd kind of cough, as he said--"What would the Lady Mayoress say?"
59828The air without had been cold, but what was that compared with the coldness within?
59828The attempt will and shall be made; and who knows but that it may be successful?
59828The captive cook sprang to his feet in a moment, and in a voice of alarm, he said--"Who spoke?
59828The clerical- looking gentleman quickly laid down the_ Courant_, and said wildly--"Are you sure you have none?"
59828The colonel--""The who?"
59828The cook started to his feet--"Who spoke-- who spoke?"
59828The deuce take it, when shall I get rid of the ca nt of the conventicle?
59828The latter at length said--"And you affirm this?"
59828The man below?
59828The man stood touching what was once the brim of a hat, as he said--"Where to, mum?"
59828The man tossed off the glass of something that Todd gave him, and then he licked his lips, as he said--"What is it, sir?
59828The medical man bowed, as he said--"May I ask his name, sir?"
59828The porters complied, and Todd set down upon one of the boxes, as he said--"How much?"
59828The silence was the most awkward for Todd, so he broke it first by saying--"You are satisfied, let me hope?"
59828The whip-- do you understand that?"
59828The young lady gave a faint cry, and Mr. Lupin flourished the carving- knife over her--"Where are the hundred pounds?"
59828Then Todd, as he folded his arms, and looked Mrs. Lovett fully in the face, said--"Well?"
59828Then does yer think as I''m the feller all for to let him go when once I''ve got a hold of him?
59828Then he glanced at the bedstead and the rich hangings, and he said--"Oh, Minna, what is all this?
59828Then he says, says he,''which would you prefer, red or white?''
59828Then he spoke--"What does all this mean?"
59828Then if he stayed he had Mrs. Lovett to encounter, but that was all; and surely he could put her off for a few hours?
59828Then in a low growling tone, he added--"No peeping and prying, eh?
59828Then in a low voice, the cook said--"You have read Romeo and Juliet, sir?"
59828Then pouncing upon him, he extracted a well- filled purse from his pocket, and holding it up to Lupin, he said--"This will do?"
59828Then they heard a man''s voice say--"Who''s that?"
59828Then why do n''t you retire to rest at once, Watson?
59828Then why do you wear that bauble?"
59828Then you wo n''t come and see the criturs fed to- day, I supposes?"
59828Then, elevating his voice, he added--"Did you mention Johanna?"
59828There are no such things, of course, as any reasonable man knows; and if there are, why, what harm can they do us?
59828There was a death- like stillness in the court for some few moments, and then the Governor of Newgate in a whisper, said to Todd--"Have you finished?"
59828There was no one now to say to him"Where is my share?"
59828There, did you see that lad?"
59828There, do n''t you hear how it''s coming in puffs, now, the wind, and each one is a bit fainter nor the one as comed afore it?
59828Think you so?
59828This was so frightfully conclusive, that it was some few moments before he could go on; but when he did, he said--"Is Arabella in the house?"
59828Though I am only a beaf- eater, I suppose as I may forgive people for all that-- eh, Cousin Oakley?"
59828To be sure he was well armed for one individual, but what could he do against some dozen of men?
59828To be sure, how could he for one moment suspect to find two of the most notorious criminals in all Newgate snugly hidden in the hall?
59828To me who have no acquaintances-- no relations?
59828To stick to him like a bear until he should be compelled to, what you called, settle with you?
59828Tobias rose to a sitting position in the bed, and looked his mother in the face--"Are you, too, mad?"
59828Tobias, my dear-- bless us and save us, are you going to stay in bed all day?"
59828Todd at that moment would have given anything to be able just to say--"How are you getting on?"
59828Todd began to breathe a little more freely, and yet he kept asking himself--"What was it?"
59828Todd crept along the floor until he came close to the man, and then he said--"My friend, have you anything to do?"
59828Todd crept towards Lupin, and leaning forward he whispered faintly--"It ca n''t be done?"
59828Todd fairly staggered for a moment, and then he said--"Wait here-- in my shop-- and amuse yourself until I come back?
59828Todd glanced at her, saying--"What is the matter, Charley?
59828Todd heard the wish, and turning quickly with what he intended should be an engaging smile, he said--"And why not, Peter-- and why not?
59828Todd lathered away at Mr. Brown''s chin, as he said with an air of innocence--"Can you carry so many jewels about with you, sir?"
59828Todd looked at the new- comer with a strange sort of scowl, as he said--"My friend, have not I seen you here before, or somewhere else?"
59828Todd turned upon him, with a face livid with passion, as he said--"Well, sir, what now?"
59828Todd was in the shop in a moment, and saw a respectable- looking personage, dressed in rather clerical costume, who said--"You keep powder?"
59828Todd''s counsel rose, and in a very respectful voice, he said--"Did you ever see this String of Pearls, about which so much fuss is made, colonel?"
59828Todd''s?"
59828Todd''s?"
59828Todd?"
59828Todd?"
59828Todd?"
59828Todd?"
59828Todd?"
59828Trifling?
59828Tulip?"
59828Up or down?"
59828Upon my life that was good-- was it not?"
59828Villimay?"
59828Was Mrs. Lovett taken in by the major?
59828Was Todd satisfied with Johanna''s excuse about the toothache?
59828Was ever there heard of such wickedness?
59828Was he a tall, ugly- looking fellow?"
59828Was he ever a smiling infant, with pretty dimples?
59828Was he not thus a very happy man for a little while?
59828Was he satisfied of the good foible of the supposed Charley Green, by the readiness with which she had come into the parlour?
59828Was it not suggestive of another murder?
59828Was it to rip open the coffins and rob even the dead?
59828Was it you?
59828Was it, or was it not, an establishment of the fact of Mark Ingestrie having been Todd''s victim?
59828Was not that dreadful?
59828Was not that satanic?
59828Was she ever some gentle little girl, fondly clinging to a mother''s arms?
59828Was there anything in what he said, or was n''t there?"
59828Was there at his or her birth much joy?
59828Was there ever such a cunning place for murder to be done in as a chapel, with its ready receptacles of the dead beneath it?
59828Watson, could you not at once-- eh?
59828Watson?"
59828We have n''t seen so much of the world without learning to distinguish what kind of person one has to deal with?"
59828Well I''m sure-- what next?
59828Well, I never; what shall you do, Mrs. Ragg?
59828Well, Mrs. Ragg, as you was a saying?"
59828Well, as I was a saying, arter you had finished off his master--""I?"
59828Well, my dear Arabella, what would you say to me?"
59828Well, my dear, have you got the ribbon?"
59828Well, who are you?"
59828Were these little trifles presented to Mrs. Lovett, by Todd, as proofs of the thriving business he was carrying on?
59828What a mercy it was that Todd did not come in at such a moment as that, was it not?
59828What a strange compound is the human mind, and how singularly does it take its texture, cameleon- like, from surrounding circumstances?
59828What am I now-- what am I now?"
59828What am I saying?"
59828What am I to do?
59828What am I to hush about-- I shall sit upon no end of thorns and nettles, till I know.--What is it?"
59828What am I to think of it?"
59828What am I to think?"
59828What are they doing away yonder, Bill?"
59828What are you about to to do, Johanna?"
59828What are you laughing at, you little jackanapes?
59828What are you?"
59828What boy are you?
59828What business has a man of that age out at such a time as this?"
59828What can I do-- what can I do?''
59828What can I do?
59828What can I say-- what can I do to convince you of the contrary?"
59828What can be the cause of it?
59828What can be the good of making a fuss about it?"
59828What can have become of him?"
59828What can he have been about, I wonder?
59828What can it matter to me?"
59828What can that story mean about the attic next door?
59828What can the law do, but take my life?
59828What can you get for your friend, Miss Wilmot?
59828What care I so that I complete my revenge against Todd?
59828What cared he for such matters?
59828What cared he if the fumes from the dead came up, and made havoc upon hot Sundays among the living?
59828What cared he what mischief the charnel- house beneath the planks did to the old and to the young?
59828What could account for such a phenomenon?
59828What could compensate Mrs. Lovett for the abject terrors that came over her now?
59828What could have put such a thing into your heads?"
59828What could he do?
59828What cupboard is that behind the child''s cot?"
59828What did I see?
59828What did I see?
59828What did I see?
59828What did she say to excuse herself to you?"
59828What did you do?"
59828What do I dread most?
59828What do I forget?
59828What do I want with all?
59828What do they come to?"
59828What do they know?--what can they know?"
59828What do you bring it in?"
59828What do you charge?"
59828What do you mean by asking me if I have heard anything more of him?"
59828What do you mean by coming here to ask to be an errand boy in a barber''s shop?
59828What do you mean by it, eh?
59828What do you mean by it?"
59828What do you mean by knocking at the window of an honest tradesman?
59828What do you mean by remorse?"
59828What do you mean by that, you stupid hound?
59828What do you mean by this conduct?
59828What do you mean by those incoherent expressions?"
59828What do you mean by you care not?
59828What do you mean by''could n''t you go through the house at once-- eh?''"
59828What do you mean, eh?"
59828What do you mean, my dear madam?
59828What do you mean?
59828What do you mean?"
59828What do you mean?"
59828What do you say to going and trying to get the key?"
59828What do you say to taking me now, a couple of you?
59828What do you say to that now, old stick- in- the- mud?
59828What do you say to that, now?
59828What do you say to''The heart that can feel for another?''"
59828What do you say, Mr. Ben?
59828What do you say?
59828What do you suppose I did?"
59828What do you think he has been doing?"
59828What do you think of that for an offer?"
59828What do you think of that, now?
59828What do you think of that?
59828What do you think of that?"
59828What do you think?"
59828What do you wait for?"
59828What do you want with me?
59828What do you want?
59828What do you want?"
59828What do you want?"
59828What do you want?"
59828What does Sweeney Todd do with his customers?"
59828What does he care about my lodgers?
59828What does it all mean?"
59828What does it mean?
59828What even to the dog that had played no inconsiderable a part in his final conviction of the murder of its master?
59828What friends has she?
59828What good would his death have done to any one?"
59828What had I to do save to pine over the past, the present, and the future?
59828What had been done?
59828What had he seen?"
59828What had he yet done to Sir Richard Blunt?
59828What has happened?"
59828What has happened?"
59828What have I done that I should be brought here?--what have I done?
59828What have I to do with charity, or charity with me?
59828What have you all come here, and plotted and planned for, but to take my life?
59828What have you lost now?"
59828What have you to say?"
59828What heart bled as hers bled?
59828What heart heaved with sad emotion as hers heaved?
59828What if it be true?
59828What if it be true?"
59828What induces you to keep all your tools in this chest with the points uppermost?"
59828What is gained, or pretended to be gained, by all the hurry- skurry and jostling and driving that characterises society at present?
59828What is it all-- what does it mean-- tell us, for goodness gracious sake?
59828What is it that you demand of me now?
59828What is it to you, if you were to murder everybody in this house, so that you got this door open?
59828What is it you are about?"
59828What is it you would say?"
59828What is it, old fellow?"
59828What is it?
59828What is it?
59828What is it?"
59828What is it?"
59828What is it?"
59828What is it?"
59828What is it?"
59828What is madness but an affliction of providence?
59828What is that afar off?
59828What is that?
59828What is that?"
59828What is that?"
59828What is that?"
59828What is the meaning of all this?
59828What is the meaning of it all?
59828What is the meaning of it, you young rascal?
59828What is the meaning of this strange appearance on the ground, as if something had been dragged along it?"
59828What is the row now, Harry-- eh?"
59828What is the use of swearing?
59828What is there in the wide world would compensate a man for acting as you say I have acted?
59828What is there to hinder me from carrying out such a resolution?
59828What is to become of her?"
59828What is to become of me?"
59828What is yer afeard on?
59828What is yer going to say now?"
59828What is you a thinking on?
59828What language would be strong enough to depict the storm of passion that raged in the bosom of that imperious woman?
59828What lay is we to go on?"
59828What may your business be, madam?"
59828What must be his feelings towards you, Mark?"
59828What must it have been to those who knew him not?
59828What name shall I have the pleasure of saying?"
59828What noise is that-- a shriek?
59828What now if Todd had so come in?"
59828What now?"
59828What now?"
59828What on earth am I to do?"
59828What on earth can have become of the rascal?
59828What on earth can it mean?
59828What on earth would be the use of my taking your life?"
59828What ought I to do, to relieve myself from this state of horrible suspense?
59828What ought I to do?--Ought I to tell Mrs. W. of it?"
59828What pen could describe the dark and malignant thoughts that filled her brain as she proceeded?
59828What pies can he possibly mean, sir?
59828What say you, Sir Richard?"
59828What shall I do with this confounded shop, now?
59828What shall I do?
59828What shall I do?"
59828What shall I do?"
59828What shall it be?
59828What shall we do in this case?
59828What shall you do?"
59828What should she say to him?--how should she look at him?
59828What story?"
59828What the devil noise was that?"
59828What then happened?"
59828What think you, sir?"
59828What to Johanna?
59828What to Tobias?
59828What wager?
59828What was he to do?
59828What was he to do?
59828What was he to do?
59828What was he to think?
59828What was it but blood?
59828What was she to look at first?
59828What was she to think?
59828What was that?"
59828What was there in the chair that Johanna should for some few moments, now that she had begun to look at it, not be able to take her eyes off it?
59828What will become of me, then, with nothing but the cold, cold river all round me?
59828What will he think when one touches him?"
59828What will not a mob give three cheers for-- ay, or any number of cheers you like to name?
59828What will now become of me?"
59828What will you call successful, Arabella?"
59828What will you do?"
59828What would have become of Oakley if it had n''t been for me, is a question I often ask myself in the middle of the night?"
59828What would the world be to me without you?
59828What would you say?"
59828What would you say?"
59828What you have got them what do you call''ems on, have you?"
59828What''s that, Crotchet?"
59828What''s that?
59828What''s that?"
59828What''s that?"
59828What''s the row?"
59828What''s the use of grieving?
59828What, are you asleep?"
59828What, then, was glass and china to him?
59828What, you wo n''t go, wo n''t you?
59828When Sweeney Todd reached the door at the end of the passage, he tapped at it with his knuckles, and a voice cried--"Who knocks-- who knocks?
59828When and where was it that you saw my child?"
59828When did you find that out, you old rogue?"
59828When had he made such a morning''s work as that?
59828When he concluded his statement, Sir Richard said--"Well, Crotchet, what do you think of all that?
59828When he saw Crotchet coming in with three shutters in his arms at once, he could scarcely believe his eyes, and he roared out--"What''s this?
59828When morning came, I inquired who put the sheets there?
59828When shall I forget that chapel, I wonder?"
59828When will he come?"
59828When''s the happy day to be?"
59828When, madam, do you expect her?"
59828Where am I going to now?"
59828Where am I?
59828Where am I?"
59828Where am I?--where am I?
59828Where are we now?
59828Where are you now?"
59828Where are you, mother?"
59828Where are you?"
59828Where are you?"
59828Where could she seek for consolation, where for hope?
59828Where did you say it was?"
59828Where did you sleep?"
59828Where do you come from, and who are you?
59828Where is Minna?"
59828Where is he now?"
59828Where is he to go?"
59828Where is she?
59828Where is she?"
59828Where is the poison?--Will he take it?
59828Where is this cupboard that you speak of?"
59828Where is yer?"
59828Where is your daughter and Mr. Ingestrie?
59828Where is your old acuteness, that you do not see at once how truly foolish it would have been to bring the money here?"
59828Where is_ she_?"
59828Where lives she?"
59828Where to, your honour?"
59828Where was she to begin her investigation?
59828Where would you advise us to go?"
59828Where''s Morgan?"
59828Where''s Mrs. Lovett?
59828Where''s the odds, you know, ma''am?"
59828Which side of the river, sir, would you like to be put ashore at, if you please?"
59828Which way are you going?"
59828Which will be the safest course?
59828Who am I?
59828Who and what are you, my friend?
59828Who are you, sir, eh?"
59828Who are you, too, with those mangled limbs?
59828Who are you?
59828Who are you?"
59828Who are you?"
59828Who are you?"
59828Who are you?"
59828Who are you?"
59828Who are you?"
59828Who are you?"
59828Who can it be?
59828Who could have supposed that any passion but self- preservation could master all others in his mind?
59828Who could strike you?
59828Who could that be?
59828Who did it?
59828Who did it?''
59828Who is it that is about to intrude upon me to- night?"
59828Who is it that you are looking for, and pray what has he done?
59828Who is that?"
59828Who is there?"
59828Who is this Minna Gray, who so enthralled his boyish fancy?"
59828Who is without?
59828Who knocks?"
59828Who pities him?
59828Who saw me do it?"
59828Who saw me kill him?
59828Who saw me-- what eye was upon me?
59828Who shall say I did it?
59828Who shall say what thoughts crossed that bold bad woman''s soul at that time?
59828Who shall take upon himself to say that Mr. Thornhill is not now alive and well somewhere?
59828Who shall we have this time, do you think?
59828Who should I mention it to?"
59828Who should know better-- ah, who should know half so well as she-- the handwriting which conveyed those few words to her senses?
59828Who talks of bad news?
59828Who the deuce is she?"
59828Who the devil is he?
59828Who the devil supposed you did know?
59828Who wants me?
59828Who was Shindrad, the great uncle of Joshua, and why did Nebuchadnezar call him Zichophobattezer the cousin of Neozobulcoxacride?"
59828Who was it opened the door of Todd''s house for you, and strove, as I hear, to drag you into it?"
59828Who was that left your charming presence just now?"
59828Who will know me?
59828Who will look for this woman?
59828Who will say,''I will stop this man, or he shall kill me?''
59828Who would be Sweeney Todd, for all the wealth, real or fabled, of a million Californias?
59828Who would be violently afflicted if he made a false step and broke his neck?
59828Who would have thought, now, that I should ever live to be at my old work again in this house?
59828Who would not be a man for your sake?
59828Who''ll have them?''
59828Who''s Todd?
59828Who''s afraid?"
59828Who?"
59828Whoever heard of a horn being blowed at such a rate, in the middle o''Fleet- street, afore, unless it was somethin''as consarned the parish?
59828Whom did you call after, woman?"
59828Why am I here, and she not?
59828Why call me mad, when the truth or falsehood of what I say can be ascertained so easily?
59828Why did he try to deceive me?
59828Why did n''t you come home, eh?
59828Why did n''t you know it before?"
59828Why did you not throw open razors at him until one had transfixed him?"
59828Why did you open the door so quick?"
59828Why do I speak?
59828Why do I suffer more, much more, from what does not happen, than from what does?"
59828Why do n''t you do as Mr. Todd tells you?"
59828Why do n''t you laugh, you dog?
59828Why do n''t you?
59828Why do you allude to that?"
59828Why do you glare at me?
59828Why do you keep a razor concealed in your sleeve?"
59828Why do you linger?"
59828Why do you mock and joke at me?"
59828Why do you seek to destroy me?"
59828Why does Todd let them shriek in such a fashion?"
59828Why does it put me in mind of my loss?
59828Why have I come here again, instead of making my escape by the chapel door?
59828Why should I harm the little innocent?
59828Why should I single you out of all the world, Mrs. Lovett, to be just to?"
59828Why should I suffer such horrors?
59828Why should he wish to trammel my actions?
59828Why should it be so?
59828Why should she awaken to a sense of her disappointment, Watson?
59828Why what do you mean by gammoning a fellow in that sort o''way for, eh?
59828Why, she asked herself, should she hesitate to put Todd''s name to the document necessary to get her half of the money from the stock- broker?
59828Why, then, should this house be an exception to the rule so general?
59828Why, there is only one; but perhaps you allude to the lights of the gospel?"
59828Why, there''s not an animal as ever I knew comes near you; and so the poor fellow had his throat cut in the barber''s for his string of pearls?"
59828Why, what brought you here?"
59828Why, who are you carrying?"
59828Why, you are not afraid that the portrait is too good a likeness, are you?"
59828Why, you are very-- very--""Very what, sir?"
59828Why, you do n''t mean to say you have any of them?
59828Why-- why, what is all this?"
59828Wilful murder with the chill off or what?
59828Will no steps be taken to bring this man, Todd to justice?"
59828Will not money purchase anything in this great world?
59828Will nothing please you?"
59828Will you aid me?
59828Will you come up stairs at once now, Miss Gray, and see him?"
59828Will you do it?"
59828Will you do it?"
59828Will you go on board that, sir?"
59828Will you go, sir?"
59828Will you go?
59828Will you have the whiskers left just as they are, or taken off entirely, sir?"
59828Will you join us in a glass, sir, if you please?"
59828Will you listen, or wo n''t you, while I tell the horrid anecdote?"
59828Will you now give me one year''s pay in advance?''
59828Will you permit me always to call you Johanna?"
59828Will you remember?"
59828Will you send or bring me some real butcher''s meat?"
59828Will you stop?
59828Will you walk?
59828Will you, first of all, take a look at one of the sleeping chambers of the insane?"
59828With the reins of his steed in his hand, he pushed his way through the mob, saying--"What is it?
59828Wo n''t you sit down?"
59828Would he have laughed and sniggered over the bumper of brandy he was holding to his lips in his parlour?
59828Would he not before twelve hours now be miles and miles away?
59828Would he run away from me and from those that he loved so well?
59828Would he, feeling for her as she knew he did, have kept her in a state of suspense upon such a subject?
59828Would it not be a great thing, sir, if any papers or documents which this Thornhill might have had about him, could be recovered?"
59828Would n''t that be harder still for all?"
59828Would she shrink from the trial?--would her delicacy take the alarm and overcome her great desire to recover Tobias?
59828Would you like anything got for you, sir?
59828Would you like to hear more?"
59828Would you like to see the morning paper, sir?
59828Would you say''Well?''
59828Yes, this was the power which armed that frail and delicate- looking girl with strength to cope with such a man-- man shall we call him?
59828Yes-- yes?
59828You are armed, of course, Sir Richard?"
59828You are the servant of the house?"
59828You are well prepared, are you?
59828You base man, what do you want here?"
59828You did n''t want me to spew it back again, did you, eh, ma''am?"
59828You do know where to lay your hand upon money?"
59828You do n''t mean to say that one such is here, and that the dead body of Todd is in the thicket?"
59828You do n''t mean to say-- why--?
59828You do n''t mean to take it all?"
59828You do n''t say so?"
59828You do n''t suppose he was goose enough to come back again?
59828You do n''t think it will make you ill?
59828You do not mean that, Crotchet?"
59828You do not mean to tell me that it is possible for you to love any man without his loving you in return?"
59828You do not mean to tell me that there is no hope?
59828You have been to sea, sir?"
59828You have heard all about poor Tobias?"
59828You have heard of Todd, the murderer?
59828You have n''t tried the frightening system yet, then?''
59828You have no other means of identifying the bone, but by its having been fractured in the way you describe?"
59828You know this young lady here?"
59828You know you slept here last night on that large sofa in the corner?"
59828You knows me and I knows you, so what does it matter what other folks say?
59828You leave it to me-- will you now?"
59828You must go with him, you say?
59828You perceive I am a military man?"
59828You see that boat with the sail and the six rowers there?"
59828You shall there sign your name in his book, so that he may know it, and then you will be satisfied, I presume?"
59828You surely will not go so far as that?"
59828You understand all that, I hope, Bill White?"
59828You understand me?"
59828You understand me?''
59828You understand that?"
59828You understand?"
59828You understand?"
59828You used to polish the people off in your barber''s shop, and then make them into pork pies, I believe?"
59828You will be sure to come to- morrow?"
59828You will come for me if you can?"
59828You will not go till to- morrow?"
59828You wish me to settle with you?
59828You would like to give me a drop of the same stuff you have set the woman in the next room to sleep with, would n''t you now, my beauty?"
59828You-- you-- are--""What?"
59828Your mother- in- law, you say?"
59828_ The shaving chair was empty._"What''s the matter?"
59828a well- to- do man?"
59828and is this the end of all our fond affection?
59828and shall I here, with the open sky above me, and only the known neighbourhood of one dead villain, shake in such a way?
59828and then if he said''yes,''I''d say,''well, old fellow, it''s of no use to you now, you know; will you give it to me?''"
59828and what had I in the way of relaxation?
59828and where are you going?"
59828any one else been?"
59828asked the magistrate,"and every one here?"
59828bless me, now, who''d''a thought your swell cove proved to be out o''luck?
59828but Sweeney Todd is--""What-- what?"
59828but oh, why am I here?
59828can I do it?
59828can you make sufficient allowances for this poor distracted heart, to forgive its ravings?"
59828cried Ben as he clutched the arm of Mrs. Oakley only the more tightly in his own:"What are you at now?"
59828cried Ben,"Why, my duck, what do they laugh at?
59828cried Big Ben, popping his head into the parlour,"what do you all bring it in now?
59828cried Mrs. Ragg,"do you want to break my heart?"
59828cried Tobias;"What have I done that I should be subjected to such cruel treatment?
59828cried Todd, finding that positive fright lent him strength,"you do not mean that?"
59828cried Todd,"what else do you suppose I care about in all the world?"
59828cried a voice, and it was a female one--"Skinner, how long will the ovens be?"
59828cried the captain in evident alarm;"Is it Blisset?"
59828danger?
59828death!--Did you say death?"
59828did I indeed look my last upon that face, when on this spot we parted?"
59828did you ever see such a violent fellow, sir?
59828did you mean you, miss?''
59828do they?
59828do you call that a laugh?
59828do you expect me to go in the dark?
59828do you hear her footstep now?"
59828do you laugh that way when you are at home?
59828exclaimed Arabella, while her face became of the colour of a rose- bud;"Colonel Jeffery?"
59828exclaimed Mrs. Oakley,"and leave me here, you wretches?"
59828exclaimed Todd,"how could you dream of saying what you did about me at the bar?"
59828give a madman wine, while I am here in my senses to drink it?
59828ha!--this is good; and so it is this withdrawal of the money from Brown that has made all this riot in your brain?
59828had you, sir?"
59828have n''t I told you over and over again, that I will not have that man in my house?"
59828have you forgotten your mother?"
59828have you no thought for your poor father, to whom, as you well know, you are the dearest tie that he has in the world?
59828he cried,"has he dared really to consummate an act I thought he could not have dreamt of for a moment?
59828he exclaimed,"and am I then indeed condemned to such a slavery?
59828he muttered,"two letters to me, who seldom receive any?
59828he said again,"hush-- who is it?
59828he said at length,"what is this?
59828he said to himself,"what will become of me?
59828he said,"what was that?"
59828he said,"what''s that?
59828he said;"who''s there?"
59828how can you be so foolish, sir,"cried Tobias,"as to be deceived by that man, who is making a mere instrument of you to cover his own villany?
59828how did you contrive to get the deeds away?''
59828how do you feel now?
59828how do?
59828how gapish I am-- you keep hammering away there, as if you thought we were all deaf or stupid?"
59828if you saw the only creature you ever loved in such a situation, sir?
59828in this world who can trust to appearances?
59828is it a fight?
59828is she asleep?''
59828is that all?
59828is we to be brought over the street, and then is we to do nothing to go down to prosperity?"
59828it is some one who is really mad, and confined for life in this dreadful place; for life do I say, am not I too confined for life here?
59828it''s affecting to think how such children love each other, ai n''t it, sir?
59828it''s no matter; I only wanted to know, that''s all; it was quite a joke, was n''t it-- quite funny, though rather odd, eh?
59828just because things had gone a little adverse, and he was the enforced cook of Mrs. Lovett?
59828keep a beadle out of his own church?
59828laughed Tobias,"who told of Todd?"
59828might it not have been some other ill- fated vessel that met with so dreadful a fate?"
59828mother-- oh, where are you, mother-- did you leave me here, mother?
59828my dear sir, you will not think of venturing out to- night?
59828my friend, Hector, are you here?"
59828my little lad?"
59828not_ wus_?
59828or anything else sufficiently alarming and extraordinary to excite the junior members of the legal profession to such a species of madness?
59828or would anything more common do, mum?"
59828or-- or more terrible, ten times more terrible question still, am-- am I at length, with all my care, discovered?"
59828recommend a ragged wretch like you?"
59828repeated Mrs. Lovett with a burst of rage,"what do I want with chaplains?
59828repeated Todd, with a groan;"what must the worst be, I wonder?"
59828said Ben with a confused look, as if he would have liked to add,"which is that?"
59828said Crotchet, facing him with a look of defiance,"eh?
59828said I;''who told you so?''
59828said Johanna, as she glanced around her,"133?
59828said Lupin,"Todd?"
59828said Sir Richard,"who is Ben?
59828said Sweeney Todd,"who will question you, you are well known to be in the trade, and to be continually dealing in such things?"
59828said Tobias, as he put himself into an attitude of listening,"what was that, I thought I heard something?
59828said Tobias,"what is that?"
59828said Tobias,"where am I?
59828said Todd,"how do you do?
59828said the boy;"where are you?"
59828said the coachman,"was that you, sir?"
59828said the colonel,"What sort of a person is he, Ben?"
59828said the old man,"What have you done?"
59828said you?
59828screamed Todd,"what?"
59828she said,"Can not I have the poor privilege of being left alone?"
59828she said,"what shall I do?
59828she said,"why do you thus desert me, when I have relied so abundantly upon your true affection?
59828shrieked Todd,"so you thought you had me?
59828so might he have said of thought, From that thought what acts may come?
59828so you could not resist the pie- shop?"
59828suspect what?"
59828tell me something I do n''t know, will you?
59828tell me truly-- are they gone?"
59828that''s it, is it?
59828that''s what I axes you-- how are you to stop it, ma''am?
59828the savage will attack you, will he?"
59828then comes the anxious question, of what has been his fate?"
59828then tell me upon what principle of justice can you take its life?"
59828was the reply;"he may be or he may not, but I want to know how long I am to wait here for my fare?"
59828was this his?"
59828what are you about to do?
59828what are you laughing at now?
59828what can I do to unravel this mystery?"
59828what can have happened?"
59828what do n''t you like?"
59828what do they call them--""A runner?"
59828what do you mean by putting the brush in my mouth?
59828what do you suppose the beasts in the Tower would do, if I was converted?
59828what for?"
59828what has he done?"
59828what have I done that I should be placed in a cell?
59828what have you done, Tobias-- what have you done?"
59828what is it all about?"
59828what is it now?"
59828what is it?
59828what is it?"
59828what is that to you?
59828what next?"
59828what noise is that?
59828what thoughts have you taken into your fancy now?
59828what was she to do?
59828what was that?"
59828what will become of me?
59828what will become of us?"
59828what will they think has become of me at the tower?"
59828what''s that in the shop?"
59828what''s that?
59828what''s that?"
59828what''s that?"
59828what''s the row, and where''s the danger, I should like to know?
59828where can my strop be?
59828where did you come from?
59828where else, save in the surging waters, were they to turn for safety?
59828where''s the gentleman?"
59828who comes?
59828who is that?"
59828who is this?"
59828who is this?"
59828who would be an emperor, if he could n''t get pies like these?--eh, Master Clift?"
59828who''s at home?"
59828who''s this?"
59828who, sir?"
59828who?"
59828who?"
59828who?"
59828who?"
59828why did I say rum and put myself in mind of it?
59828why do you ask if to- night is the time for action?"
59828why have I lived so long as to have the capacity to listen to such fearful tidings?
59828will you speak to her?"
59828woman, what do you mean by speaking of murder in such a tone?"
59828woman,"cried the colonel,"does that mean that when you do see any one you will tell it?"
59828you are looking at old Todd''s house, sir?"
59828you have come home, have you?"