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 |
---|---|
22408 | Swan,exclaimed the latter, halting,"I can scarcely comprehend Why I never hear you talking: Are you really dumb, my friend?" |
22408 | What do you mean, Herbert? |
22408 | What is that, mother? |
22408 | For what care the children for heat or for work, At that age when all labor so gaily we shirk? |
22408 | For what is outward form at best But accident of birth? |
22408 | Mrs. Zebra, standing with her baby by her side, asks proudly of the lookers- on,"Did you ever see such a likeness?" |
22408 | Need we say this dog has a kind, sensible master? |
22408 | What need we dread, When wine and bread God''s bounteous hand hath given? |
22408 | What wonder if, thus sad and lorn, From all my dearest habits torn, A- foraging I sometimes go And get a snubbing or a blow? |
22408 | Who has not at one time or other of his life read fairy tales and sympathized with stories of enchanted princes and princesses? |
4748 | A fox? 4748 A messenger?" |
4748 | And now-- would you shoot him, or let him lie there and die by inches, as the devil should? |
4748 | And-- Nepeese? |
4748 | Black, you say? |
4748 | But it''s a bit of fun, after all-- an''I''ve got to hit the line of rail before I can get over to the mountains, so what''s the difference? 4748 But where did Baree go, mon pere?" |
4748 | Coming, Boy? |
4748 | Dead, Ookimow Jeem? |
4748 | Did he not bear some dog mark? |
4748 | Do you care if I play with you? |
4748 | Government? |
4748 | I guess you wo n''t try the biting game again, eh, youngster? 4748 I have come in time?" |
4748 | Is it not true, m''sieu? |
4748 | Is it possible-- that she smiles from her heart at that beast? 4748 M''sieu expects me to bring her?" |
4748 | So you''re a trap robber, eh? 4748 What has happened, mon pere?" |
4748 | What shall I tell him? |
4748 | A good line, eh? |
4748 | A shot on a lonely trap line, a single knife thrust-- and who would know? |
4748 | A trap robber, eh? |
4748 | After all, was he not glad? |
4748 | After all, was not his power sufficient? |
4748 | An OUTLAW? |
4748 | An outlaw? |
4748 | And a dozen times he asked, in a wondering sort of way,"Now what the deuce made you do that, old chap? |
4748 | And what right, you may ask, has a confessed slaughterer of wild life such as I have been to complain? |
4748 | And-- WHY NOT? |
4748 | Are you bound that way, M''sieu?" |
4748 | Are you hitting for his trap line, to get even? |
4748 | But Umisk, and Beaver Tooth, and all the others? |
4748 | But for hours Pierrot was still, thinking, and a hundred times he asked himself that same question: Why had McTaggart sent for him? |
4748 | But to old Tuboa the trees might have whispered, WHY NOT TONIGHT? |
4748 | But what had she to fear? |
4748 | DO YOU LOVE ME, KA SAKAHET?" |
4748 | Did I not tell you that? |
4748 | Did he belong to them? |
4748 | Did you ever want to howl, an''did n''t dare? |
4748 | Eh, what do you say to the bargain?" |
4748 | Eh?" |
4748 | Now he said, with his eyes on Baree:"God save us, but you''ve got the poor devil in a right proper mess, have n''t you?" |
4748 | OR WAS IT BAREE? |
4748 | Or he might have been saying to Gray Wolf:"Well, we''ve got the little rascal out of that windfall at last, have n''t we?" |
4748 | Or shall I?" |
4748 | So he said, making his voice quite casual:"You are n''t going, are you, old chap?" |
4748 | So-- was it not possible that this youngster she and her father had pursued was of the flesh and blood of her mother''s pet? |
4748 | Understand? |
4748 | Want to know what happened?" |
4748 | Was he not the Factor of Lac Bain? |
4748 | Was it a fishercat? |
4748 | Was it a lynx? |
4748 | Was it a wolf or a fox? |
4748 | Was it like this that the first woman had looked to Kazan? |
4748 | Was it the wind? |
4748 | What had he done that they did n''t want to make friends with him? |
4748 | What have YOU got against the wolves?" |
4748 | What was it stirring him? |
4748 | What was it that came to him with the perfumes of the forests and the green meadow? |
4748 | What was it? |
4748 | What was the use of hanging around where there were wolves, on a beautiful night like this? |
4748 | What was there in the air? |
4748 | What''s YOUR opinion? |
4748 | Where was the danger he could neither see nor smell? |
4748 | Who would guess where Pierrot had gone? |
4748 | Why had Bush McTaggart sent for HIM? |
4748 | Why had Umisk and his little mates run away from him? |
4748 | Why had he not chosen some one nearer? |
4748 | Why was he there? |
4748 | Why was it that he trembled now as he stood there? |
4748 | Will you? |
4748 | Would even Pierrot dare stand up against that? |
4748 | Would he find them? |
4748 | Would he go-- now? |
4748 | Would he try that again? |
4748 | Would his heart not have turned sick if she had been happy at the thought of leaving him? |
4748 | Would not the company and the law believe his word before that of this girl? |
4748 | Would the dog respond to the call of the pack? |
8607 | Ah, dear nurse, where did you get them? 8607 And are there many woods near it?" |
8607 | And did the hunter take her home? 8607 And do they pursue the graceful deer? |
8607 | And has it a funny face and ears too, nurse? |
8607 | And is the rice good to eat, nurse? |
8607 | And what are creeks, nurse? |
8607 | And what became of this nice fellow, nurse? |
8607 | And what do the beavers make dams with, nurse? |
8607 | And where is Coburg, nurse? 8607 Are there any beavers in England, nurse?" |
8607 | Are there any other kinds of snakes in Canada, nurse,asked Lady Mary,"besides the garter- snake?" |
8607 | Are there many kinds of maple- trees, that sugar can be made from, nurse? |
8607 | Are there many sorts of wild fruits fit to eat, nurse, in this country? 8607 Are there no more flowers in bloom now, nurse?" |
8607 | But what is this odd- looking, black thing here? 8607 But you did not eat our parents too?" |
8607 | Can otters swim, nurse? |
8607 | Can squirrels swim like otters and beavers, nurse? 8607 Can the moon make rainbows at night?" |
8607 | Dear nurse, why does my little squirrel tremble and look so unhappy? 8607 Did you ever hear of any little boy or girl having been carried off by a wolf or bear?" |
8607 | Did you kill them? |
8607 | Did you notice, Lady Mary, how the dormice held their food? |
8607 | Do people see the birds flying away together, nurse? |
8607 | Do the beavers sleep in the winter time, nurse? |
8607 | Do the hunters follow them? |
8607 | Do you know any other pretty flowers, nurse? |
8607 | Do you think it was a rattle snake, nurse? |
8607 | Does it prick one''s finger like a thistle? |
8607 | Does the Canadian robin come into the house in winter, and pick up the crumbs, as the dear little redbreasts do at home? |
8607 | Have you ever seen their nests, nurse? |
8607 | How could the bear have got into the stack of wheat, nurse? |
8607 | How does it make that whirring noise, nurse, just like the humming of a top? |
8607 | How long will the winter last, nurse? |
8607 | I did not think, nurse, that wild strawberries could have been so fine as these; may I taste them? |
8607 | I suppose, nurse, when they awake, they are glad to eat some of the food they have laid up in their granaries? |
8607 | I suppose,said Lady Mary,"these lights are the same that the peasants of Northern England and Ireland call the Merry Dancers?" |
8607 | I think, sometimes, I ought not to keep my dear squirrel in a cage-- shall I let him go? |
8607 | I wonder where you were brought up? |
8607 | I wonder who taught the Indians how to make maple- sugar? |
8607 | If you please, nurse, will you tell me what these dark shining seeds are? |
8607 | Is it a book, my lady? |
8607 | Is the racoon a pretty- creature like my squirrel? |
8607 | Mrs. Frazer, are you very busy just now? |
8607 | My book is only a fable, then, nurse? 8607 Now, nurse, will you tell me some more about Jacob Snow- storm and the otters?" |
8607 | Nurse, can people eat musk- rats? |
8607 | Nurse, did you ever see a tame beaver? |
8607 | Nurse, do not beavers, and otters, and musk rats feel cold while living in the water; and do they not get wet? |
8607 | Nurse, do you know the names of these pretty starry flowers on this little branch, that look so light and pretty? |
8607 | Nurse, how can beavers cut down trees; they have neither axes nor saws? |
8607 | Nurse, how can they see to eat in the dark? |
8607 | Nurse, if you please, will you tell me what this little animal is designed to represent? |
8607 | Nurse, is there real rice growing in the Rice Lake? 8607 Nurse, please can you tell me anything about fawns? |
8607 | Nurse, please will you tell me something about tortoises and porcupines? |
8607 | Nurse, what is the name of that pretty creature you have in your hand? 8607 Nurse, when you see any of these curious flowers, will you show them to me?" |
8607 | Nurse, where did you get these nice strawberries? |
8607 | Nurse, will you be so kind as to ask Campbell to get a pretty cage for my squirrel? 8607 Nurse, will you tell me something about birds''nests, and what they make them of?" |
8607 | Nurse,said Lady Mary,"did you ever hear of any one having been eaten by a wolf or bear?" |
8607 | Of what use is the dam, nurse? |
8607 | Oh, what was it, nurse? 8607 Please tell me what a stoup is, nurse?" |
8607 | Please, Mrs. Frazer, will you tell me which flowers will be first in bloom? |
8607 | Please, nurse, tell me of what colours real porcupine quills are? |
8607 | Stop, nurse, and tell me why they are called black and white; are the flowers black and white? |
8607 | That is curious,said the child,"Does God sow the seeds in the new ground?" |
8607 | That must be very useful; but if the sap is sweet, how can it be made into such sour stuff as vinegar? |
8607 | This embroidered knife sheath is large enough for a hunting knife,said Lady Mary,"a''_ couteau de chasse_,''--is it not?" |
8607 | What are Pagans, nurse? |
8607 | What are wigwams? |
8607 | What became of them, nurse? |
8607 | What colour are the Canadian robins, nurse? |
8607 | What colour was it, my dear? |
8607 | What do you mean by the fall, nurse? |
8607 | What do you want more, my dear children,said their mother,"than you enjoy here? |
8607 | What is migrating, nurse? 8607 What shall we do for supper to- night?" |
8607 | What was that for, nurse? 8607 Which is the nearest way to the mill?" |
8607 | Who calls them all to build their winter houses? |
8607 | You do not think it was cruel, nurse, to kill the snake? |
8607 | *****"Nurse, I am glad Silvy went away with Nimble; are not you? |
8607 | *****"Nurse,"said Lady Mary,"how do you like the story?" |
8607 | And now, have you anything more to say about birds and flowers? |
8607 | Are there as many bears and wolves now in those places?" |
8607 | Are there many squirrels in this part of Canada?" |
8607 | Are there not moss, dried grass, and roots beneath, to make a soft bed for you to lie upon? |
8607 | Are they pretty creatures, and can they be tamed; or are they fierce, wild little things?" |
8607 | But why would biting out the eye prevent the grain from growing?" |
8607 | Can you tell me what birds they were?" |
8607 | Can you tell us where we shall find them?" |
8607 | Did you ever know any one who was eaten by a wolf?" |
8607 | Did you ever see a tame fawn, nurse?" |
8607 | Do the black squirrels sleep in the winter as well as the flying squirrels and chitmunks?" |
8607 | Do you see that red squirrel yonder, climbing the hemlock- tree? |
8607 | Do you want me to do anything for you?" |
8607 | Have you heard of any other sufferers; or do people sometimes escape from these monsters?" |
8607 | His name is GOLD-- Mr. Gold, are you here to- night or are you sleeping in your iron chest? |
8607 | How do you think the Indian women carry their infants when they go on a long journey? |
8607 | I am so glad-- are not you?" |
8607 | I daresay it thought them very pretty; or was it smelling them? |
8607 | I have seen acorns at home in dear England and Scotland, and I have eaten the hickory- nuts here; but what is beech- mast? |
8607 | I should like to have a tame otter to play with, and run after me; but do you think he would eat my squirrel? |
8607 | I wish there were maples in the garden, and I would make sugar, molasses, wine, and vinegar; and what else would I do with my maple- tree?" |
8607 | If they come to a lake or river, can they cross it?" |
8607 | If you please, will you tell me something about it, and why it is called by such a curious name?" |
8607 | Is it a dried fish? |
8607 | Is it a large city like Montreal or Quebec?" |
8607 | Is it a little beaver?" |
8607 | Is it the same as emigrating?" |
8607 | Is it''Little Red Riding Hood,''or''Old Mother Hubbard,''or''Jack the Giant- killer?''" |
8607 | It would have killed me, if it had bitten me, would it not, nurse?" |
8607 | Lady Mary was much interested in the account of the little girl and her pets"Is this all you know about fawns, nurse?" |
8607 | Nurse, please tell me what are sleigh- robes made of?" |
8607 | Nurse, what is a fawn?" |
8607 | Oh, Miss Campbell, what shall we do?" |
8607 | Please, will you tell me all that you know about them?" |
8607 | Then Lady Mary brought a print and showed it to her nurse, saying,--"Nurse, is the porcupine like this picture?" |
8607 | Was not that good, nurse?" |
8607 | Was not the Major naughty to say so?" |
8607 | Were you ever in the green forest, nurse? |
8607 | Were you ever there?" |
8607 | What do you think it was, nurse?" |
8607 | What do you think the beaver had done? |
8607 | What is it?" |
8607 | What was it doing-- looking at the honey- suckles? |
8607 | Where do otters live?" |
8607 | Why did they not carry it at once to their nests?" |
8607 | Why do n''t you come out, Mr. Gold? |
8607 | Why does he not lie down and sleep on the nice soft bed you have made for him in his little chamber? |
8607 | You know, Lady Mary, that the blackbird and thrush build nests, and plaster them in this way?" |
8607 | [ Illustration: THE INDIAN HUNTER]"Please, Mrs. Frazer, will you tell me what sort of trees hemlocks are? |
8607 | and do not the boughs drop down a plentiful store of brown ripe acorns? |
8607 | can you tell me?" |
8607 | did you find real hare- bells, such as grow on the bonny Highland hills among the heather? |
8607 | do bears eat raspberries?" |
8607 | said the child, after she had tired herself with looking at the prints,"a long, long time-- a great many weeks?--a great many months?" |
8607 | what can it be?" |
37251 | A kind of duck, is n''t it? |
37251 | Ah, Dickie, would you dare? |
37251 | An accomplished player? |
37251 | And the rabbits? |
37251 | And why not? |
37251 | But how about the` Dumps''? |
37251 | But they are so destructive? |
37251 | But was he dead? 37251 But what becomes of the cockatoos?" |
37251 | Dick maintains you? |
37251 | Do n''t hedgehogs sleep all winter? |
37251 | Do n''t you want slow music to that? |
37251 | Do you really mean it? |
37251 | Ever hear tell of the mad surgeon who fought the Polar bear? 37251 Have I? |
37251 | I do n''t care about the ghost, Paddy,I said;"but what about the dogs? |
37251 | Is dat where all de dreadful snakes come from? 37251 Is he dead, then?" |
37251 | Is it grebe? |
37251 | Is it true? |
37251 | Is n''t it first- rate? |
37251 | Is your dog dangerous? |
37251 | It is very hard, is n''t it, my dear? |
37251 | It''s no good interfering,the cock appears to think;"it is a sad state of affairs to be sure, but what can a fellow do? |
37251 | It''s you and me this season, ai n''t it? |
37251 | Or a kind of gull? |
37251 | Professor Dick, you call him? |
37251 | Quite impossible,I replied;"but how would_ you_ say it?" |
37251 | See them two dogs? |
37251 | Shall noble fidelity, courage, and love, Obedience and conscience-- all rot in the ground? 37251 Were you not glad?" |
37251 | What are sun- dogs? |
37251 | What could it be? |
37251 | What do you see in the fire? |
37251 | What for I called de funny fish Metoosah? 37251 What is it? |
37251 | What is it? 37251 What is it?" |
37251 | What right has they to turn the swallers out, eh? 37251 What took me there, you ask me, Ida? |
37251 | Whatever do they carry flowers for? |
37251 | Who are the ladies-- can you distinguish them? |
37251 | Why with ermine, Ida? |
37251 | Why, ye tenants of the lake, For me your wat''ry haunts forsake? 37251 Yes, you see all these cockatoos? |
37251 | You did not do any work? |
37251 | You''re my Maggie May, are n''t you? |
37251 | _ O, you''re_ there, are you? |
37251 | ` And what did you come for?'' 37251 ` Boys,''said the captain again, as he helped himself to an immense piece of loon pie,` it is far too soon to go back to England yet, is n''t it?'' |
37251 | ` How dare you use a dog in that way?'' 37251 ` Must I?'' |
37251 | ` On winter nights,''I asked,` do you not suffer very much from the cold?'' 37251 ` What is it, Bob?'' |
37251 | ` Whatever have you been doing, Cockie?'' 37251 A short life, you say? 37251 And shall I tell you why? 37251 And the white, warty crab stops dancing and listens, and rolls his stalky eyes around, Handy to have eyes on stalks, you say? 37251 Are they really weeds, or are they living things? 37251 Are you hungry? |
37251 | Besides, what says the old, old poem?" |
37251 | But in which direction did the caravan lie? |
37251 | But watch him, boy; what is he going to do? |
37251 | But what did that signify? |
37251 | But who can picture the glory of that Arctic night? |
37251 | But who the mystery was the strange cock-- the impassive spectator? |
37251 | Ca n''t_ you_, R''ooma, even you, admire that? |
37251 | Could I check the mare before we reached the brow of the hill? |
37251 | Could we answer it in the affirmative? |
37251 | Did he sit there mocking the dying agony of the other bird? |
37251 | Did they swim across from the mainland? |
37251 | Do lovers come here in the evening? |
37251 | Do you feel any the better for it now? |
37251 | Do you know it is nearly sunset?" |
37251 | Do you know what I''ll do, if I do n''t have more dumpling? |
37251 | Do you remember the days when I used to beseech you to do unto others as you would that others would do unto you? |
37251 | Do you understand?" |
37251 | Does your Tiny do so? |
37251 | Dumps seemed to say;"fancy being back again among you all; and how is the grass, and how is the rose- tree, and how is the dumpling?" |
37251 | Eh, Mary?'' |
37251 | Ere he faded before thee, the friend of thy heart?" |
37251 | Even at breakfast- time, if the window were open, Dick would pop his head in, and apparently ask:"Is there any of that dumpling left? |
37251 | Example: They have slain all their big game( where will you find a herd of wild buffalo now? |
37251 | Got any bread and milk? |
37251 | Got any worms, any slugs, any anything?" |
37251 | Had you not better come in and rest a bit? |
37251 | Has he had his supper?'' |
37251 | Have I done anything wrong, I wonder?" |
37251 | Have ever you seen flowers that grow on earth like these? |
37251 | He addresses her in wretchedly bad grammar, but what can you expect of a sparrow? |
37251 | He asked me three questions in rapid succession, but gave me no time to answer:"Who are you? |
37251 | How did the snakes get there? |
37251 | How long didst thou think that his silence was slumber? |
37251 | I wonder what makes that skylark so happy? |
37251 | I''m a poet, am I? |
37251 | Is he a brother- in- law, or a father- in- law, or the son by a former marriage, or what? |
37251 | Is it possible, R''ooma, he is about to dance a kind of a submarine Ghillie Callum? |
37251 | Is it?" |
37251 | Is there anything so lovely on shore, R''ooma-- anything else so lovely in Nature? |
37251 | Look, though, is that a pine- tree? |
37251 | May Heaven send Johnnie safely home again; and wo n''t he find his doggie sleek and fat? |
37251 | No room be found for them beneath or above, Nor anywhere in all the Universe round? |
37251 | Now would it not be cruel if the person in whose charge that birdie is left were not more than kind to it in Maggie''s absence? |
37251 | Or Scott''s beautiful lines on the subject, a few of which I can not resist the temptation to quote? |
37251 | Shall we go?'' |
37251 | Some other day, perhaps-- who knows? |
37251 | Tell me, fellow- creatures, why At my presence thus you fly? |
37251 | There touldn''t be two Maggie Mays, tould there, pa?" |
37251 | Verses? |
37251 | Was ever sky so bright before I wonder, was ever sea so warm, so soft, so smooth-- was ever air so fresh and balmy? |
37251 | Was n''t Dumps in the stable once more? |
37251 | Was this a wizard, or a spectre-- the spirit of this haunted wood? |
37251 | Well, first and foremost, I tell ye, I''m captain and commander on the ice; d''ye hear?" |
37251 | Were they dead? |
37251 | Were we glad to return? |
37251 | What am I now? |
37251 | What do ye want? |
37251 | What of that? |
37251 | What should I do with it? |
37251 | What_ is_ it? |
37251 | What_ is_ it?" |
37251 | What_ is_ it?" |
37251 | When the wind waved his garment, how oft didst thou start? |
37251 | Where do they live?" |
37251 | Who are you at all?'' |
37251 | Who, they thought, would give him his morsel of dumpling now? |
37251 | Yes, but what had I to fear? |
37251 | _ Quien Sabe_? |
37251 | _ Us_, I say, d''ye hear? |
37251 | ` Have you had an accident?'' |
37251 | and wherefore? |
37251 | asked little Inez, my eldest daughter, one day;"and is n''t this winter?" |
37251 | he seems to say,"that I am being called Robert? |
37251 | said the youngest;"I hope poor Hoggie has gone to a better place, pa.""Has Hoggie gone to heaven, pa?" |
37251 | was he a former lover-- a rival? |
6479 | Ah, dear nurse, where did you get them? 6479 And are there many woods near it?" |
6479 | And did the hunter take her home? |
6479 | And has it a funny face and ears too, nurse? |
6479 | And is the rice good to eat, nurse? |
6479 | And what became of this nice fellow, nurse? |
6479 | And what do the beavers make dams with, nurse? |
6479 | And what is the Indian name for Old Snow- storm? |
6479 | And where is Coburg, nurse? 6479 Are there any beavers in England, nurse?" |
6479 | Are there any other kinds of snakes in Canada, nurse,asked Lady Mary,"besides the garter- snake?" |
6479 | Are there any other wild fruits, nurse, besides raspberries and strawberries, and currants and gooseberries? |
6479 | Are there many kinds of maple- trees, that sugar can be made from, nurse? |
6479 | Are there many sorts of wild fruits fit to eat, nurse, in this country? 6479 Are there no more flowers in bloom now, nurse?" |
6479 | But what is this odd- looking, black thing here? 6479 But you did not eat our parents too?" |
6479 | Can otters swim, nurse? |
6479 | Can squirrels swim like otters and beavers, nurse? 6479 Can the moon make rainbows at night?" |
6479 | Dear nurse, why does my little squirrel tremble and look so unhappy? 6479 Dear nurse, will you tell me anything more about birds and flowers to- day?" |
6479 | Did you ever hear of any little boy or girl having been carried off by a wolf or bear? |
6479 | Did you ever see a tame fawn? |
6479 | Did you kill them? |
6479 | Did you notice, Lady Mary, how the dormice held their food? |
6479 | Do people see the birds flying away together, nurse? |
6479 | Do the beavers sleep in the winter time, nurse? |
6479 | Do you know any other pretty flowers, nurse? |
6479 | Do you think it was a rattlesnake, nurse? |
6479 | Does God sow the seeds in the new ground? |
6479 | Does it prick one''s finger like a thistle? |
6479 | Does the Canadian robin come into the house in winter, and pick up the crumbs, as the dear little redbreasts do at home? |
6479 | Have you ever seen their nests, nurse? |
6479 | How could the bear have got into the stack of wheat, nurse? |
6479 | How does it make that whirring noise, nurse, just like the humming of a top? |
6479 | How long will the winter last, nurse? |
6479 | I did not think, nurse, that wild strawberries could have been so fine as these; may I taste them? |
6479 | I suppose, nurse, when they awake, they are glad to eat some of the food they hare laid up in their granaries? |
6479 | I think, sometimes, I ought not to keep my dear squirrel in a cage-- shall I let him go? |
6479 | I wonder where you were brought up? |
6479 | I wonder who taught the Indians how to make maple- sugar? |
6479 | If you please, nurse, will you tell me what these dark shining seeds are? |
6479 | Is it a book, my lady? |
6479 | Is the racoon a pretty creature like my squirrel? |
6479 | Is this all you know about fawns, nurse? |
6479 | Mrs. Frazer, are you very busy just now? |
6479 | My book is only a fable then, nurse? 6479 Now, nurse, will you tell me some more about Jacob Snow- storm and the otters?" |
6479 | Nurse how can beavers cut down trees; they have neither axes nor saws? |
6479 | Nurse, can people eat musk- rats? |
6479 | Nurse, did you ever see a tame beaver? |
6479 | Nurse, do not beavers, and otters, and muskrats feel cold while living in the water; and do they not get wet? |
6479 | Nurse, do you know the names of these pretty starry flowers on this little branch, that look so light and pretty? |
6479 | Nurse, how can they see to eat in the dark? |
6479 | Nurse, is there real rice growing in the Rice Lake? 6479 Nurse, please can you tell me anything about fawns? |
6479 | Nurse, please will you tell me something about tortoises and porcupines? |
6479 | Nurse, what is the name of that pretty creature you have in your hand? 6479 Nurse, when you see any of these curious flowers, will you show them to me?" |
6479 | Nurse, where did you get these nice strawberries? |
6479 | Nurse, will you be so kind as to ask Campbell to get a pretty cage for my squirrel? 6479 Nurse, will you tell me something about birds''nests, and what they make them of?" |
6479 | Nurse,said Lady Mary,"did you ever hear of any one having been eaten by a wolf or bear?" |
6479 | Of what use is the dam, nurse? |
6479 | Please tell me what a stoup is, nurse? |
6479 | Please, Mrs. Frazer, will you tell me what sort of trees hemlocks are? 6479 Please, Mrs. Frazer, will you tell me which flowers will be first in bloom?" |
6479 | Please, nurse, tell me of what colours real porcupine quills are? |
6479 | Stop, nurse, and tell me why they are called black and white; are the flowers black and white? |
6479 | That must be very useful; but if the sap is sweet, how can it be made into such sour stuff as vinegar? |
6479 | This embroidered knife- sheath is large enough for a hunting- knife,said Lady Mary,"a''_ couteau de chasse_,''--is it not?" |
6479 | What are Pagans, nurse? |
6479 | What are wigwams? |
6479 | What became of them, nurse? |
6479 | What colour are the Canadian robins, nurse? |
6479 | What colour was the snake, my dear? |
6479 | What do you mean by the fall, nurse? |
6479 | What do you want more, my dear children,said their mother,"than you enjoy here? |
6479 | What is migrating, nurse; is it the same as emigrating? |
6479 | What shall we do for supper to- night? |
6479 | What was that for, nurse? 6479 Which is the nearest way to the mill?" |
6479 | Who calls them all to build their winter houses? |
6479 | You do not think it was cruel, nurse, to kill the snake? |
6479 | *****"Nurse, I am glad Silvy went away with Nimble, are not you? |
6479 | *****"Nurse,"said Lady Mary,"how do you like the story?" |
6479 | Are there many squirrels in this part of Canada?" |
6479 | Are there not moss, dried grass, and roots beneath, to make a soft bed for you to lie upon? |
6479 | Are they pretty creatures, and can they be tamed; or are they fierce, wild little things?" |
6479 | But why would biting out the eye prevent the grain from growing?" |
6479 | Can you tell me what birds they were?" |
6479 | Can you tell us where we shall find them?" |
6479 | Did you ever know any one who was eaten by a wolf?" |
6479 | Do the black squirrels sleep in the winter as well as the flying squirrels and chitmunks?" |
6479 | Do you see that red squirrel yonder, climbing the hemlock- tree? |
6479 | Do you want me to do anything for you?" |
6479 | I have seen acorns at home in dear England and Scotland, and I have eaten the hickory- nuts here; but what is beech- mast? |
6479 | I should like to have a tame otter to play with, and run after me; but do you think he would eat my squirrel? |
6479 | I wish there were maples in the garden, and I would make sugar, molasses, wine, and vinegar; and what else would I do with my maple- tree?" |
6479 | If they come to a lake or river, can they cross it?" |
6479 | If you please, will you tell me something about it, and why it is called by such a curious name?" |
6479 | Is it a dried fish? |
6479 | Is it a large city like Montreal or Quebec?" |
6479 | Is it a little beaver?" |
6479 | Is it''Little Red Riding Hood,''or''Old Mother Hubbard,''or''Jack the Giant Killer?''" |
6479 | It must be a black bass? |
6479 | It would have killed me if it had bitten me, would it not, nurse?" |
6479 | Looking at the honeysuckles,--I dare say it thought them very pretty; or was it smelling them? |
6479 | Nurse, please tell me what are sleigh- robes made of?" |
6479 | Nurse, what is a fawn?" |
6479 | Oh, Miss Campbell, what shall we do?" |
6479 | Papa and mamma are going away from Government House, and I am to return to the old country with them; I am so glad, are not you?" |
6479 | Please, will you tell me all that you know about them?" |
6479 | Then Lady Mary brought a print and showed it to her nurse, saying,"Nurse, is the porcupine like this picture?" |
6479 | Was not that good, nurse?" |
6479 | Was not the Major naughty to say so?" |
6479 | Were you ever in the green forest, nurse? |
6479 | Were you ever there?" |
6479 | What do you think it was, nurse?" |
6479 | What do you think the beaver had done? |
6479 | What is it?" |
6479 | What was it doing? |
6479 | Where do otters live?" |
6479 | Why did they not carry it at once to their nests?" |
6479 | Why does he not lie down and sleep on the nice soft bed you have made for him in his little chamber? |
6479 | and do not the boughs drop down a plentiful store of brown ripe acorns? |
6479 | can you tell me?" |
6479 | dear nurse, what can it be?" |
6479 | did you find real hare- bells, such as grow on the bonny Highland hills among the heather? |
6479 | do bears eat raspberries?" |
6479 | said the child, after she had tired herself with looking at the prints;"a long, long time-- a great many weeks?--a great many months?" |
52782 | ''Hello,''says I,''when did you git in? 52782 About what matter?" |
52782 | Ah, you''re finding our boy out, eh? |
52782 | Ai n''t you going for to make some sorter effort to git your hosses out of the field? |
52782 | Ai n''t you got no sense? 52782 All the way through the dark for that? |
52782 | And so this is Mr. Simmons, the famous negro hunter? |
52782 | And so you did n''t catch him; and your fine dogs are finer now than they ever were? |
52782 | And then what? |
52782 | And what was you doing all that time? |
52782 | And what wonderful person will do this for you, my boy? |
52782 | And when are you going home to your master? |
52782 | Are you still in the woods, Aaron? |
52782 | But if we find them, Son of Ben Ali? |
52782 | But what was the nigger doing at your place? |
52782 | But, Colonel, if he''s that, what do you want him caught for? |
52782 | But, Colonel,drawled Mr. Simmons,"what under the sun ever got the idee in your head that Addison Abercrombie_ is_ harboring your nigger?" |
52782 | But, Colonel,remonstrated Mr. Jim Simmons,"did n''t you send for me? |
52782 | By what means did you know that the horse had been left without food and water? |
52782 | Can you pass them here? |
52782 | Can you walk, Master? |
52782 | Dat ar Aaron had um atter''i m, an''what''d he do? |
52782 | Den how come I ca n''t fool dem ar dogs? |
52782 | Did I say that? 52782 Did anybody cross from the other side this morning?" |
52782 | Did he go into the cabins? |
52782 | Did n''t you hear him when he butted me? |
52782 | Did you fellows see It? |
52782 | Did you notice,said the young man who was first to see the apparition,"that the Thing that was riding the Thing had no head?" |
52782 | Do n''t he open on track? |
52782 | Do n''t you know dey done foun''out whar you stays at? 52782 Do n''t you know what a runaway is? |
52782 | Do you think you''d''a''caught him, Colonel, taking into account all the circumstances and things? |
52782 | Ear- marks? 52782 Got who?" |
52782 | Have you ever paid Abercrombie? |
52782 | Have you ever visited that country? |
52782 | Have you seen a pistol lying loose anywhere around here? |
52782 | Here? |
52782 | Honey, ai n''t it de trufe? |
52782 | How came it so red, den? |
52782 | How come any chil''out dis time er night? |
52782 | How come, I like ter know? |
52782 | How come? 52782 How come?" |
52782 | How long have you been standing here? |
52782 | How you know? |
52782 | Hurt much, Master? |
52782 | I charged you interest, did n''t I, Simmons? |
52782 | I did n''t say I was going to catch him, did I? |
52782 | I did n''t say he could n''t get away from my dogs, did I? |
52782 | I''d git de meat-- but dey mout ketch''i m, an''den what''d I look like? |
52782 | If they were after the runaway, what on earth did he mean by going in this direction? |
52782 | Is anybody ever hear de beat er dat? 52782 Is dat Aaron?" |
52782 | Is that Sound? |
52782 | Is that so? |
52782 | Is that so? |
52782 | Is that so? |
52782 | Jim Simmons? 52782 Jimmy, you did n''t go and apologize to that old buzzard for what I said, did you?" |
52782 | Kin you handle dish yer paddle? 52782 Man, ai n''t you tired?" |
52782 | Man, what you think? |
52782 | May I ask the old man there a few questions? |
52782 | Me? 52782 Me? |
52782 | Me? |
52782 | Mine? 52782 Nothing?" |
52782 | Of course they are-- how can they help themselves? |
52782 | Of course you believed in the country next door to the world? |
52782 | Oh, have you been admitted to the sanctum? |
52782 | On what bank, Gossett? |
52782 | Only three, Son of Ben Ali? 52782 Shall I go too?" |
52782 | Shall I have Timoleon put in the new stable to- night? |
52782 | Shall I ride him down, Son of Ben Ali? |
52782 | Shall I use a club on you, White Grunter? 52782 Sho nuff?" |
52782 | Suh? |
52782 | Supposing you had,suggested Mr. Simmons,"would you''a''done it? |
52782 | That you, Terrell? |
52782 | The child with the crutches? |
52782 | The missing boat? 52782 Then that''s the reason you think Abercrombie ai n''t harboring my nigger?" |
52782 | Up or down? |
52782 | Was a bateau missing from this side this morning? |
52782 | Was anybody with you in the bateau when you went down the river this morning? |
52782 | Was he in that one? |
52782 | Well? |
52782 | Were the bloodhounds after him? |
52782 | Were you hunting the runaway? |
52782 | Whar yo''huffs? 52782 What Aaron done done?" |
52782 | What are the ear- marks, ma''am? |
52782 | What are you crying about? |
52782 | What dat? |
52782 | What dey doin''out dar? |
52782 | What did you find? |
52782 | What did you see? 52782 What do I think? |
52782 | What do you see in the man? |
52782 | What do you suppose the trouble was? |
52782 | What do you think now? |
52782 | What has this great man ever done for you, Simmons? |
52782 | What horse? |
52782 | What is the noise about, Lucy? |
52782 | What is your name? |
52782 | What kind er folks is you? |
52782 | What two things, Colonel? |
52782 | What was that dog barking at just now? |
52782 | What was the trouble, Randall? |
52782 | What were they talking about? |
52782 | What wid? |
52782 | What yo''name? |
52782 | What you doin''? |
52782 | What you gwine ter do? |
52782 | What you gwine ter lan''on the same side wid Jim Simmons fer? |
52782 | What''s that? |
52782 | What''s that? |
52782 | What''s what? |
52782 | What''s your name? |
52782 | When was that? |
52782 | Where did the voice come from? |
52782 | Where is this country that is next door to the world? |
52782 | Where is your runaway? 52782 Where''s my pistol?" |
52782 | Where''s the ford? |
52782 | Whereabouts is that country? |
52782 | Which way did It go? |
52782 | Which way did he go, Uncle Jake? |
52782 | White er blue? |
52782 | Who are you? |
52782 | Who carried the bateau over the shoals this morning? |
52782 | Who is you? 52782 Who lives there?" |
52782 | Who said anything about fire? 52782 Who was it?" |
52782 | Who was with you in the bateau? |
52782 | Who''s behind you? |
52782 | Who? 52782 Who?" |
52782 | Why did you come? |
52782 | Why, confound it, do n''t you know this horse is as wild as a buck? 52782 Whyn''t you go in an''see whether Aaron was in there?" |
52782 | Would you teach me? |
52782 | Wuz you, sho nuff? |
52782 | Yes, ai n''t that Gossett? |
52782 | Yes, where? |
52782 | You are still anxious to punish the poor man who was hurt by the horse? |
52782 | You gwine dar to Gossett''s? 52782 You know that new school teacher at Abercrombie''s?" |
52782 | You wish what? |
52782 | You''ve saved your$ 30, hain''t you? |
52782 | You? 52782 Your runaway? |
52782 | A runaway sitting by his side and driving a fractious and easily frightened horse without bit or bridle? |
52782 | A''on gwine in dar en put dat ar hoss up? |
52782 | Ai n''t you coming? |
52782 | Am I a horse to be ridden? |
52782 | An''whar de lines? |
52782 | And more than that: do n''t I know from my own niggers that the yaller rapscallion comes here every chance he gets? |
52782 | And the reply was,"Well, why not?" |
52782 | And was it truly true that he had ever worn a shoe as small as that? |
52782 | And who''s going to hurt me, pap?" |
52782 | And why did Susy''s Sam hang back and want to turn his mule around before he had finished the furrow? |
52782 | And why should he come whirling back at dusk,--a red cloud of dust rising beneath the Gray Pony''s feet? |
52782 | Are you fixing to have me killed? |
52782 | But did Aaron have the same power over his own master? |
52782 | But what difference did that make? |
52782 | But what is it to be touched? |
52782 | But where? |
52782 | Ca n''t you put him in his stable?" |
52782 | Ca n''t you talk? |
52782 | Could it be that by some noiseless shifting of the scenery he was even now in the country next door to the world? |
52782 | De speckled pullet hollered shoo ter hawk, but what good did dat do?" |
52782 | Did he know the paths? |
52782 | Did n''t Aaron belong to Chunky Riley''s master? |
52782 | Did n''t he double and turn and go back the way he came, to be caught and killed on dry land? |
52782 | Did n''t he have the Simmons nigger- dogs after him that very day? |
52782 | Did n''t his master try to catch him? |
52782 | Did n''t the Colonel send one of his nigger women to the quarters on the Abercrombie plantation? |
52782 | Did n''t the woman say she had seen the runaway? |
52782 | Did n''t you buy him and pay your money down for him? |
52782 | Did n''t you say,''Glad to see you, Simmons; walk right in and make yourself at home''? |
52782 | Do n''t you know dey er gwine ter hunt you in de mornin''? |
52782 | Do n''t you know dey got de dogs dar? |
52782 | Do n''t you know he''ll ketch you ef you do dat? |
52782 | Do n''t you know some er de niggers''ll see you-- an''maybe de overseer? |
52782 | Do n''t you know you ca n''t git away fum dem dogs fer ter save yo''life?" |
52782 | Do n''t you reckon you could tell when anybody was trying to insult you? |
52782 | Do n''t you think it''s cunning?" |
52782 | Do n''t you want him out of the woods? |
52782 | Do n''t you want ter b''long ter Sally Ward?" |
52782 | Do you blame me, Colonel?" |
52782 | Do you keep him in a box and permit only your best friends to peep at him occasionally?" |
52782 | Ear- marks? |
52782 | Ef I squeeze too tight, des say de word;"and then,"Whar we gwine, honey? |
52782 | Fer catching the nigger? |
52782 | Fullalove?" |
52782 | Git him out, did I say? |
52782 | Had he seen the horses? |
52782 | Has he escaped?" |
52782 | Have stray dogs crept under the door? |
52782 | He felt that he and his father had been wronged by some one, he could n''t say who, but not by the runaway, for what was a"nigger,"anyhow? |
52782 | He jumped as if he had heard the report of a gun, and cried out in a tone of alarm:--"Who flung dat rock? |
52782 | He knew by the scent of the cigar that the voices he heard belonged to white men: but who were they? |
52782 | Him harbor niggers? |
52782 | Hit''s some trouble ter git de corn off''n de cob, but spozen dey want no corn on de cob, what den?" |
52782 | How am I to do it?" |
52782 | How come dey ai n''t no niggers but de Gossett niggers in de woods? |
52782 | How come you got ter go up de river?" |
52782 | How come you ter know''bout de missin''boat?" |
52782 | How could this be? |
52782 | How did Aaron know that the horse had gone without water and food? |
52782 | How did he know? |
52782 | How did the Swamp know? |
52782 | I tried to make the hoss stand, but he would n''t, and, just then, what should I see but two great big wildcats trying to sneak up on me? |
52782 | I wonder if he''s taken up over here? |
52782 | I''m so small, and-- and so crippled, you know, nobody would ever think I had a runaway?" |
52782 | If Aaron really had any influence over his own master, why did n''t he stay at home instead of going into the woods? |
52782 | If it was too late for him to learn the language of the animals, how could he hope to interpret the prophecies of the constellations? |
52782 | If we find them, shall I use my teeth?" |
52782 | Is anybody ever see de beat er dat? |
52782 | Is that it?" |
52782 | Is we dat close?" |
52782 | Jimmy do n''t owe you nothin'', does he?" |
52782 | Man, who is you?" |
52782 | Marster, how in de name er goodness kin you drive dish yer hoss widout bridle er lines?" |
52782 | May I examine your neck to see what can be done?" |
52782 | Me?" |
52782 | Now what do you pay me fer? |
52782 | Now, how come dat? |
52782 | Now, if he was n''t a nigger what was he trying to play nigger for? |
52782 | Now, was n''t he wise for his age? |
52782 | Now, where does he go?" |
52782 | Oh, is n''t there some one to hear me?" |
52782 | Once there, was there a hound that would venture to take a bath with him? |
52782 | Saddle''em by sun- up? |
52782 | Says he,''Will you please, sir, give me as much as a spoonful of low- wines for to rub on my legs?'' |
52782 | Shall I make bacon of you? |
52782 | She''s a scorcher, ai n''t she?" |
52782 | Smoke without fire? |
52782 | Suppose that some quagmire or other in that there swamp has gone and got up a ruction on its own hook? |
52782 | That is, if Aaron could n''t call the elements to his aid-- but suppose he could? |
52782 | Was he following the rolling echoes? |
52782 | Was he listening? |
52782 | Was it Mr. Coon or Cousin Coon? |
52782 | Was it for this,--for this,--her darling child had been born? |
52782 | Was it indeed true? |
52782 | Was it the runaway''s intention to jump suddenly from the buggy and strike the horse with the whip? |
52782 | Was n''t he a runaway? |
52782 | Was n''t there a snap and a snarl when the partridge- pea vine caught his foot? |
52782 | Was n''t there a splash and a splutter as he ran into the quagmire? |
52782 | Was one of the bateaux missing this morning?" |
52782 | Well, then, why did n''t his master keep Aaron while he had him in the buggy? |
52782 | Were n''t the chances ten to one that when she saw him she told him that Simmons would be after him in the morning? |
52782 | Whar you say de key is?" |
52782 | What about foxfire? |
52782 | What am I that my food should be thrown at me through the cracks? |
52782 | What am I to do to- day?" |
52782 | What are you doing now?" |
52782 | What could the Little Master want at this early hour? |
52782 | What could the rest hope for if so fierce a creature as the White Pig could be disposed of in this fashion? |
52782 | What demon was this that had seized the White Grunter and was carrying him off? |
52782 | What does that mean?" |
52782 | What have you done with your hosses?" |
52782 | What living and moving creetur could build a fire in that thicket? |
52782 | What man am I to carry, Son of Ben Ali?" |
52782 | What then? |
52782 | What then? |
52782 | What was he up to? |
52782 | What was the rider''s errand? |
52782 | What was this going on right before his eyes? |
52782 | What yo''name, honey?" |
52782 | What''d I do out dar by myse''f at night? |
52782 | What''s to hinder you? |
52782 | What, then, was to be done? |
52782 | When did you come to like me so well?" |
52782 | When everything was ready, the question arose, how was the horse to be removed to his new quarters? |
52782 | When the time comes for the cart I shall have-- what do you call it?" |
52782 | Where did the nigger go? |
52782 | Where''ve you been?" |
52782 | Who are you, anyhow?" |
52782 | Who else would dare to hurt him, or even threaten to hurt him? |
52782 | Who is dat? |
52782 | Who knows? |
52782 | Who stopped him?" |
52782 | Who talked of turns where the Little Master was concerned? |
52782 | Who''s going to know where the fire is?" |
52782 | Who, then, but Abercrombie? |
52782 | Why could n''t the track dogs catch him? |
52782 | Why did he sit still and allow the runaway to go back to the woods? |
52782 | Why not stay here with me to- morrow, and the next day?" |
52782 | Why should I doubt your word?" |
52782 | Why should he go skimming along the red road at day dawn? |
52782 | Why, then, should a thin but steady stream of blue smoke be constantly rising upwards from the centre of Spivey''s Canebrake? |
52782 | Why, what on the face of the earth do you mean? |
52782 | Why? |
52782 | Why? |
52782 | Why? |
52782 | Will dey ketch you ef I tell?" |
52782 | Would Mr. Coon of the Swamp ever be caught on dry land? |
52782 | Would she hasten it? |
52782 | You ca n''t help seeing what''s right at you, can you?" |
52782 | You reckon he gwine ter foller you ter de landin''en den turn right''roun''in his tracks en go back?" |
52782 | You''d have Jim Simmons''s nigger dogs atter you, an''den what''d you do?" |
52782 | Your name, Son of Ben Ali?" |
52782 | [ Illustration: HE EDGED AWAY AS FAR AS HE COULD]"What is it?" |
52782 | [ Illustration: THE EXCITED HORSE PLUNGED ALONG]"Hurt much?" |
52782 | [ Illustration: THE HORSES WERE RIGHT AT HIS HEELS]"Is anybody ever see de beat er dat?" |
52782 | and"Whar you been, Little Marster, dat we ai n''t seed you sence day''fo''yistiddy?" |
52782 | he cried;"ai n''t he your nigger? |
52782 | he cried;"what queer country is this, where all the birds are headless? |
52782 | how can you put such an idea in the child''s mind?" |
52782 | insisted Mr. Jim Simmons with his careless, irritating drawl,"ai n''t it a plum''fact that this nigger''s been in the woods a month or sech a matter? |