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
14014does not this narrative present us with some useful subjects for reflection?
15003But when I know they are the thing, why should I hesitate about the name?
15003Shall one, short, heedless generation break that whole chain of glorious life and make that paradise a desert?
15126And now what opinion may be reasonably formed after a careful consideration of all the foregoing facts?
15126And now, ye effeminate feather bed loungers, where do you suppose we were to sleep?
15126Shall it be concluded as many, nay, as most people have done, that the Red Indians are wholly extinct?
19301This was told us before the service, and when, in the service, he was asked, as the Prayer- book directs,"By whom was this child baptized?"
19044An''another,''Is you?''
19044My first question, when at last we found our tongues, was,"How ever did you happen to be out in the boat in this ice?"
19044Un''ud say,''Is you goin''?''
14866But is this business, sense, or conservation?
14866But what about those who ought to know better?
14866What could appear to have less in common than electricity and sanctuaries?
14866Where else are there so many intimate appeals both to the child and the philosopher?
14866Yet I must not forget the"flies"--who that has felt them once can ever forget them?
47253''Look out there; do n''t you see I''m fast?''
47253Had not Mr. Kingdon Gould allowed himself to be photographed?--then why not I?
47253He strongly advised me trying a loch nine miles up the road, where he and a friend had got twenty- seven dozen mud trout(?
47253I have seen one Indian canoe bring in over one hundred fish in a day''s fishing-- but is this sport?
47253The question now was what was to be done?
47253Who can blame him for the decision he had the courage to carry out?
47253Who knows whether I shall keep that resolve?
47253fish, about which I had dreamt for so many years?
18636Or Christ''s true doctrine for to propagate?
18636Or aym''d you at your owne sweete private gaine?
18636Or did you hope to raise your owne renowne?
18636Or drawe salvages to a blessed state?
18636Or else to adde a kingdome to a crowne?
18636Or our o''re peopled kingdome to relieve?
18636Or poore mens children godly to maintaine?
18636Or shew poore men where they may richly live?
18636Sought you the honour of our nation?
41166And who can contemplate this without gaining dignity in the contemplation?
41166He said to the local physician,"Are you not afraid of the wound becoming infected?"
41166Is it any wonder I love Alaska and long for its wild free life?"
41166Is it any wonder that the steamers on their return trips carry so many insane men to the States?
41166Old Sourdough, meanwhile helping the fun along by craning his neck in every direction, said,"Where?
41166One of the officers shouted to me:"Here you, going over?
41166Query, did the mother bird carry away its offspring to some place of safety where it would not be disturbed?
41166The doctor lying on the broad of his back lifted his head and stared through the now open poop deck and asked,"Where are those sparks coming from?"
41166The guide said,"Is that close enough?"
41166We had now reached the critical moment,--would they select the right time to make the turn?
41166[ Illustration: Did He Come Out?]
41166where?"
19452''Deed, sir, how does you manage to live so far off?
19452Ca n''t you see you''re keeping the steamer?
19452Have you got a plug or so of baccy you could give me, skipper? 19452 No, Tryphena?
19452This morning, miss, you know how hot it was? 19452 Well, what''s up?"
19452What''s it all about?
19452What? 19452 And if David eats so much in twelve months, how much will Noah, two months younger, eat in the same period of time? 19452 And the Lord will say to me,''Why, did n''t he know better than to steal boots? 19452 As he held up the last teetering mountain hebawled":"What am I bid for this wonderful cake?
19452As they come on in shoals at each harbour the refrain persistently runs through my head,"Will there be beds for all who come?"
19452Aside from destruction, in what direction would you say that''Senath''s forte did lie?
19452But when he changed his theme and spoke of hell, with its everlasting fires which needed no replenishing, they cried,"Where is it?
19452But,"How''s t''fish, B''y?"
19452Can you find any babies throughout the British Isles to match mine?
19452Carmen held the hands of her two sisters, and greeted me with"Are you the woman wot''s going to look after we?"
19452Did I ever write you about our chambermaid''s feet-- the new one?
19452Did I say"day of rest"?
19452Do you fancy that cream had thawed?
19452He had managed to scale the side of the house-- but how?
19452He it was who put the question in the doctor''s Bible class,"Is it religious to wear overalls to church?"
19452How much corn- meal mush will David eat in twelve months?
19452If one herring satisfies thirty- six, how many dozen will a herring and a half feed?
19452Last Sunday I questioned them, and finally asked triumphantly,"Well, David, who was the Babe in the manger?"
19452Only when the master of ceremonies, who is always specially appointed, had cried out in a sonorous voice,"Any more?"
19452Shall I bring you one as a pet?
19452Shall I take the next boat back and be in England before the coastal steamer comes south to claim me?
19452The Lord will look them over and then look at me, and if any one of them is n''t there he will say,''Cartier, where is Tom Flannigan?''
19452The answer not being considered satisfactory, Gabriel felt that the time had come for the supreme test, Would Solomon give it to God and the angels?
19452The latest problem brought to me for settlement was,"Does God live in the Methodist Church?"
19452Then by varying gradations of importance came the question, would he give it to Teacher?
19452There is an old story about a foreigner who once asked,"How do you spell''swile''?"
19452Well, whose is it, and what is it?"
19452What am I to do with them?
19452Whatever could I say for myself then?"
19452When he started to open the door of the shelter in which Spider was incarcerated, the fisherman burst out in dismay,"You never put him in there?
19452Which?"
19452Who shall say that a beloved hand and voice did not welcome him home?
19452Will all the babies at the Orphanage be dead before I arrive on the scene of action?
19452You have probably heard the old story about the difference between the Labrador and the New Jersey mosquito?
19452[ Illustration:"HAVE YOU A PLUG OF BACCY, SKIPPER?"]
19452or,"How is your health?"
16809And a bit o''shot for my gun?
16809And how''ll they make harbor, not knowin''what to sail by?
16809Any signs of fish, b''y?
16809Are the men of your crew loyal enough to fight for you?
16809Be there a doctor aboard, sir?
16809Be you a_ real_ doctor, sir?
16809Been ill long?
16809Do you believe dogs can travel against this gale?
16809Do you kill much game here on the island?
16809Domino Run? 16809 Have you any provisions on hand?"
16809How are you going to take care of these children this winter?
16809Is there a stove in it?
16809Is you sure, now, Pop?
16809Liveyeres? 16809 What are the signs of fish?"
16809What are you going to do with it?
16809What have you been doing since?
16809What have you to eat?
16809What is the trouble, Uncle Tom?
16809What''s the matter with the man? 16809 What''s the trouble?"
16809When did you leave Cape Norman?
16809Where are the dogs, Walter?
16809Where did you come from in this storm?
16809Where did you kill it?
16809Where is it?
16809Where is your man?
16809Yes, Uncle Tom, it is I?
16809You deserve the punishment of man and God?
16809And with his rifle and one good eye, who knows but he may knock over a silver fox or a bear or two?
16809Are they not afraid to play with these pretty things?"
16809Can any one wonder that the people love Grenfell?
16809Can we wonder that Grenfell is happy in his work?
16809Can we wonder that nothing in the world could induce him to leave the Labrador for a life of ease?
16809Do you know?"
16809Grenfell sat silently for several minutes observing his patient and asking himself the question:"What can I do for this poor man?"
16809How could he help the man in such a place?
16809How far is it?"
16809If he and the dogs survived the night and another day, what would the dogs do?
16809Oh is it weed, or fish, or floating hair-- A tress o''golden hair, O''drown''ed maiden''s hair, Above the nets at sea?
16809The jolly boat was launched, and as it approached the land the man arose and coming down to the water''s edge, shouted:"Be that you, Doctor?"
16809Well, what of it?
16809What are liveyeres?"
16809What could he do?
16809What did her blue flag mean?
16809What had she come for?
16809What has Grenfell been doing since?
16809What is that?"
16809What_ was_ her business?
16809Would he be caught under an ice pan?
16809Would the cold so paralyze him as to render him helpless?
16809and anxiously asked,"Had we better put back?"
43934''What are you doing here?'' 43934 ''Where are you going?''
43934''Where are you living, Jim?'' 43934 Ai n''t the occasion worth it?
43934Am I supposed just to listen?
43934And who is Harbor Jim?
43934But does it seem quite fair, Jim?
43934Did you come to look on or to work?
43934Did you ever hear anything about reincarnation, Jim?
43934Did you think,said Jim, interrupting his reading,"that there were so many bright, clear springs for the traveller?"
43934Do you believe that? 43934 Have you a Bible?"
43934Hello, Bob, did Jim go out?
43934How about Rascal Moore?
43934How long does it take before it rains, do you know? 43934 How''s fishing, Jim?"
43934I do n''t remember much that we said on the way, do you, Effie?
43934In answer to prayer?
43934Then,interrupted Jim,"how about the Prodigal Son?
43934This is his town,said Bob,"can you find his house?"
43934Was it the doctor or you, Jim, that cured her?
43934What about that big catch? 43934 What did you leave us for, Jim?"
43934What was the best catch you ever had, Jim?
43934What''s the matter, Bob; what you got your good behavior[6] on fur?
43934Who''s coming to this Christmas, Jim?
43934You smile, but why not? 43934 _ Rascal_ Moore, did you say, Jim?"
43934Anything you know of she could do?
43934But how''d you discover that your''s was the only religion?"
43934Can I do anything for you, sir?
43934Can you tell when the frost will take my cabbages or the snow heap up my door- way?
43934Did n''t he get separated from his Father?"
43934Did n''t he take a chance-- a big one-- when he saved me on the ice- pan?
43934Do n''t you see what we are a''doin''?"
43934Do you begin to see how it is, Effie?"
43934Do you see?
43934Ever down there?
43934First I says:"''Who are you, Jim?''
43934He told him what the Dominion needed and when at last he began to get out of breath he turned to Jim and said:"''What do you think?''
43934How could it be plainer than that?"
43934How did it happen?"
43934I am wondering what you can be awantin''this time of a working morning?
43934I hesitated and then asked:"Have you any objection to my walking back to the city with you?"
43934I know I ought n''t to have been, but I was, and I answered the Lord:''I_ am_ still; see me suffering here; is that all the message?''
43934I nodded and the fellow returned it and said, removing his hat as he spoke:"Do n''t you think we had better uncover before such a view as that?"
43934If the Lord could work a miracle on Peter could n''t He some time, some how do it on Judas?
43934Is it perfectly clear to you?"
43934Is it that some one has fell sick and wants Jim to watch or pray?"
43934It is James, what?"
43934Jim noticed his concern and remarked with a certain acerbity of tone:"You do n''t clean your hands with soap and water, do you?"
43934Suddenly I heard a voice say:"''Why do n''t you look at yourself, Jim?''
43934Then the next question I put myself was this:"''What are you worth?''
43934Then, again, God wants to have His say now and then, and how can He, if we are sputtering all the while?
43934Think of anything she could take?
43934What do you think of it?"
43934What do you think?
43934What is it, a doctrine or a medicine?"
43934When he was well outside, Mrs. Jim spoke:"Jim, do you think he has a screw loose in his loft?"
43934Why should n''t He let''em travel?
43934Would you be interested, sir, in hearing how we started out?"
43934asked Jim,"or do you think I might know enough to ask a question now and then?"
39130An''why, zur?
39130And what have you been doing since?
39130And what might that cure be?
39130And what''s the matter with him?
39130And who is this?
39130But have you ever seen another?
39130But where,said I,"did she get her looking- glass?"
39130But you is n''t?
39130Did you do this thing?
39130Do you think of the sea as a friend?
39130Do your besettin''sin get the best o''you, sir?
39130Does you think she''ll die, zur?
39130Eh?
39130Hard?
39130Has you ever been there?
39130Have you never_ had_ a sea- boil?
39130He was n''t_ frightened_, was he?
39130How long have you waited?
39130How many years ago, sir?
39130Is you sure you could n''t do nothin''? 39130 Is you sure, skipper?"
39130No?
39130Noa? 39130 Sure, I be a old feller t''be down the Labrador, is n''t I, zur?"
39130Sure,said he,"not a hundred have n''t?"
39130Then why,they said--"why did you come at all?"
39130Thick? 39130 Think I''m going to turn out this time of night?"
39130Think they''ll be one comin''soon?
39130Were you sick when you sailed for the Labrador in the spring?
39130What detains you?
39130What do we pay you for?
39130What have you been doing since?
39130What you going to be when you grow up?
39130What you going to work at,said I, in desperation,"when you''re a man?"
39130What you going to_ be_, what you going to_ do_,I repeated,"when you grow up?"
39130What you laughing at?
39130What''s the last harbour in the world?
39130Where do the tide go, zur, when''e runs out?
39130Where do''e go, zur? 39130 Where have you been?"
39130You are an evil man, of whom the people should beware?
39130You are eighty- three?
39130You deserve the punishment of man and God?
39130You have fished out of this harbour for seventy- six years?
39130After a silence, he continued, speaking wistfully,"What''s the last harbour in all the whole world, zur?
39130An''you is n''t a doctor, you says?
39130And when he was about to be on his way again----"Could you bear word,"said the woman,"t''Mister Elliot t''come bury my boy?
39130Are they not afraid to play with these pretty things?"
39130But perhaps you might know something about doctorin''?
39130But you is n''t, you says?"
39130Does n''t you know?"
39130Have ye never heard, sir, what the poet says?"
39130How have the fish been to- day?"
39130Is n''t you?
39130Is you noa kind of a doctor, at all?
39130Is you sure, zur?"
39130Noa?"
39130So I up with me trap, for I''d been gettin''nothin''; an''--an''--would you believe it?
39130Sure, zur, would you believe it?
39130Sure, zur,_ you_ is able t''tell me that, is n''t you?"
39130Then,"Be you a doctor, zur?"
39130They be sea- horses an''sea- cows an''sea- dogs, Why not the shape o''humans?"
39130Turn out?
39130What did_ that_ matter?
39130What do it be?"
39130Where are the fish?
39130Which ones shall it be, John?"
39130Which ones?
39130Why wull ye speak such trash to a stranger?
39130Woan''t you come up an''see she, zur?
39130Would the doctor go?
39130Would the doctor help her?
22372But what about the microscope, Mr. Jones? 22372 But what will you do now, Skipper?"
22372Do they pay nothing at all?
22372Have n''t you got any books?
22372Have you got a hen?
22372How did you find your way?
22372How did you get it there?
22372How is that?
22372How long ago did you get the medicine?
22372How long have they been with you?
22372No pain, Uncle Solomon, I hope?
22372Skipper John, what relation are those people to you?
22372Then the Eusol injection has done good, I suppose?
22372Then why ever do you keep that rooster?
22372WHO HATH DESIRED THE SEA?
22372Well, where are we now? 22372 Well, which do you like best, the bishop or the doctor?"
22372What have you observed coming from these lungs?
22372What kind are they?
22372What made you take them in?
22372What''s that?
22372What''s the matter, Jim?
22372Where did you get it?
22372Where did your bullet go?
22372Where is the ship?
22372Who gave it to you?
22372Why, then, did you come to me?
22372After long hesitation, during which time I had been watching him from the rail, he suddenly asked:"Be you a real doctor?"
22372An operation gave her good stumps; but what use was she in Labrador with no legs?
22372Are not sheep, angora goats, oxen, and other animals just the result of similar efforts?
22372At length it came to the momentous point of"What denomination do you belong to?"
22372But was she really lost?
22372CHAPTER XIV THE CHILDREN''S HOME"What''s that schooner bound South at this time of year for?"
22372CHAPTER XVI"WHO HATH DESIRED THE SEA?"
22372CHAPTER XXVI THE FUTURE OF THE MISSION What is the future of this Mission?
22372Ca n''t the Newfoundlanders look out for themselves and their dependent children?"
22372Ca n''t you go in and help while I fetch the police?"
22372Do you still believe as you did when you first decided to serve Christ?"
22372Do you think it will suit her?"
22372Does it pay?
22372For what can be more reactionary in human life than the man who thinks he knows it all, whether it be in science, philosophy, or religion?
22372Has it been the reader''s good fortune ever to save a human life?
22372Has one man more than another the right to be called"missionary,"for of what use is any man in the world if he has no mission in it?
22372How is her head?
22372How many would he swap for a start in clothing and"tings for his winter"?
22372If I were going to America to festive gatherings and to have some honours conferred, why leave the mother behind?
22372If education for the mind is, why not education for the body?
22372Is it not as true as ever that if we are not ourselves possessors of Christ''s spirit, ourselves we can not save?
22372Jones?"
22372Later in the season, while showing my photograph album to a trader, he had suddenly remarked,"Why, what''s---- doing here?"
22372Louder still,"Is there any one here?"
22372Moreover, who does not love Charles Kingsley?
22372Once down, however, one shouts out,"Is there any one here?"
22372The dangers of life lie in ignorance, and after all is not true religion a thing of the intellect as well as of the heart?
22372The only citizen to whom I suggested the anomaly merely said,"Well, why not?"
22372This chapter would not be complete without an endeavour to face the task of trying to answer the questions so often asked:"What is your position now?
22372What could they do in Labrador?
22372What do they want with them when they gets them?"
22372What does that show?"
22372What is the good of it all?
22372What''s my course?"
22372What''s the trouble?
22372When I said,"You are hungry, are n''t you?"
22372Which is really charity-- skilfully to remove his injured leg, if he had one, or to afford him the pleasure and profit of a good book?
22372Whither away was the question?
22372Why is it necessary to carry on a charitable enterprise there?"
22372Why not take one in the cause of righteousness?
22372Why should n''t these town cagelings share our holidays?
22372Why, then, should you have only to ask the Lord to give unasked the wherewithal to feed other people''s families?
22372Wo n''t any of the girls round here have you?"
22372Would I consider crossing the Atlantic in one of our small sailing vessels, and make an inquiry into the problem?
22372Would n''t you just propose to her for me, and bring her along as you comes South?"
22372Would you lend us your big room for prayers in the morning?"
22372You do think yerself-------- clever, do n''t yer?"
22372was he?"
4019And was the bride- elect kept waiting?
4019And we passed right by the mouth of the Nascaupee?
4019Are you awake, b''y?
4019But did n''t you see Allen Goudie''s tilt, sir?
4019But do n''t you know how you got lost?
4019But how can it come through those mountains?
4019But if he be dead?
4019But why did you take it? 4019 But why do you wish to go there?"
4019Dead?
4019Did George get out and send you?
4019Do they have cake and pie?
4019Do they have gingerbread in the camps?
4019Do you catch enough fur to keep you in flour and molasses?
4019Do you remember,asked Hubbard,"the slogan of the old Pike''s Peakers?--''Pike''s Peak or Bust?''"
4019Do you see that second knoll?
4019Do you think she would mind?
4019Do you think you can live as long as that?
4019For Heaven''s sake,said Hubbard,"why did you do it?"
4019George,I asked,"have you your Testament with you?"
4019George,I cried indignantly,"where did you get that pea meal?"
4019George,said I,"however in the world could you keep it so long?"
4019Had n''t you better break a few more boughs?
4019Have I escaped starvin''only to drown?
4019Have you found Hubbard?
4019How did it happen, George?
4019How do they make it? 4019 How''s that?"
4019How''s the weather, b''y?
4019Is that so?
4019Man,he replied,"do n''t you realise it''s about the only part of the continent that has n''t been explored?
4019Mornin'', Wallace,he said, when he had collected his senses,"that blamed rain will make the travellin''hard, wo n''t it?"
4019Now where in the world is Labrador?
4019Wallace,he at length asked,"do you like pig''s knuckles?"
4019Well, do n''t you remember it? 4019 Well,"said Hubbard,"what''s the vote?--shall we turn back or go on?"
4019Well?
4019What are you shooting at now?
4019What are you stopping for?
4019What could you do with a beaver if you got him?
4019What do you hunt? 4019 What do you think the chances of getting caribou are?"
4019What in the world do you expect to do with it? 4019 What is it, b''y?"
4019What kind of fur do you find here?
4019What was it-- a summer or a winter camp?
4019What''s that?
4019What''s the matter, George?
4019What''s the use of killing them?
4019What''s too bad?
4019What''s up? 4019 What?"
4019Where are my ships?
4019Which would you rather have, Wallace, a piece of bread or a blanket?
4019Who?
4019Why what in the world would you do with them?
4019Why,said George,"do n''t you expect to get back to eat any more?"
4019You do n''t mind sitting here for a while and chatting, do you, b''y?
4019''Will you have some more?''
4019After he had greeted us, Lloyd asked:"Is all the world at peace, sir?"
4019Ai n''t there any men here?"
4019Allen hesitated for a moment; then asked:"If the other man be dead, sir?"
4019And how would oatmeal go for porridge?--don''t you think that would be bully on a cold morning?"
4019And what do you suppose I did?"
4019Are n''t you hopeful we shall?"
4019As the other bird flew away, he rose to his feet and shouted:"I hit''im!--did you see how he went?
4019But how?
4019But should we meet with more delays, and arrive on the George too late for the caribou migration, and fail to find the Indians, what then?
4019But were we ever to get out to tell about it?
4019But what does George say?"
4019Could it come from Lake Michikamau?
4019Could we reach the flour?
4019Could you get one or two good men besides yourself to go with us, George?"
4019Could''un spare a dollar t''buy grub, sir?"
4019Did I ever tell you about the day I was married?--the trouble I had?"
4019Did you ever eat any, Wallace?"
4019Did you ever eat apple butter, boys?"
4019Got a pipe, sir?"
4019Had it ceased?
4019Had they come and missed me, and gone away again?
4019Have you fellows experienced any such feeling?"
4019Have you felt that way, George?"
4019He came quickly forward, and, grasping my hand as I stepped from the boat, asked abruptly:"Where''s Hubbard?"
4019How do you feel, Wallace?"
4019How long had I been wandering, anyway... My sisters in far- away New York, were they hoping and praying to hear from me?
4019How would it be to stew them to- night, and stir in a little flour to thicken them?
4019Hungry?
4019I could no longer walk; why not sleep?
4019If not, what were we to do?
4019It''s up to you, b''y-- which route are we to take?"
4019Looking critically at my share, he asked:"How long can you keep alive on that?"
4019No luck?"
4019No?
4019Or was George, brave fellow, lying dead on the trail somewhere below?
4019Poor Hubbard... Why did not the men come to look for us-- the trappers that George was to send?
4019Shall I put them all to cook?
4019Should I not now be justified in surrendering to the overpowering desire to sleep?
4019Standing there with the icy current swirling about me, I said,"What''s the use?"
4019Suddenly, and without a word of introduction, he said:"Boys, what do you say to turning back?"
4019THE OBJECT OF THE EXPEDITION"How would you like to go to Labrador, Wallace?"
4019The silence became so oppressive that I had to break it:"George,"I said,"were you never hungry before?"
4019Therefore take no thought, saying, What shall we eat?
4019Was he looking and waiting for me?
4019Was it a shout?
4019We can run''em, ca n''t we, Wallace?"
4019What do you say, b''y?"
4019What do you say, boys,"he added,"to throwing away some of the outfit?
4019What does glory and all that amount to, after all?
4019What were you talking about?"
4019What will you do, boys?"
4019What would we need to get at the post, George?"
4019Where had all the people in the world gone to, anyway?
4019Who hath lain alone to hear the wild- goose cry?
4019Who hath seen the beaver busied?
4019Who hath watched the black- tail mating?
4019Who hath worked the chosen water where the ouananiche is waiting, Or the sea- trout''s jumping-- crazy for the fly?
4019Who would be anywhere else, if he could?
4019Why could I not find him?
4019Why not give it up and go to sleep?
4019Why should I worry about them?
4019Why?
4019Would he never fire?
4019Would it lead us to Michikamau?
4019Would n''t they thicken up better if you were to cook them to- night and let them stand until morning?"
4019Would they find my bones and take them back?...
4019nothing could down your spirit for long, could there?
4019or, What shall we drink?
4019or, Wherewithal shall we be clothed?
16048A ghost? 16048 A little after two o''clock when he left?"
16048All of us scouts, just like the boys in New York?
16048And then what happened?
16048And will you be goin''outside the Bay?
16048And you''ll stay now? 16048 Are you sure?"
16048Are you sure?
16048Be it on the table? 16048 Be you givin''up the silver?"
16048Can you bring one, too, Seth?
16048Could we be scouts?
16048Did I now?
16048Did you find Injun Jake?
16048Did you tell Doctor Joe about the tracks?
16048Do n''t you think you had better wait and start in the morning? 16048 Do you know who I am?"
16048Do you think you could let me fuss around that shoulder a little while?
16048Does it hurt too badly for you to bear it?
16048Does you mean somebody shot he?
16048Eli,said Doctor Joe, closing the door behind him,"may I have a word with you?"
16048Goin''to steal our cache, was ye? 16048 Gone where?"
16048Got her, Bill?
16048Has she been took?
16048He wo n''t die, will he?
16048How are you feeling, Lem?
16048How be you, Eli?
16048How be you, Thomas? 16048 How can we search un out?"
16048How do, Eli?
16048How do, Jake?
16048How long did he stay? 16048 How long has it been since you saw him last, Seth?"
16048How you goin''to do it?
16048How''ll we do it?
16048How''ll we make un fast when we gets un done?
16048How''ll you make un fast now without nails?
16048How''s Lem, sir? 16048 How''s the morning, Thomas, fair for our trip to Fort Pelican?"
16048I dare say,Doctor Joe suggested,"that you''ve never eaten potatoes or onions?"
16048I suppose they''re this here bunch what''s campin''down by the brook and been runnin''all over the country to- day?
16048Is you afraid, Jamie?
16048Is you startin''so early?
16048Is you sure, now,''twere Injun Jake does un?
16048Now what do you think about killing hen partridges in summer?
16048Said he had un? 16048 See un?
16048Shall we have un for supper?
16048The others? 16048 To take you about?"
16048Tryin''to steal our cache, eh? 16048 We can kill pa''tridges, ca n''t we?"
16048We''ll not be gettin''away from Fort Pelican to- morrow, will we?
16048Well, where''s the tree you went and hid the stuff in?
16048Were you takin''that silver?
16048What are you wondering?
16048What be that, now?
16048What do you think''s been happenin''to Jamie?
16048What does he know, now? 16048 What have you got for us, Margaret?"
16048What kind of a rifle does Indian Jake use?
16048What makes you think so?
16048What time did Indian Jake come?
16048What time did we leave Flat Point?
16048What we goin''to do about this here kid then? 16048 What were that now?"
16048What were they meanin''by''swag,''Doctor Joe?
16048What were you huntin''the cache for, then? 16048 What would Jamie be pilin''the stones for now?"
16048What you doin''here?
16048What you goin''to do with him, Bill?
16048What you goin''to do, play the sucker?
16048What you meanin''by that?
16048What you puttin''the grease in for?
16048What you wantin''of Doctor Joe?
16048What''ll we be doin''? 16048 What''s bringin''you to the Nascaupee?"
16048What''s that now?
16048What''s that, now?
16048What''s the matter, Eli? 16048 Whatever has been happenin''to he?"
16048Whatever is un all about?
16048When are you expecting Mrs. Horn and the boys back?
16048When were you gettin''back?
16048Where is you? 16048 Where you goin'', Eli?"
16048Where you goin''now? 16048 Where''s Jamie?"
16048Where''s Jane?
16048Where''s your boat?
16048Who''s this here Doctor Joe? 16048 Why ca n''t we cut strips of sealskin off our sleepin''bags for strings to tie un with?"
16048Why not cook dinner out here over an open fire?
16048Why, how do, Eli? 16048 Will the boss die then?"
16048Will you, sir? 16048 Wo n''t you be stayin''with me?"
16048Would n''t a bit of wet t''baccer draw the soreness out?
16048You heard what I said? 16048 A dozen yards from the camp David suddenly stopped and exclaimed:What''s that now?"
16048And who could have come to this out- of- the- way place unobserved by the old trapper and shot him without warning?
16048And who''s the other scouts?"
16048Are you hungry?"
16048Bill swung the bag over his shoulder, when suddenly he stopped and exclaimed:"What''s that?"
16048But who could have known of the existence of the skin?
16048Ca n''t I be goin''with you and Davy?
16048Can it, Pop?
16048Did you see what way the tracks goes?"
16048Did you trace un, Andy?
16048Do you all understand?"
16048Do you hear me?"
16048Do you hear that?
16048Do you hear what I''m sayin''?
16048Do you hear?"
16048Do you think that''s right?"
16048Doctor Joe watched them disappear round the island, and returning to Lem''s bedside asked:"Lem, do you know what kind of a rifle Indian Jake carried?"
16048From what point of the rock was the northerly line to begin?
16048Has anything happened?"
16048He hain''t seen any swag around, has he?
16048Hear me?"
16048Hear that?"
16048How was they strange?"
16048How''ll we ever get away?"
16048I were just askin''if''twould be suitin''you if I stays home and lets they go?"
16048I''ve got_ some_ say, hain''t I, Hank?"
16048Is Injun Jake here?"
16048Is he hurt bad?"
16048Now how shall we go about it to trace it?
16048Our stuff is our''n, ai n''t it?
16048See un?
16048They ai n''t likely to go makin''a search for that, be they?"
16048They wo n''t blame us for that other job, will they?
16048To see Lem Horn?"
16048We do n''t want to go huntin''trouble, do we?
16048Were they searching for him through the blackness of the night and the storm?
16048What can he blab about?
16048What chance could Indian Jake have against such skill as that?
16048What made you think of ghosts?"
16048What time did he go?"
16048What were Doctor Joe and the lads doing?
16048What you want to tie him for?"
16048What''ll we do about un?"
16048What''s that got to do with us?
16048What''s the use of draggin''him along?
16048What''s the use of us fallin''out?"
16048What''s the use of us fellers fightin''about it?
16048What''s up?"
16048Where should he begin to pace?
16048Who set you on to it?
16048Who set you on to stealin''it, now?"
16048Who shall it be?"
16048Who''s''the others''?"
16048Will Jamie go too?"
16048Will you do it while your father and I visit?"
16048Would he ever see the dear old home at The Jug again?
16048Would these men kill him?
16048You have one, have n''t you?"
16048You hear that, do n''t you?"
16048You heard what we said, and you goin''to blab it?"
16048You want to see he?"
16048You''ll not be leavin''The Labrador again?"
44387A tragedy or a comedy?
44387Ah, my fine lady,he cried, harshly,"you think yourself strong enough to flout Pierre d''Antons, do you?
44387Ah, who can say?
44387An''may I ask how ye come by such a power o''trade in a night- time?
44387An''may I make so bold as to ax when ye married Sir Ralph Westleigh''s daughter?
44387And Mistress Beatrix?
44387And has your heart given you no hint of it?
44387And my friend, too?
44387And what if you had seen the savages?
44387And who are you, to bring me word of my son''s return?
44387And who may ye be, lad?
44387And why do you summon to trade with the cry of the hunt?
44387And why, dear father? 44387 And you found no indications of gold?"
44387And you have heard? 44387 And you loved me then?"
44387And you would have to go with Black Feather?
44387Are the seasons not arranged to your liking, boy?
44387Are you afraid?
44387Are you on friendly terms with the savages?
44387Askin''your pardon, master,he said, standing close,"but what of that Injun in there?
44387Bernard-- my dear lad-- why all this talk of pardon, and duty, and delinquencies, and God knows what else? 44387 But do these gods not fight with knives-- long knives and short?"
44387But how do you know so much, lad?
44387But what are you doing here-- an old man and a child?
44387But why do you ask? 44387 But why does he stay?
44387D''ye hear that now? 44387 Dead?"
44387Dear heart,murmured the lad, without lifting his face or altering his position,--"dear heart, can it be true?"
44387Did you really love me that first day you came to the fort, or was it just-- just surprise at seeing a-- a civilized girl in so forsaken a place?
44387Do you fish with war- bows?
44387Do you live in this great lodge all by yourself?
44387Do you mean that you-- do you mean that it happened on the first day of your arrival at the fort?
44387Do you mourn the little stockade and the great river, lad?
44387Does Soft Hand, the great bear, slumber, that the foxes bark with such assurance?
44387Does your education commence so soon?
44387God knows I do not want any one to suffer,said the baronet,"but may it not be a trick of this Panounia''s, or whatever you call him?"
44387Has he a stake in the colony?
44387How could I know less, who dwelt within eyeshot of the black captain for so many days, and who have learned the ways of such wolves?
44387How did it begin?
44387How do you know that, lad?
44387How long, think you, shall you stand in need of chaperons in Bristol?
44387How will he sound to- night, I wonder?
44387How?
44387Hurt? 44387 Hurt?"
44387Indeed, sir?
44387Is it not a pleasant dream?
44387Is there a village yonder?
44387Is there nothing that you would teach me?
44387Lad, where have you learned your bravery?
44387Maybe get something to eat? 44387 Now who be master o''this ship?"
44387Oh, that''s all, is it?
44387Say you so?
44387So you love this Bernard Kingswell?
44387Surely, four Englishmen and a lad could do nothing against such a host?
44387Take Ouenwa?
44387Then where be her spars?
44387Then why did you risk it?
44387Then you are a friend-- out and out?
44387Then you are a kinswoman of mine?
44387This Captain d''Antons-- what of him?
44387To see the ship?
44387Trade?
44387Well, my lad?
44387What ails him now?
44387What are you talking about?
44387What at?
44387What authority has Maggie Stone?
44387What be mun jabberin''about?
44387What be this?
44387What brings you here, you fool-- and how many follow you?
44387What do you expect to see?
44387What do you know of the black captain?
44387What do you see?
44387What do you want?
44387What does it fear? 44387 What does it mean?"
44387What does that mean?
44387What does this mean, captain?
44387What is in your fine canoe, little Dreamer?
44387What is it waiting for?
44387What is it?
44387What is it?
44387What is that they are yelling?
44387What morning?
44387What story is this?
44387What the devil do you mean?
44387What the devil does it mean?
44387What was it,she whispered, breathlessly,--"the matter that held you and Bernard in such serious converse?"
44387What was that?
44387What would the countess, your aunt, say to such behaviour?
44387What''s this?
44387What-- the mistress be safe, d''ye say?
44387What?
44387Whatever has mun been a- doin''now, to get so distressin''scrawny? 44387 When did you stake your heart?"
44387Where the devil are they?
44387Who has taken it upon himself to improve on my orders?
44387Who is she, or who was she ever, to question my behaviour? 44387 Why do you weep, dearest?"
44387Why not pick a quarrel with him?
44387Why pretend, dear heart?
44387Why should I mourn them?
44387Why think of it now?
44387Wine, monsieur?
44387Would gods make such flights for the sake of a few dried fishes and a few dressed pelts of beaver and fox?
44387Would the fellow dare return?
44387Would you face the homeward voyage in one of the little boats?
44387Would you have me rot in this place for the remainder of my life?
44387You have no love for the wilderness?
44387You think Panounia can break into the fort?
44387You, too?
44387Your work, Ouenwa?
44387Ah, you liar, why did I not have you strung up to a yard- arm when you were safely in my power?
44387An''ye''d lift yer hand against the ship''s master, would ye?"
44387And who are you, woman, to insult your mistress and the gentleman who saved you from the knives of the savages?
44387Are we attacked?"
44387Be he really sick, or be he playing a game?"
44387But what do you with the great strangers, little Dreamer?"
44387But why take time for idle surmises?
44387Can it be that any more such beings exist?
44387Can it be that you are one of Sir Felix Brown''s lasses, grown to such a fine young lady in London?"
44387Could it be that the High God had been deaf to her prayers?
44387Did I use the word heroic, monsieur?
44387Did he possess neither knowledge of men nor mother wit?
44387Had he no will of his own?
44387Had other men heard her soul and her dear heart singing and crying from the strings of the violin?
44387Had other men seen her so beautiful?
44387Has even Master Kingswell ever before looked upon such beauty and such raiment?"
44387He screamed the name of his daughter,"Beatrix, Beatrix"--or was it his dead wife he was calling?
44387How could he understand what the rapids were saying with all this babbling of"knife"and"wolf"in his ears?
44387How should he be hurt?"
44387Is it not that I have won at last beyond peradventure?
44387Maybe get killed?"
44387No doubt they would persist in rescuing him, and, in that case, what reason could he give for wishing to stay in his cheerless camp?
44387Of these treasures the recluse was justly proud, for had he not acquired them at risk of sudden extinction by the breath of the clapping fire- stick?
44387Shall I not read in the books, and see horses, greater than caribou, bearing gentlemen upon their backs?
44387So you are Master Kingswell''s ward?"
44387Stab me, but why did not my heart give me a hint of your preference?"
44387Such a fate would warm the heart of Soft Hand, for is not our Great Chief an old woman himself?"
44387Surely she realized the chances of danger?--the risk he was running, for her sake?
44387Tell me if your heart has any promise?"
44387Tell me now, will you promise to marry me, or will you let your father go to the gallows in the spring, and this plantation be put to the torch?
44387Tell me, wind, of the flints I sow, What shall I reap?
44387The night is bitterly cold, and--""But where is Bernard?"
44387The old bear grumbles at the mouth of his den!--will you not be with us when we singe his fur?"
44387The thin, clean- shaven lips trembled-- or was it the wavering of the candle- light?
44387Then why would you have me mourn?
44387Was it fancy, or-- or what?
44387Was that love, think you?"
44387We last met, I believe, at Randon Hall-- or was it at Beverly?"
44387What dark deed might not be perpetrated by the shrouded messenger between the death- bed and Paradise?
44387What do you say to the idea, Tom?"
44387What else could he expect of even this true friend?
44387What had she done to be driven beyond the bounds of civilization, her safety dependent on the whims of a French buccaneer?
44387What has my heart to do with your talk of guards and ammunition and supplies,--save that it is with you in everything?"
44387What lurks in the dull brain of him?"
44387What menace might not lurk in the gloom of the round, fur- scented lodge?
44387What power of man, in that wilderness, could break down his guard and harm the most wonderful being in the world?
44387What was that?
44387What will the white moon say to the proud Warriors, dead?
44387What would you suggest?"
44387Who be master?"
44387Who knows but that Time may shuffle the pack before long?"
44387Who, now, is the wolf slayer?"
44387Whose hand has overthrown the lodge of the totem of the Black Bear?
44387Why does he live in this place when he might be reaping the harvests common to such husbandmen?"
44387Why had the hidden enemy fired only one arrow, when they might have annihilated the little party with a volley?
44387Would she resort to tears again, or would she answer back?
44387You''d presume?"
44387exclaimed Kingswell, springing to his feet,"but what is the trouble?
44387she said, gently,"and why fill the dear lad with doubt?
44387they cried,"what warrior has done this deed?"
13396''Then how does they do for swiles?''
13396Ah? 13396 An amateur?"
13396And now you think you have discovered the feet of clay?
13396And what about the doctor''s pay?
13396And what about you and the little boy, Frenchy?
13396And what did Dick say?
13396And why do so many of them cross from time to time?
13396And you, Barnett, have you no regard for your little chaps? 13396 And-- and Helen dear, I do n''t suppose you will want to sail to- morrow, will you, or in a day or two?"
13396Anything particularly wrong or fatal in my general appearance?
13396Are n''t you glad I took a course in cookery?
13396Are you not afraid?
13396Are you not going to kiss me also, Susie?
13396Are you the doctor?
13396Are you two having lover''s quarrels already?
13396Are you?
13396But how can I leave now, Dad?
13396But what if you were carried out to sea?
13396But what''s th''use o''despisin''any of th''Lord''s blessin''s, specially when they gits kinder scarce?
13396But why did n''t we send the doctor on her?
13396Byes, did yer ever see the like o''that?
13396Ca n''t I help?
13396Could n''t they be taught to be a little cleaner?
13396Could n''t you get him?
13396Did I do anything wrong?
13396Did n''t yer ever look at the big feet o''he?
13396Did the doctor write that?
13396Did you ever hear him blow up his house- staff?
13396Did you ever see such rosy cheeks? 13396 Do n''t you really care, Daddy?"
13396Do n''t you think I deserve a pipe?
13396Do n''t you think that Gordian knot had better be cut at once?
13396Do you mean that you were alone with the crew?
13396Do you really believe that?
13396Do you really think so?
13396Er-- er,he hesitated,"are you a physician, sir?"
13396Have a cigar? 13396 How about your wife and children, Sammy?"
13396How can he help loving you?
13396How do you enjoy the practice of your profession in Sweetapple Cove?
13396How do you feel now?
13396How do you reach Sweetapple Cove?
13396How long have you known that you had diphtheria too?
13396How''s your coal?
13396I could never weary of watching all these things, and what is that big duck, or is it a goose, traveling all alone and flying straight as an arrow?
13396I hope you do n''t think I''m very bad, Daddy?
13396I suppose I can be back in time for lunch?
13396Is Mr. Jelliffe still asleep?
13396Is n''t he wonderful? 13396 Is n''t it awfully unhealthy for them?"
13396Is n''t that just what I''ve been gnashing my teeth over?
13396Is n''t there anything that we can do for you?
13396Is that what you nurses call him?
13396Is the man hurt or ill?
13396Is there anything that I could do?
13396Is yer after findin''th''doctor gettin''any better?
13396Is you real sure you got enough?
13396It''s a whale, is n''t it?
13396It''s dreadful, is n''t it?
13396Just let Frenchy know, will you? 13396 May I come in?"
13396Now would n''t that jar you?
13396Of course they fed us well at the hospital, when we had time to eat, but...."Is that your last word?
13396Read it, Helen?
13396See those tops moving?
13396The big feet of who?
13396They are splendid little boats, are they not?
13396Was it home- sickness that brought you back?
13396Was n''t it horrid to go on such a long trip and stay on a boat so long?
13396We are going out fishing again, are we not?
13396We go to- day?
13396Well?
13396What about that child she referred to, Doctor?
13396What can any one expect to do? 13396 What is it, dear?"
13396What is the matter with him, Frenchy?
13396What is the matter, dear?
13396What is the trouble?
13396What is your own advice?
13396What kind of traps?
13396What shall we do?
13396What''s th''laddie sayin''?
13396What''s the matter, daughter?
13396What''s the matter?
13396Where is it? 13396 Where is that?"
13396Who wants to take chances? 13396 Who would ever have thought that men would cling to such places?"
13396Who''s got a bed in his house that I can put Dick Will in for a few days, till he gets better?
13396Why do n''t you give them some?
13396Why do n''t you go back to your own country?
13396Why do n''t you go on?
13396Will you be so kind as to share it with me?
13396Wo n''t you come in?
13396Wo n''t you come over to the house?
13396Wo n''t you let me take her?
13396Wo n''t you let me take your shawl?
13396Wo n''t you sit down?
13396Would n''t it inculcate into you a chastened spirit? 13396 Yer sure do n''t mean it, does yer?"
13396Yes,she nodded,"and now what about you?"
13396You are not going to drive me away?
13396You are not ill, are you?
13396You are not ready yet, are you? 13396 You goin''now?"
13396You had quite a long sail to get here, did n''t you? 13396 You have already found the girl?"
13396You have given it to the child?
13396You promise to go home within a year?
13396You will dine again with me, next Thursday?
13396And is n''t it perfectly awful in winter?"
13396And now what can I do?"
13396And she has always been very fond of me, at least as a good friend, and-- and-- who knows?
13396And who pays for this boat and the wages of the men?
13396Are you developing new traits?"
13396Are you quite sure...?"
13396Are you very tired, Miss Jelliffe?"
13396Barnett?"
13396But how about gales?"
13396But how about the appetite for other things, for success in life, for the appreciation of intelligent men and for their companionship?
13396But what cared I for nurses just then?
13396But you and I are old travelers, are n''t we, and used to quick changes?
13396By the way, Aunt Jennie, what has become of him, and why has n''t he written to me?
13396CHAPTER XXI_ From Miss Helen Jelliffe to Miss Jane Van Zandt__ Aunt Jennie_,_ darling_: Is n''t the world just the most wonderful place?
13396Ca n''t make it, you say?
13396Can you understand such a confused statement?
13396Considering that she has bidden me to avoid carefully all matters relating to the tender passion what else can I do?
13396Could you stand a trip in a fishing boat?"
13396D''ye know it''s most midnight?
13396Daddy?"
13396Did n''t some Frenchman say once that an old man is a fellow who thinks himself wise because he''s been a fool longer than other people?
13396Do n''t all the nice young men like to look after girls?
13396Do n''t you think we''ve got just as good a right as any whipper- snapper of a new intern to be blown up?"
13396Do you suppose I''m so anxious to go that I''m going to risk all our lives?
13396Do you want to spread this thing about and kill off all your children?
13396Does n''t he consider me as an important patient?
13396Have n''t I told you it is dangerous?
13396Have you heard from Harry Lawrence lately?
13396Have you the slightest notion of how many years I have loved you, Dora?"
13396He will be back soon, and an hour or so wo n''t matter, will it?
13396How are you, and what kind of a time have you had?
13396How can I tell you all that he said?
13396How can a man do big work in surgery with no assistants?
13396How can you possibly say that I must be yawning myself half to death and longing for the fleshpots of Morristown?
13396How do you ever manage to get back in storms and fogs?
13396How much does he weigh?"
13396How the deuce do you keep from starving to death?"
13396How''s yer leg feelin''the night, Mister, an''is there anythin''else I might be doin''fer yer?"
13396I wonder just what he meant by that, Aunt Jennie?
13396I wonder whether there is another such beastly country in the world?"
13396I wonder why he keeps on living at Sweetapple Cove?
13396I wondered what his first look would say to me, what the first word from his lips would portend?
13396Is it the same sort of loon that we see on the Maine and Adirondack lakes?"
13396Is n''t it a wonderful head?
13396Is n''t it funny that even here some notion of trusts and corners should have penetrated?
13396Is n''t it queer how people of our sort are always deemed to be quite helpless with their hands?
13396Is n''t it queer that silly things should enter one''s head at such times?
13396Is n''t it too bad, Aunt Jennie, that we ca n''t all be happy all the time?
13396Is n''t it wonderful, Aunt Jennie, how some people have the faculty of causing themselves to be loved by every one?
13396Is there no danger of what you fellows call atrophy?
13396John''s?"
13396May I call in the morning?"
13396Mebbe yer does n''t jist feel like reskin''it?"
13396No danger, is there, Doctor?"
13396Now in regard to Dr. Grant....""Are we really going to- morrow, Daddy?"
13396Of course I am grateful to Dr. Grant for looking after me so nicely, but why should he deserve such a lot of credit for it?
13396SWEETAPPLE COVE BY GEORGE VAN SCHAIGK 1914 CHAPTER I_ From John Grant''s Diary_ Have I shown wisdom or made an arrant, egregious fool of myself?
13396So yer done it yerself, did yer, ma''am?
13396The years, do you hear me?
13396Too far from Long Island Sound, is n''t it?
13396Was I not ready to do all that a woman possibly could?
13396Was there a nurse in the world as ready as I to lay down her very life for her patient?
13396Were n''t those old Persians wonderful people?
13396What are you doing?"
13396What d''yer think o''that?"
13396What do you know about your ability to go right out and do a man''s work, by yourself?
13396What is it?
13396What is the matter?"
13396What is the use of keeping on trying when one has to be forever bucking against ignorance and stupidity?
13396What orders?"
13396What you think?"
13396Where did you get them?"
13396Where is it?"
13396Why ca n''t I share it with all the others who will have to stay here?
13396Why do n''t you go on?
13396Why remind me of it?"
13396Will the day ever come when these may prompt her to think it would increase her happiness to take me under her protecting care?
13396Wo n''t you let me fry the trout?"
13396Wo n''t you let me help?
13396Would you believe, Auntie dear, that all the other women about here are just as bad?
13396You ai n''t got a man yet, has you, ma''am?"
13396You are not going to try and kill them, are you?"
13396You believe me, do n''t you?"
13396You do n''t expect to start in such a gale, do you?"
13396You remember about them, do n''t you?
13396You will answer my letters, wo n''t you?"
13396You will come to supper, wo n''t you?"
13396You will do your best, wo n''t you?
13396You wo n''t let him talk very much, will you?"
21710A blind man says he does n''t see the sun, and do n''t believe in it,rejoined Grummidge:"does that prove that there''s no sun?"
21710Agreed, captain,said Paul;"but what about food?"
21710An''have Master Paul an''Hendrick agreed to fall in wi''this mad plan?
21710An''what then? 21710 And pray, good sir,"said Paul,"may I ask how it happens that we should find an Englishman in this almost unheard- of wilderness?
21710And who put it into Taylor''s heart to help us?
21710Are there many fish like that in these rivers?
21710Are we goin''to be domineered over by Swinton? 21710 Are_ you_ not as happy as_ me_, daddy?"
21710But are you quite alone here?
21710But d''ye think, master,said Stubbs,"that we shall find fish in them waters?"
21710But how came you to know about all that Master Paul, if this is all the Scripture you''ve had?
21710But how shall I know,said the hunter earnestly,"that these words are true-- that they are the words of God?"
21710But how?
21710But now, Hendrick, what d''ye really think o''this state of things? 21710 But surely you do n''t mean to leave us here without food, and with our hands tied behind us?"
21710But surely you wo n''t land them without a morsel to eat?
21710But what about practice, daddy? 21710 But what are we to do, boys?"
21710But what can I do, Olly?
21710But what do you call a` reasonable''distance, daddy?
21710But what do you mean, stranger, by saying that it might have been discovered long ago if people had kept their ears open?
21710But where are we to get long- bows and cross- bows and slings?
21710But where''s the twine to come from?
21710Can we expect all men to act upon that precept?
21710Can you go after deer on such things?
21710Can you guess what they are going to do?
21710Come, old boy, you''ll do it, wo n''t you? 21710 D''ye hear that, Osky?"
21710D''ye hear that, lads, what_ Master_ Swinton thinks ought to be done to_ thieves_?
21710D''ye think it will go by the board?
21710D''ye think the chief is really in earnest?
21710Did you not tell the captain we were to breakfast on the bluff?
21710Did you see little Oliver anywhere?
21710Did you slay all the palefaces?
21710Do I not know it?
21710Do n''t you see, Olly,said Paul,"that some of its roots are hollow, rotten at the core?"
21710Do you admit now, Master Trench, that the masts have gone by the board,asked Paul,"and that it is impossible to carry sail any longer?"
21710Do you ever have a scarcity of food?
21710Do you see yonder beds of rock of almost every colour in the rainbow? 21710 Does Strongbow think that the frost will hold?"
21710Does not this arise from the tendency of mankind to found and form opinions on insufficient knowledge?
21710Has Rising Sun forgotten Bearpaw?
21710Has he got nothing to say for himself?
21710Has our Bethuck brother seen no enemies from the setting sun? 21710 Have I not told you that my murdered wife was high- born and endowed with every grace?"
21710Have the Red warriors been successful?
21710Have you reason to fear aught?
21710How can any_ man_ stand in my place, or take my punishments?
21710How can we tell what they admit? 21710 How d''ye make that out, boy?"
21710How do you manage to catch salmon?
21710How long, think you, will it take us to reach the wigwams of your kindred from this point?
21710How many of them delicacies have we had? 21710 How should we set about it, think''ee?"
21710Is baby well?
21710Is it Newfoundland?
21710Is it a big island, then-- not a cluster of islands?
21710Is that a small island that I see on the weather bow, Olly?
21710Is, then, the face of the white man so distasteful to you?
21710It would be meaner to say` I''m_ not_ sorry,''would n''t it?
21710Killed him? 21710 Looks like as if God had already helped us-- at least to food-- does it not?"
21710May I ask,said Paul, with some hesitation,"if your wife came with you from the Shetland Isles?"
21710No doubt about what?
21710Olly, my son,said Trench, in a remonstrative tone,"have you gone mad?"
21710Pity that such a friend of the people should not have lived to the age o''that ancient fellow-- what''s his name-- Thoosle, something or other?
21710Rising Sun,said the chief, in a tone which the girl could not choose but obey,"tell us who killed him?"
21710Say you so?
21710Since when were you enrolled among the prophets, Master Trench?
21710So, then, this is the manuscript the old missionary carried about, is it?
21710Such as--?
21710Tell me now, d''ye happen to know what sort o''beast it is that I see starin''at us over the bushes yonder?
21710Then the palefaces had nothing to do with it?
21710Then you look forward to such- like rising in this land?
21710True, Paul; what do you propose to do?
21710True, but what of this civilised female tiger whom you would scorn to we d. Did not Christ die for_ her_? 21710 Was it love that induced the palefaces to kill Little Beaver and steal Rising Sun?"
21710We seem far from land yet, Master Trench; why such haste?
21710Well, Grummidge, what may be your notion?
21710Well, Spitfire, what''s your objection to my keeping order?
21710Well, and what o''that? 21710 What d''ye call the two things dangling from your shoulders, boy?"
21710What does he say?
21710What does he see?
21710What fortune, comrade?
21710What have they done?
21710What if the gale should last a week?
21710What is it, boy?
21710What mean you by this?
21710What means he by that?
21710What of-- deer?
21710What say you?
21710What''s that, boys?
21710What''s that?
21710Whence come ye? 21710 Where away, Master Hendrick?
21710Where do the deer all come from?
21710Who said` No''?
21710Why not, Master Trench?
21710Why not, my son?
21710Why not? 21710 Why so-- how?
21710Why, Hendrick, do you take me for Goliath, who as Paul Burns tells us, was brought down by a stone from the sling of David? 21710 Will our Bethuck brother tell us more news?"
21710Will you join me? 21710 Would the chief guide him to the place where the prisoners were?"
21710Yes-- what then?
21710You do n''t mean to say he lived as long as that?
21710You shall accompany your amiable father; but first I''ll give you a fair chance,he added, in a bantering tone:"will_ you_ navigate the ship?"
21710You-- you''re not goin''to leave me, are you?
21710Your son, I suppose?
21710Ai n''t there no end o''cordage swashin''about the_ Water Wagtail_ ever since she went ashore?
21710Am I wrong in holding that it was` Our Father''?"
21710An''have n''t we got fingers?
21710And I have no doubt, captain, that you know how to use the cross- bow?"
21710And the skin-- I doubt we might find that tough?"
21710And what mean ye by saying we are sent?
21710And when that comes to pass, will it bear no good fruit?
21710Are you alone, or only the advance- guard of the bloodthirsty race?"
21710Are you prepared, captain, to give up all hope of returning to our shipmates?"
21710As to what the Almighty will do or wo n''t do, how can I tell?
21710But Bearpaw is also just; he will let the men of the sea speak in their own defence now that I am here to interpret?"
21710But how was he to get at the seal with a club?
21710But what about the hair?"
21710But what makes you want to wash the rabbit, my boy?"
21710But what of our future movements?
21710But will our guests not stay with us till the hard frosts set in?"
21710Ca n''t we undo the strands an''make small cord?
21710Can any one wonder that marvellous tales of the sea were told that night round the fires at supper- time?
21710Can you wonder that I fled from the horrible spot; that I left my native land for ever; and that I shudder at the very thought of strife?"
21710Common sense, from the beginning of time, has told us the same thing, but what does man do?
21710Could his white brother be jesting?
21710Could it be?
21710D''ye mean the one lyin''to wind''ard o''that cliff shaped like the side of a Dutch galliot?"
21710D''ye think a stout man like me can sup heartily on rabbit bones?"
21710D''ye think you could manage to git on my back?"
21710Did not Strongbow and his braves find the dead body of Little Beaver bruised and broken?
21710Did she not see it with her own eyes?
21710Did they not see his black dog in the paleface camp, and has not Rising Sun disappeared like the early frost before the sun?
21710Did they take his scalp?"
21710Did you not say only last night that there is nothing like practice to make perfect?"
21710Did you obtain him from them?"
21710Did you, father?"
21710Do I guess rightly in supposing that the teaching of it to your wife and children was the means?"
21710Do n''t you think so, Paul?"
21710Do they admit that they did?"
21710Do you mean to deny, Master Trench, that some of your late crew were very good fellows?
21710Do you see it?"
21710Does not Rising Sun know it?
21710Does not that signify completeness in the spread of knowledge?
21710Have you got flint and steel in your pocket, Master Trench?"
21710Have you not heard of this writing-- that` the knowledge of the Lord shall cover the earth as the waters cover the sea?''
21710He had often tried it in Old England; why not try it in Newfoundland?
21710How can I take comfort in unfulfilled promises?
21710How do you propose to proceed?"
21710I drop the Swinton law of might being right, and ask you who are now the law- makers-- which is it to be-- kindness or cruelty?"
21710If hard work, hard fare, and hard fortune are trying even to good men and true, what must they be to bad men and false?
21710If not, why is it recorded as a blessed state of things to which we may look forward, and towards which we may strive?
21710If they never saw Rising Sun, why did she not come back to us and tell what had happened?
21710In what sense is God a` refuge''to us-- or` strength,''or a` present help''?
21710Is all quiet and peaceful among his friends?"
21710Is n''t that so, boys?"
21710Look here, do n''t you admit that God created all men and_ sent_ them into this world?"
21710Look there, d''ye see that small island lyin''close to the shore with several seals''heads appearin''in the channel between?"
21710May I count on you?"
21710May she not be saved by the same Power that drags the tiger of the lower ranks-- both male and female-- from the pit?"
21710Missed it?
21710Need we add that the work went on merrily now that the wanderers had returned?
21710Now what I want to know is, d''ye think God will forgive_ me_?"
21710Now, if the Great Spirit could pardon the guilty and set them free, would it be wrong in Bearpaw to follow His example?"
21710Now, lads, you understand what you''ve got to do?"
21710See you yonder bluff with the bush on the top of it?"
21710Shall we be forced to give in an''''bout ship?"
21710Well, mate, how d''ye feel now?"
21710What I was a- goin''to say is, are you an''the other lads ready to follow me into the woods an''bolt if we can, or fight to the death if we ca n''t?"
21710What are ye laughin''at?"
21710What can I do, Olly?
21710What can I do?"
21710What d''ee say to try, lads?"
21710What d''ye think o''that?"
21710What did the palefaces do?
21710What if the stem should sink further and flatten us?"
21710What may it be-- if I may presume to ask?"
21710What more have you to say?"
21710What say you, Hendrick?"
21710What say you?"
21710What say_ you_, Olly?"
21710What was he to do?
21710What''s Blazer about?"
21710Where is she?
21710Why did she not return?
21710Will you sit down beside us and share our meal, while I answer your questions?"
21710Will you walk with me while we talk?"
21710Wo n''t_ you_ do it, Lord?"
21710Would it be the first time that men have been killed in a good cause?"
21710You had a deal of talking about navigation, had you not, before you understood it?"
21710You''ll join us in that, Grummidge, wo n''t you?
21710and have not woods-- generally got lakes in''em and rivers which usually swarm with provisions?"
21710asked Oliver, with that pert cock of the head peculiar to insolent youths;"a yard, or a fathom?"
21710asked the captain;"it is not dirty?"
21710cried Oliver;"but what has Master Hendrick got to say to it?"
21710d''ye mean that men are sent by the Almighty whether they go to do good or evil?"
21710d''ye think we are to be frightened by a sprinkling of snow?"
21710did you live on nothing?"
21710do n''t you see he must have tumbled over the cliff?"
21710he gasped,"are you there?"
21710how goes it?
21710is there no deliverance, no hope for this poor world?"
21710returned the captain, with some severity;"are these not` arms''?
21710singe off wet hair?
21710steal the ship?"
21710what shall I say?
21710without arms or provisions, father?"
44037''And what did they tell you?'' 44037 ''And what is it?''
44037''Can we cross by the ice?'' 44037 ''Did you meet the fairies to- night?''
44037''Did you say_ green_ silk thread or_ blue_?'' 44037 ''Did you, now?''
44037''Do you, now?'' 44037 ''Has you got a knife?''
44037''Has you got a loaded gun?'' 44037 ''Has you got a razor?''
44037''Has you got a strange man aboard?'' 44037 ''Have you got a fish t''trade?''
44037''Is it razors you want?'' 44037 ''Is this pan turning round?''
44037''John, b''y, is you below?'' 44037 ''John, b''y,''a strange voice called,''is you below?''
44037''Low we''ll get one the day, sir?
44037''Strikes what?'' 44037 ''Why?''
44037An''Billy?
44037An''did you find the cigars, skipper?
44037An''was they good? 44037 An''what rock''s this?"
44037An''you''ll not be takin''the punt t''the grounds?
44037And nobody knows who put it there?
44037And you''ll take good care?
44037And you''re bound for home, now?
44037And you''ve never been there?
44037Archie?
44037Are we losing, sir?
44037Are you happy, dear?
44037Aye?
44037B''y,Billy shouted,"is you dead?"
44037B''y,said Ride, with a gesture towards the mail- bag,"will you carry that bag to Ruddy Cove?
44037Be there a letter for me?
44037Billy what?
44037But we may make it, mate,said the captain,"if----""Ay, sir?"
44037But what did you ship him for, captain, if you knew that?
44037But what''s up? 44037 But where is I?"
44037But, Bill,said the captain, hopelessly,"you did n''t_ count_ the tows?"
44037But,he added,"you would n''t advise heavin''to, would you?"
44037Ca n''t we run for it, sir?
44037Can you take us there?
44037Captain,the boy whispered,"let the other kid come along, wo n''t you?"
44037Come, now, who''s going with me in the boat t''tow?
44037D''you mind? 44037 Did you make the count alone?"
44037Did you see me? 44037 Did you see me?
44037Did you see what I done?
44037Do they say that?
44037Do you know the bearings?
44037Do you think he_ can_ make trouble?
44037Do you think you now know the difference between a man and a tailor''s lay- figure?
44037Doctor,said the stranger,"how did they know that you were in distress?"
44037Does you hear me?
44037Does you see water beyond, b''y?
44037Does you see where the arrow points?
44037Due west, lads-- a mile or more off?
44037Ever hear it? 44037 Got back?"
44037Got that kid?
44037H- h- h- how l- l- long you been h- h- here?
44037Had Skipper Job gone below again? 44037 Has you been touchin''them flags?"
44037Hear that, b''y?
44037How else can you account for that ring? 44037 How''s the ice?"
44037Is I goin''WHAT, sir?
44037Is I goin''WHAT?
44037Is it t''snow, or is it not? 44037 Is n''t you got a salmon net off Shag Rock?"
44037Is that a fire?
44037Is the water gainin'', b''y?
44037Is they just like squids?
44037Is you goin''inside the ice, sir?
44037Is you ready?
44037Is you sure he''s dead?
44037Letters, is it? 44037 Men,"he cried,"did you ever see a sky like that?"
44037Now how do I happen to be sitting here?
44037Now, what did he do that for?
44037Oh, well,the skipper broke in from his place in a bunk,"how could I tell that he was mad?"
44037P- p- pretty cold, i- i- isn''t it?
44037See anything yet?
44037See that berg, b''y?
44037Shore or ice?
44037Skipper,he demanded,"where is we?"
44037So you did get out to the salmon net?
44037Sorry?
44037Spanish gold or English?
44037Sure, why?
44037Surprised? 44037 Take us, wo n''t you, please?"
44037Tell me, now,he said, when the boy reached his side,"can you go aloft?"
44037The dory?
44037Then the place is n''t well known?
44037Think you''ll share with the crew, Billy?
44037This?
44037Tibb''s Eve?
44037Topsail,he demanded,"what you been doin''back there?"
44037Turned turtle, ai n''t she?
44037Tuttle?
44037Well, b''y,he cried,"how do you like the sealin''v''y''ge?"
44037Well, b''y,was what he said to Archie,"you''re back, is you?"
44037Well, sir?
44037Well, we_ were_, were n''t we?
44037Well?
44037What does he do with his beak?
44037What had I? 44037 What in the world is this thing?"
44037What is it, Eli?
44037What luck?
44037What was it?
44037What you laughin''at?
44037What''s become of the gale?
44037What''s in there, Tom?
44037What''s it like inside?
44037What''s it like?
44037What''s that in the tickle?
44037What''s that patch o''black?
44037What''s that, now?
44037What''s that?
44037What''s that?
44037What''s the matter, cap''n?
44037What''s this, b''y?
44037What''s this? 44037 What''s this?"
44037What?
44037When?
44037Where is it?
44037Where is you? 44037 Where you going?"
44037Which?
44037Who called me a thief?
44037Who shipped you?
44037Who''s crazy?
44037Who''s mad, now? 44037 Will she make it, think you?"
44037Will you not carry the mail t''Ruddy Cove, Saul Ride?
44037Will you take it t''Ruddy Cove t''-night? 44037 Wo n''t us, lad?"
44037Wo n''t you try, b''y?
44037Wo n''t you?
44037You''re from Ruddy Cove?
44037*****"Be the mail come?"
44037A whale?
44037Ackell?"
44037Ackell?"
44037Ackell?"
44037An''----""Growlers?"
44037An''you''ll be a good b''y''til I gets back?"
44037And do you know how I come to be away up here?
44037And so, for your good, and for their good, and for the good of the firm, I have decided that you may----""That I may go?"
44037And what flag did they fly?
44037But had he arched his back?
44037But what?
44037But where was Deep Down?
44037But where was the brow of the cliff?
44037But where was the hummock?
44037But whose?
44037But, Skipper, do n''t you think you might have given me a chance to do something for myself?"
44037Ca n''t_ you_ tell why?
44037Can you answer me that?
44037Can you answer that?"
44037Come, now, what''s the_ truth_ o''all this?"
44037Could he cross on them?
44037Could he endure until night?
44037Customer?
44037Danger?
44037Did he not owe a duty to his mother-- to himself?
44037Does you hear me?
44037Does you not know what that is?
44037Eh?
44037Eh?
44037Give up?
44037Had Eli Zitt''s little partner got back from Fortune Harbour?
44037Had he not watched the course of that selfsame flood?
44037Had his father and Bill Watt escaped from the floe by some new opening?
44037Had she survived?
44037Have n''t you heard them?
44037Have you got that pick and shovel, Billy?
44037He was preparing to attack again, when--"What''s that?"
44037Hear me?"
44037How did I get shut in there?
44037How is you, b''y?"
44037How many other such letters might there not be in that bag for the mothers and fathers of the northern ports?
44037How was Bobby to be found in that great shadow?
44037How was he to get the boy ashore?
44037If his father and Bill Watt managed to get to the edge of the ice afoot, who else was to take them off?
44037In either event, what chance would there be for the men?
44037In the first event, which was almost inevitable, what chance would there be for the_ Dictator_ herself?
44037In what way could relief come to him?
44037Is n''t Cape Grief close to leeward?
44037Is you afraid, b''y?"
44037Is you-- is you-- all right, Bobby?"
44037Like a woman''s voice?
44037Might not the storm abate?
44037Might not the wind change?
44037Might not they be picked up?
44037No?
44037Oh, where is you, lad?"
44037Or was Bill changing his place?
44037Or were they floating free?
44037Or would he come aft?
44037See them?"
44037Struck it rich?
44037That''s odd, is n''t it?
44037The Wrecker, Old Moll or Deep Down?
44037Then, why should he be?
44037There he must stand until-- who could tell?
44037This is it: If you had a bottle of ginger ale, how would you get the stuff out without breaking the bottle or drawing the cork?
44037Try it again?
44037Twelve o''clock?
44037Until the punts came down to his aid?
44037Was he a match for a powerful Newfoundland dog?
44037Was he afraid of drowning?
44037Was it Billy Topsail?
44037Was it Josiah Seaworthy?
44037Was it a rescue, or was it not?
44037Was it a wing?
44037Was it not his duty to beat home?
44037Was the wind deceiving him?
44037Were these masses of ice connected deep down under water?
44037Were they all well at home?
44037Were they safe at home?
44037Were they still on the floe?
44037What could he do?
44037What d''ye make o''that?"
44037What did it all mean?
44037What do you think of your shipmates?"
44037What had become of Tom?
44037What if Billy had left the mail- bag to soak and sink in the waters of the bay?
44037What if he had failed in his duty to the people?
44037What if it laid hold of the punt?
44037What if the squid were alive, after all?
44037What is it you want?''
44037What possessed the dog?
44037What sealing captain would take a lad of fifteen when there were grown men to be shipped?
44037What was he to do if she had been too heavily weighted?
44037What was it?
44037What was it?
44037What was the call?
44037What was the matter with the man?
44037What were they calling to him?
44037What''s the weather?"
44037Where is you?"
44037Where was the rodney?
44037Where was the ship?
44037Which one of the three rocks that lay in a line off Iron Head?
44037Who could hear his cries for help?
44037Who took the odd six?"
44037Who was in the water off Iron Head?
44037Who was it?
44037Who was to see?
44037Who''s crazy?"
44037Why did he go about with a sneer or a frown forever on his face?
44037Why did the captain flush and bristle when Tuttle came near?
44037Why did the crew seem to expect him to"do"something?
44037Why expose the lazy, fat, old fellow, with his shaky legs and broken teeth, to an attack in force by the pack of a strange harbour?
44037Why had he boasted of his wealth?
44037Why should it be best for me?
44037Why was he not like all the rest of the crew?
44037Why was his father so grave?
44037Will it break, or wo n''t it?''
44037Will----""Will you carry Her Majesty''s mail t''Ruddy Cove?"
44037Would he guide them to the cave at Little Tickle Basin?
44037Would it stop altogether?
44037Would the ship be locked in?
44037Would they break beneath him?
44037Would they break near at hand?
44037Would they find me at all?
44037Would they find me in time?
44037[ 4] Do n''t you see the chance the barbed steel hooks and the forty fathom of line gave me?
44037now,"the old fellow repeated, with a wink of mystery,"_ was n''t_ they good?"
44037or its Norwegian equivalent?
20242A Power that takes care of us?
20242After that, what?
20242And why not a little farther,said Raed,"if the weather was good, and we met with no accident?
20242Another walrus, did you say?
20242Are there volcanoes on these straits, suppose?
20242Are we in any danger of Cape Race?
20242Are you sure it''s not breakers?
20242Besides, how are we to get off the island here, supposing''The Curlew''should not come back? 20242 Burn?
20242But how about the birds, the eider- ducks and kittiwakes?
20242But how about their boat?
20242But how are we to go aboard, sir?
20242But how did you come to meet the Huskies?
20242But how far did they chase you?
20242But how long do you suppose it_ will_ take to work up there with ordinary weather?
20242But is there really any bottom to it?
20242But not before you''ve ben ter brackfus'', sar?
20242But those explosions!--how would you account for those?
20242But what shall we have for fuel?
20242But where is the south pole?
20242But where''s the fire and smoke?
20242But where''s your salt coming from?
20242But where''s your_ new species_?
20242But would it not have been far better to have come over here and asked them kindly for what we wanted?
20242But, Kit, if''The Curlew''should n''t make its appearance, do you believe we could get down to Nain, or any of those Esquimau coast- villages?
20242But, captain, what can we do?
20242Ca n''t we devise a plan to capture it?
20242Ca n''t we frighten them out of it in some way?
20242Can he get near enough to kill them with a pole, suppose?
20242Can we do that?
20242Can you give us the latitude?
20242Captain, what do you think of that animal?
20242Captain, will you please bring up a couple of those long bars of iron and three or four yards of red flannel? 20242 Could n''t it, Wade?"
20242Could n''t you see that?
20242Did it hit the seal?
20242Did n''t you see the rumpus?
20242Did they come so near you as that?
20242Did you come upon them? 20242 Did you fire a musket?"
20242Did you fire at the eagle?
20242Did you see it fly up from the top of the berg, Weymouth?
20242Do n''t you see that great black_ bunch_ lying among the ice there?
20242Do you really think of going up there another season?
20242Do you really think so?
20242Do you suppose they really have hostile intentions?
20242Do you suppose we shall be much seasick?
20242Do you think so?
20242Donovan?
20242Fire? 20242 Got one?"
20242Had n''t we better get out of sight?
20242Had n''t we better try to beat out of the straits into the open sea again, clear of the land and ice?
20242Half a mile?
20242Has he made any demonstrations?
20242Has it ever occurred to any of you that we none of us know anything about sailing a vessel?--anything to speak of, I mean?
20242Have another?
20242Have you any idea where we are, captain?
20242Have you got the boat there?
20242How about a fire?
20242How about drink?
20242How came that aboard?
20242How can we find out? 20242 How deep is it here, for a guess?"
20242How do I know that you''re not a set of pirates?
20242How do they go?
20242How do we know that some party of Huskies or Indians has not been watching our movements all day?
20242How do you account for this_ dipping_ of the needle?
20242How do you explain it, captain?
20242How far do you suppose it is out to those towns, Nain, say, from here, for a guess?
20242How far off?
20242How long do you set it?
20242How long will this walrus last for firewood, suppose?
20242How long would it take us, do you suppose?
20242How many cartridges in all?
20242How many do you make out in the big boat?
20242How many miles a day could we make, besides hunting and getting our food?
20242How, for Heaven''s sake, did that ship come to get up so near before they saw her?
20242Hurt you much, Bonney?
20242I do n''t gen''ly give advice to my betters,he began, with a hitch at his trousers;"but"--"You''d be getting out of this?"
20242I suppose so rigid a republican as Raed will be willing to have it decided by vote?
20242Is it a big gale?
20242Is it because they resemble buttons?
20242Is it possible that people live there? 20242 Is n''t there a town out on the Atlantic coast of Labrador, a town or a village, settled by the Moravian missionaries?"
20242Is that so?
20242Is that the cape, captain?
20242Is that the way you explain it?
20242Is the ship on fire?
20242It is now considered to be the same thing as electricity, is it not?
20242It''s a white- headed eagle, is n''t it?
20242It''s not an Esquimau dog, is it?
20242It''s the sea on the rocks,--those cliffs,--isn''t it?
20242It''s too large for a_ fisher_, is n''t it? 20242 Keeps watch here while you are off?"
20242Kit, what do you think of the chance of our getting off from here?
20242Noise?
20242Now, which are the prettiest ones?
20242Possible they''ve got such a breeze as that down there? 20242 Question arises, Can we eat him?
20242Question now arises,Raed resumed,"What shall we do with this money?
20242Raed, will you act as leader, or captain?
20242Raed?
20242Rather trying to a fellow''s philosophy, is n''t it?
20242Ready to cook those eggs, Weymouth?
20242Rumpus?
20242Same creature that the old writers call a_ morse_, is n''t it?
20242Seriously, what do you expect we can get hold of for grub, Raed?
20242Shall we call the other young gentlemen?
20242Shall we let him come aboard, sir?
20242So red as this?
20242Suppose he saw us,--saw the schooner?
20242Suppose the captain is lucky enough to get away from them: how long do you think it will be before he will get back here for us?
20242Suppose they are calling to us?
20242That so? 20242 That so?"
20242That stopped you, I suppose?
20242That''s the way it looks; is n''t it, captain?
20242That''s what you call a''sure shot,''is it,sneered Wade,--"that one you fired at the bear?
20242The Huskies trying to surprise us?
20242Then this low land to the south- west of us is Cape Chidleigh, is it not?
20242Then what are the chances of her getting back here for us?
20242Then what is it, for pity sake?
20242Then you advise us to invest in this?
20242Then you are not disappointed in my''principles,''as you choose to term them?
20242There must be a great fire somewhere round: do n''t you think so, sir?
20242There wo n''t be much bread, to be sure; but then a fellow can live on eggs and birds, ca n''t he?
20242Think so?
20242Think so?
20242To what sort of property do you refer?
20242Too deep for cod- fishing here?
20242Trull,said the captain to that old worthy, who was just poking his head up out of the forecastle,--"Trull, is that noise the surf?"
20242Wade?
20242Was n''t that our howitzer?
20242Was n''t that the bear?
20242Wash?
20242We ought to treat them, had n''t we?
20242Well, I expect it; and who''ll be to blame for that? 20242 Well, ai n''t it, captain?"
20242Well, boys, what sort of a dry storm have you been having here?
20242Well, how''s this matter to be settled?
20242Well, what does he say?
20242Well, what in the world is it, then?
20242Well, what next, Palmleaf?
20242Well, what next? 20242 Well, what was_ that_, then?"
20242Well, what''s that?
20242Well, what''s the word for child?
20242Well, why not let her go so?
20242Well,said he,"waiving that subject, what say for going as far north as Hudson Straits, if everything should work favorably?"
20242Weymouth?
20242What ails you?
20242What are they dragging, I wonder?
20242What are you running from?
20242What became of my musket?
20242What could possess him to go so far?
20242What did you fire at?
20242What do you propose?
20242What does he want?
20242What does that mean?
20242What in the world does_ karrack_ mean?
20242What is it? 20242 What is there so attractive about Hudson Bay?
20242What kind of an animal was that?
20242What name?
20242What name?
20242What of that? 20242 What of that?"
20242What say for shortening sail, or standing up nearer the islands, and laying to for the night?
20242What say to that, Trull?
20242What say, Raed? 20242 What say, fellows?"
20242What shall we do with_ it_?
20242What shall_ we_ be able to do the first week out, especially if it be rough weather?
20242What ship is that, anyway?
20242What ship is that?
20242What the dickens is up now?
20242What then?
20242What think of those fellows? 20242 What think of''em?"
20242What was that, Trull?
20242What was your old name?
20242What''s all that beastly noise about?
20242What''s her name?
20242What''s his name?
20242What''s that about Esquimau?
20242What''s that for?
20242What''s that noise?
20242What''s that, sir?
20242What''s the row?
20242What''s the word for egg?
20242What''s to be done?
20242What''s up, I wonder?
20242What''s up?
20242What, for Heaven''s sake, is that?
20242What, for thunder sake, do they keep so many dogs for?
20242What_ is it_?
20242Where are your eyes there, forward?
20242Where bound? 20242 Where bound?"
20242Where is he?
20242Where is this Back- bay land?
20242Where is''The Curlew''_ now_?
20242Where''s your bear?
20242Where''s your hooks?
20242Where''s your land?
20242Which are the belles? 20242 Which is which?
20242Who goes on the bear- hunt, and who stays?
20242Who''ll take the first shot?
20242Why are they called''Button Isles''on the chart?
20242Why do n''t you heave to?
20242Why does he not keep these he has?
20242Why does he want a new crew?
20242Why need we leave them here?
20242Why not? 20242 Why not?"
20242Why should it rush in here with so much greater violence than it does down on the coast of Massachusetts or at Long Branch?
20242Why, you do n''t doubt your ability to win the affections of a Husky belle, do you?
20242Will it burn?
20242Will it not be best and safest,Raed argued,"to have her strengthened with cross- beams and braces?
20242Will you come off now?
20242Wonder if our proper name,_ Morse_, is from that?
20242Yes: who fired that last shot?
20242Yes; how about that walrus?
20242Yes; how''s that in your eye?
20242Yes; where''s your fuel?
20242You did n''t kill any of them, did you?
20242You did?
20242You do n''t call that a ship- of- war?
20242You do n''t doubt that their coming off is from friendly motives, captain?
20242You do n''t suppose the day of judgment has come and caught us away up here in Hudson''s Straits, do you?
20242You do n''t suppose the rascal''s got lost, do you?
20242You do n''t suppose they are after Palmleaf, do you?
20242You have no doubt he will come back if he can?
20242You noticed what he said about knocking the impudence out of us?
20242You paid the most of your''''tention''to them, then?
20242You sick?
20242You''re all there, are n''t ye? 20242 _ Chymo?_"said Raed interrogatively.
20242_ Ik pee- o askut ammee pussay!_"Any idea what he said?
20242_ Karrack?_queried he.
20242_ Kina?_I asked.
20242_ Kina?_he asked, taking it.
20242("What is it?")
20242Ai n''t those geese?"
20242Are n''t those the beauties?
20242But Bonney, old boy, what''s the matter with your arm?"
20242But how have you fared?
20242By and by the skipper looks down to inquire,"Sick here, anybody?"
20242Can the schooner be brought round, and the boat manned for that purpose?"
20242D''ye mind what a thundering noise that ice made?"
20242Did ever anybody hear of their being eaten?"
20242Did n''t see any thing of the evergreen sort among the rocks, did you, Wash?"
20242Do n''t you remember it, Wash?"
20242Do n''t you see how the ship''s closing in?"
20242Do you not believe in an allwise Providence?"
20242H----?"
20242Hear how he wagged his tongue to me?"
20242How about dinner?
20242How far did you go?"
20242How is that?"
20242How would it begin?
20242How would your sisters bear it?"
20242How''s that under your wool?"
20242I suppose there will be no great danger in letting down the boat as soon as it gets fairly light, will there, captain?
20242If everything went well, why not sail on up to the entrance of Hudson Straits, and get a peep at the Esquimaux?"
20242Is it fit to eat?
20242Is it safe to trust him off the ship?"
20242Is n''t it, now?
20242Is n''t there something?"
20242It is n''t fire, is it?"
20242Kina?
20242Let''s see: what was her name?"
20242Mazard will come back?"
20242Mind who that was, Raed?"
20242Neither could any of us, though we looked all around us very earnestly; till Donovan suddenly cried out,--"Why not burn the old sea- horse?"
20242Presently Wade lies down on his mattress, and I immediately ask,--"Much sick, Wade?"
20242Putrid, is n''t it?
20242The question now arose with us, Should we allow them to go according to their habit?
20242Those two back in the stern next to old ghoul- face-- how do those strike you?
20242Wade then gave_ Wunchee_(?)
20242Well, I mean civilized folks; ship''s crews?"
20242Well, how do you do?"
20242What are we to do meanwhile?--wait for it?"
20242What are you doing here?"
20242What can be the inducements?"
20242What could it be?
20242What did the women do?"
20242What do you see?"
20242What had I done in the world to deserve any thing by way of a line of praise or a tear of pity?
20242What have you got for a slow match?"
20242What is it?
20242What is it?"
20242What say to beginning our career as conquerors by subjugating that island of Esquimaux, and levying a seal- tax?
20242What say, boys?--shall we let them come aboard and take us?"
20242What was that?"
20242What would they say of_ me_?
20242What would your mother say?
20242What''s our latitude this morning?"
20242What''s that?
20242What''s to be done for water?"
20242What''s to be done, captain?"
20242Where''s a match?"
20242Why did n''t Guard notice it?
20242Why is it that a person standing near a gun-- especially a heavy gun-- can never see what execution is done during the first second or two?
20242Why not buy gold?"
20242Why should n''t it burn as well as a candle?"
20242Wo n''t he take to the water, and stay under any length of time?"
20242Would it be possible?"
20242Would they understand by our using the word_ kina_, do you suppose?"
20242You could n''t see that, could you, captain?"
20242You see?"
20242_ Bang!_"That''s a pleasant sound for us, is n''t it, now?"
20242cried Wade excitedly, catching at the last word:"did you say_ fire_?"
20242did you not hear that splashing noise that followed the explosion?"
20242did you see the black one jump at him?
20242exclaimed Raed;"how are we to get''em aboard?
20242exclaimed the captain,"I thought electricity was"--"Well, what?"
20242or did they come upon you?"
20242or even suppose she should?
20242was the question that would keep constantly recurring, followed by a still more ominous query,"What would become of us if she should not return?"
20242what is it?"
20242what''s the matter?"
29130''And will you never care to return to the grounds you have hunted from childhood?'' 29130 ''Ave yer, now?"
29130''Danger?'' 29130 ''Do you think there is danger?''
29130''Have you come to take the life of this man?'' 29130 ''Is he alone?''
29130''Ow would you get there quickest if yer''ad to?
29130''Shall I go alone, sir?'' 29130 ''Twas not so hard, was it, b''y?"
29130''What business, then, lies between us? 29130 ''What have we to talk about?''
29130''What''s this about, Landley?'' 29130 ''What?''
29130''Who is there?'' 29130 ''Who''s there?''
29130''Will you give him to us in peace and forget that he has gone with us?'' 29130 ''Will you give the murderer of my child to our tribe?''
29130''Will you take his life because of that?'' 29130 ''You will lay waste the fort,''said the interpreter''s daughter,''but will the ruins not accuse you to the great company which this man serves?''
29130An''do you see the beast with the black eye?
29130An''tell me, George Rumm, is_ I_ ever been cotched?
29130An''where,the skipper asked, quietly,"did you put the powder?"
29130Are you all right, Donald?
29130Armstrong& Company, Junior?
29130Ay, sir?
29130Ay?
29130Ay?
29130Back from Ruddy Cove?
29130Be you goin'', b''y?
29130Billy, b''y, where is you?
29130Billy,Donald North asked, at last,"what you goin''t''do with your part o''the money we''ll make at tradin''?"
29130But,thought Archie,"why cut one''s hands when it is so easy to throw a jacket over the glass and save the pain?"
29130But,thought Archie,"why tunnel them when it is possible to leap over them?"
29130Can you reach the ice alone?
29130Can you swim?
29130Come back, will you?
29130Could it be Right- In- the- Way?
29130Dickering?
29130Did you not hear it?
29130Did you, now?
29130Do the prisoners never escape?
29130Do you care for a run ashore?
29130Do you know the Kurepain, sir?
29130Do you see that, Jimmie, b''y?
29130Do you think,Sir Archibald went on, with a little grin,"that Mrs. Skipper William would care to take him in?"
29130Do you think,said Billy, indignantly,"that I''d have risked the schooner that way if''twas a full keg?"
29130Does n''t you think, Jim, that we could manage it-- if we tried wonderful hard?
29130Does you hear the breakers?
29130Does you t- t- think you c- c-_can_ haul her off with your teeth?
29130Doubt?
29130Eh, b''y?
29130Eh? 29130 Eh?"
29130Empty-- an empty keg?
29130Fair against the forecastle bulkhead?
29130Father,said Jimmie, one night, when the man was putting him to bed,"how long will it be afore that there Kurepain comes?"
29130Goin''aboard the_ Black Eagle_?
29130Goin''north?
29130H- h- how?
29130Have you ever been to Saint Pierre?
29130Have you fathomed it?
29130Have you, now?
29130Have you, now?
29130Hook''s? 29130 How far for''ard?"
29130How long have you knowed Sir Archibald?
29130How much do you want?
29130How much is it, son?
29130How will you go about it?
29130How''d you come out here?
29130How''s she headin''now?
29130How''s that bank- account holding out?
29130How''s the weather?
29130How''s the wind?
29130How''s this?
29130I know it, dad,Archie began eagerly,"but----""Will you compete with them?"
29130I say, mister,he added, between munches,"which way would yer say my''ome was from''ere?"
29130I say, mister,piped Bagg, when the old man came abreast,"which way''s''ome from''ere?"
29130I say, mister,said Bagg, briskly, addressing old John Forsyth,"yer''aven''t got no''am,''ave yer?"
29130I say, mister,said Bagg,"which way was you tellin''me Lun''on was from''ere?"
29130I say,he added,"which way''s''ome from''ere?"
29130I says,he repeated, quietly,"does you think that net''s in danger?"
29130I wonders where?
29130Is he dead?
29130Is it she?
29130Is it you, Archie?
29130Is monsieur in earnest?
29130Is that the_ Black Eagle_ at the wharf?
29130Is that you, b''y?
29130Is that you, father?
29130Is the wind in the west?
29130Is there a small pan of ice on your side?
29130Is there any doubt about it?
29130Is you ready?
29130Is you the owner o''this here craft? 29130 Is you thinkin''t''drive me by makin''fun o''me?"
29130Is you''Zekiel Rideout''s lad?
29130Is_ you_ able t''see Mad Mull?
29130It is the only security you have?
29130Jimmie, b''y, is you dead? 29130 Know Sir Archibald_ well_?"
29130Little Pony or Big?
29130Monsieur, how could you suggest it? 29130 No chance, sir?"
29130Nothing more, son?
29130Now we got her,Skipper Bill laughed,"what''ll we do with her?"
29130Now, I wonder where he is?
29130Off an''on for about sixteen years, I''low?
29130Or is it Mind- Your- Eye Point?
29130Or nothink else,''ave yer?
29130Pretty intimate, eh?
29130Robbers?
29130Shall I arst the ol''beggar when''e gets''ere?
29130Shall I give you a-- well-- a receipt-- or a note-- or anything like that?
29130Skipper''s back, too, eh?
29130Skipper,said Sir Archibald, presently,"you''ll be wanting this craft insured, I suppose?"
29130Still?
29130Sure, b''y, you''ll go along with me, will you not?
29130Sure, then, you''ll not be goin'', b''y?
29130Sure?
29130Th- th_ what_?
29130That way?
29130The same being?
29130Then you do not?
29130Then you want credit?
29130Think I do n''t know how t''get around in a rodney?
29130Think a bloke could ever get there?
29130This yer''_ ome_?
29130Tom,said the skipper, presently, to the first hand,"was it you stowed the cargo?"
29130Was they_ wild_ Indians?
29130Well, son,he sighed,"what you think about that net?"
29130Well, well?
29130Well?
29130Well?
29130Well?
29130Wh- wh- what, sir?
29130Wh- wh- what_ for_?
29130Wh- wh- where''ave we got to?
29130What do Uncle Tommy Luff say?
29130What do you make of it, Bill?
29130What do you make of it, Tommy?
29130What do you see?
29130What does the pig of a Newfoundlander say?
29130What does the pig say, monsieur?
29130What for?
29130What has happened?
29130What is it, b''y?
29130What is it?
29130What is it?
29130What kind of advertising?
29130What was that?
29130What you boys doin''out there?
29130What you goin''t''do with your share, Jimmie?
29130What you goin''t''do with yours, Donald?
29130What you laughing at, dad?
29130What you laughing at?
29130What you stoppin''for?
29130What''s Cap''n Hand thinkin''about?
29130What''s he talkin''about?
29130What''s queer?
29130What''s that?
29130What''s that?
29130What''s that?
29130What''s the matter now?
29130What''s the matter with the fire- box?
29130What''s the matter, anyhow?
29130What''s the security?
29130What''s the weather?
29130What''s this foolery?
29130What''s this?
29130What''s this?
29130What''s up, skipper?
29130What, man? 29130 What?"
29130What?
29130When,demanded Sir Archibald, pausing abruptly in his walk--"when do you propose to liquidate this debt?"
29130Where do you live?
29130Where to?
29130Where you goin''t''get the stock?
29130Where''s Archie?
29130Where''s that young scamp?
29130Where''s your home?
29130Which way, mister?
29130Who''s clerk?
29130Who''s that?
29130Who''s what, man? 29130 Why do n''t you go to law for your own?"
29130Why do you ask?
29130Will he live?
29130Will he not tell the pig of a Newfoundlander that he shall have no breakfast?
29130Will that fetch''em aboard?
29130Will you not run up a topsail?
29130Will you try it now, b''y?
29130With three hundred quintals of fish in her hold, I suppose?
29130With_ my_ skill, monsieur? 29130 Wo n''t ye go, b''y?"
29130You blokes live''ere?
29130You know the nature of this obligation?
29130You mean Skipper''Zekiel''s cottage?
29130You never leaped afore, did you?
29130You perfectly understand the terms?
29130You were n''t_ afraid_ of him, were you?
29130You''aven''t gone an''lost your way,''ave you?
29130You''ve settled at Ruddy Cove, skipper?
29130_ Care?_Skipper Bill exclaimed.
29130_ Was_ I?
29130_ You''ll_ go along, will ye?
29130''From what?''
29130''Have you come to rob the great company of its goods?''
29130''Is that all the trouble?''
29130''What have you done?''
29130''What is that last total?
29130''What trouble have you got yourself into now?''
29130''Where?''
29130''Would you, then, have him break faith with some other?
29130A prowling dog?
29130A yard or a mile away?
29130Am I the man to break my word?''
29130And if he could not get ashore himself, how could he help Bagg ashore?
29130And what if folk did suspect?
29130And what was the_ Spot Cash_ to do?
29130And when old Tom Tulk came into harbour with a mysterious load of fish who would suspect him?
29130And_ who_ was n''t?
29130Be that lad out yet?"
29130But how beach her?
29130But how charter her?
29130But how could he help him?
29130But how did they know my name?"
29130But how?
29130But to what purpose?
29130But was it the_ Grand Lake_?
29130But what did it mean to Armstrong& Company?
29130But what was left to think?
29130But would it really be an island, whereon a man might crawl out of reach of the sea?
29130But would she make the Chunks before she was ablaze from stem to stern?
29130But_ was_ the market at three thirty- five?
29130By selling at less than cost and buying at more than the market price?
29130By what unhappy chance had Deschamps come upon this visitation?
29130Can we make it in a night?"
29130Could Tommy Bull and the crew be trusted?
29130Could it have been the silence of Skipper Bill?
29130Credit?
29130Cut prices on flour, pork, sugar and tea?
29130Did you say I was t''be cured?"
29130Dirty weather?
29130Do you follow?"
29130Do you think I care what becomes o''me now?
29130Do you think I do n''t care whether I do my duty or not?
29130Does you think the net is safe?"
29130Does you think you''re strong enough to take the oars an''let me go ashore?"
29130Eh, father?
29130Flour and pork and sugar and tea?
29130For if he breaks it once, will he not break it again?
29130Had Tom Tulk played false?
29130Had n''t the_ Black Eagle_ later information?
29130Had not Sir Archibald already given him his last warning?
29130Had not Sir Archibald said so?
29130Has he not done so?''
29130Have you never, in deep darkness, suddenly felt a loss of power to keep your equilibrium?
29130He was bitten by a dog, was he not?
29130He''d take the_ Black Eagle_ t''sea in the mornin''?
29130Hear me?"
29130Hear_ what_?"
29130His father not play fair?
29130His honour?
29130How could he help Bagg?
29130If a small venture could succeed, why should n''t a larger one?
29130If he could not row ashore, how could he manage to swim ashore?
29130If he should yield up the white man, what security would you have that he would provide for you through the next hard season?''
29130If it had cured millions( and apparently it had), why should n''t it cure little Jimmie Grimm?
29130In the name of wonder, man, Hook''s what?"
29130In which direction would it be best to strike out?
29130Is I t''be cured?"
29130Is I t''be cured?"
29130Is n''t you Ezekiel Rideout''s boy?"
29130Is there none there?"
29130Is you got it yet?"
29130Old David Grey paused; and Jimmie demanded:"Did they give un up?"
29130Or was it the open sea?
29130Scuttle her?
29130Security?
29130Skipper Bill demanded;"is you goin''t''let me sing, or is n''t you?"
29130The ship was already lost; the crew-- well, how_ could_ the crew survive the rocks and gigantic breakers of the Chunks?
29130The_ Heavenly Home_?
29130Therefore why not do it courageously?
29130Three eighty- five for fish?
29130Three eighty- five for fish?
29130Was he pulling straight out from shore?
29130Was it not an excellent hair restorer, as well?
29130Was it possible to sight a black, low- lying rock?
29130Was not Skipper George forever in danger of losing his schooner?
29130Was not Tom Tulk known to be an eccentric?
29130Was there any accounting for what Tom Tulk would do?
29130Were the wreckers trying to decoy him from the ship?
29130Were these prices Sir Archibald''s orders?
29130What do_ you_ think?"
29130What had it been?
29130What lay behind the brusque order?
29130What was the meaning of that?
29130What was the meaning of_ that_?
29130What was the use of trying, anyhow?
29130What you talkin''about?"
29130What''s he reefin''for?"
29130What''s the trouble, son?"
29130What?"
29130Where was she to get_ her_ fish?
29130Where was the first of September now?
29130Where-- where?
29130Which way is''ome from''ere?"
29130Who are you?"
29130Who could deny the virtues of that"healing balm"?
29130Who could dispute the works of"the invaluable discovery"?
29130Who should stay behind?
29130Why did n''t you tell me where you were going when you started for that pole?''
29130Why do n''t you play fair?
29130Why had Sir Archibald used that mysterious and unusual word"forthwith"with such emphasis?
29130Why should n''t a cash- trader, underselling the credit plan, do well on the coast in a small way?
29130Why should the_ Black Eagle_ have been ordered home?
29130Why was it that Tom Tulk had made them a parting gift?
29130Will you listen t''me?"
29130With what would Sir Archibald charge the skipper?
29130Would he wake up fresh and smiling in the morning?
29130Would it never be known?
29130Would the big wind catch the little punt out of harbour?
29130Would the murder never out?
29130Would the skipper and clerk of the_ Black Eagle_ deliberately court discharge?
29130Would there be a constable on the wharf?
29130Would you have him break the word he has passed?
29130Wreck her?
29130_ Why_ had the expected not happened?
29130or would it be a rock swept by the breakers?
29130said Billy Topsail,"where in time is you goin''t''get that schooner?"
29696''An''if I ca n''t say Joneth,''says she,''I ca n''t thay--''''Ca n''t say what?''
29696''An''why not, cook?'' 29696 ''An''will you keep out o''the galley?''
29696''An''you wanth t''we d me?'' 29696 ''Ay, sir?''
29696''Come, Liz,''says I,''what you cryin''about?'' 29696 ''Does you, skipper?''
29696''Is you sure,''says the skipper,''that you wants t''marry this here-- woman?'' 29696 ''It ai n''t?''
29696''Ith we married, thkipper?'' 29696 ''Me?''
29696''Nick,''says your father,my uncle continued,"''does ye hear them men?''
29696''No?'' 29696 ''Now, Liz,''says he,''can you cook?''
29696''Shoos,''says the skipper,''will you let this woman do the cookin''?'' 29696 ''Skipper, sir,''says I,''is ye not got a scrap o''writin''?''
29696''Skipper,''says I,my uncle continued,"''what did ye go an''do it for?''
29696''Skipper,''says I,''was ye meanin''t''wreck that there ship?'' 29696 ''Tis_ where_?"
29696''Tumm,''says Liz t''me,''_ you_ ithn''t wantin''t''get married, ith you?'' 29696 ''Was ye meanin''t''_ do_ it?''
29696''What about mother''s ring?'' 29696 ''What you cryin''about?''
29696''What you cryin''for, Liz?'' 29696 ''What you two goin''t''do?''
29696''What''th hith name?'' 29696 ''Will you, Tumm?''
29696''Wo n''t ye?'' 29696 ''Would ye swear it?''
29696''You ithn''t got all your thentheth, ith you?'' 29696 A gentleman, Nick?"
29696A wee drop?
29696Accident?
29696Ah, Dannie, is n''t you?
29696Along o''Judy?
29696Along o''ol''Nick Top, who would not see ye wronged? 29696 An you''d but hear me, child,"she complained,"I''d''splain--""_ What about your God?_"She turned demure-- all in a flash.
29696An''Skipper Nicholas,asks he,"where did you manage t''pick up the young feller?"
29696An''_ you_ give un them jools?
29696An''after?
29696An''comfortable-- an''good? 29696 An''happy?"
29696An''happy?
29696An''his father?
29696An''how in the name o''Heaven,I demanded,"did you manage so great a thing?"
29696An''how much was that, Moses?
29696An''how much, lad,says he, in the water- side slop- shops,"is a penny saved?"
29696An''how,quoth I,"is you knowin''that?"
29696An''if I''m a liar,says I,"I''low I''m a fool for it?"
29696An''if ye sees so much as a single brass button comin''ashore,says he,"ye''ll give me a hail, will ye not, whereever I is?"
29696An''is this ol''Nicholas Top a liar?
29696An''is you comfortable, Dannie, lyin''there in your own little bed?
29696An''is you content,says he,"all alone with ol''Nick Top at Twist Tickle?"
29696An''of how much,says he,"would he rob his neighbor that he might prosper?"
29696An''she said that?
29696An''then--"What then?
29696An''this here?
29696An''what about Chesterfield?
29696An''what does_ you_ know about_ me_?
29696An''what might this be?
29696An''what''s that?
29696An''what''s that?
29696An''what''s that?
29696An''who?
29696An''why, sir?
29696An''why?
29696An''why?
29696An''why?
29696An''will you not,says she,"pour but a quarter of a inch t''the glass?"
29696An''will you not?
29696An''ye''ll make good use o''your time with the gentlefolk, Dannie?
29696An''ye''ll not try?
29696An''you is n''t so wonderful sleepy, is you?
29696An''you is sure?
29696An''you''ll be takin''_ me_?
29696An''you''ll bear your own pain,he continued,"like a man, will you not?"
29696An''you''re a true man?
29696An''you''re true,she demanded,"to them that have loved you?"
29696An''you''ve hopes?
29696An''you?
29696And has nobody told you that you were pretty?
29696And so you brought me up?
29696And there is no God,says I,"between us?"
29696And what''s that, Judith?
29696And what, Top,the stranger sneered,"may this thing be?"
29696And will you ship, sir?
29696And yet,he demanded,"you expect to go to heaven?"
29696And_ this_,says he,"is the body of you, is it?"
29696Are you clinging,says he,"to the Cross?"
29696Are you laughing, Top?
29696Are you prepared for the change?
29696Are you trusting in your Saviour''s love?
29696Ay,I complained;"but what was the bid that won from Eli Flack?"
29696Ay,I persisted;"will he not seek till he finds you, too?"
29696Ay,says my uncle, an eye half closed;"but think you he_ would_ make a rascal-- with clever management?"
29696Ay; but whose young one?
29696Black as hell?
29696Bottle?
29696But an they''re lost?
29696But an you had?
29696But could ye not scowl t''more purpose?
29696But how much, Moses?
29696But you say that you are prepared?
29696But you''ll do nothing rash, man, will you?
29696But your wife?
29696But,I protested,"is you sure''tis right?"
29696By what, John Cather?
29696Come, Dannie,says he,"what''ll ye take t''drink?"
29696Come, now, is you sure? 29696 Comfortable?"
29696Could ye hit it?
29696Could ye manage t''see Digger Rock?
29696Daniel,says he, in distress,"has that rascally Top misled you to this ridiculously romantic conclusion?"
29696Dannie, lad,he inquired, at last,"is you comfortable?"
29696Dannie, lad,my uncle anxiously inquired,"_ can_ it be that you likes them there fresh carrots?"
29696Dannie, lad,says my uncle, at last,"is that you?"
29696Dannie, lad,she asked me, not shy of the stranger, because of woful anxiety,"you''ve not seed my mother hereabouts, is you?"
29696Dannie,he asked, in quick alarm, a fear so sudden and unexpected that I was persuaded of the propriety of my premonition,"what you thinkin''about?
29696Dannie,he whispered,"if you must sin the sins of us--""Ay, sir?"
29696Dannie,he whispered,"is you awake?"
29696Dannie,my uncle inquired, leaning eagerly close when she was gone from the room,"is ye been good?"
29696Dannie,said he,"you do n''t mind me sittin''here for a spell on your little bed, do you?
29696Dannie,says he, in his wisdom,"you''ve growed wonderful fond o''Judy, is n''t you?"
29696Dannie,says he, wickedly gleeful,"how''s the bottle?"
29696Dannie,says he,"how d''ye like them there new potatoes?"
29696Dannie,says my uncle, feigning a relief he dared not entertain,"you was wantin''a drop o''water, was n''t you?"
29696Dannie,says my uncle, with a wish, no doubt, for a diversion,"is the moon up?"
29696Dannie,says my uncle, with reviving interest,"have he gone above?"
29696Dannie,says my uncle,"what you thinkin''about?"
29696Day, eh?
29696Do what?
29696Do you know the portion of the wicked?
29696Does they?
29696Eh, Dannie?
29696Eh, Dannie?
29696Eh, Judy?
29696Eh, Moses,says I;"how_ was_ it?"
29696Eh? 29696 Eh?
29696Eh?
29696Eh?
29696Eh?
29696Eh?
29696Eh?
29696Elizabeth Wutt?
29696Ever feed so high yourself, parson? 29696 For comfort, is it?"
29696For what,says he,"have Skipper Chesterfield t''say on that p''int-- underlined by Sir Harry?
29696For what,says he,"have bully ol''Skipper Chesterfield t''say on that there little p''int?
29696For what?
29696Has the woman repented?
29696Have Nicholas come?
29696Have Skipper Nicholas come?
29696Have he ever been mixed up in burglary, murder, arson, barratry, piracy, fish stealin'', or speckalation?
29696Have n''t he come yet?
29696Have you laid hold on the only Hope of escape?
29696Hear her voice in that there bell? 29696 Hear her voice, Dannie?"
29696Here you are, eh?
29696How is it with your soul?
29696How was you knowin''that, Tom?
29696How''s the tide?
29696How,Parson Lute demanded, with a start,"does she-- ah-- subsist?"
29696I beg your pardon?
29696I''low then,says my uncle,"that he talked a wonderful spell about a lad, did n''t um?"
29696Is I been unkind, Dannie?
29696Is he a thief?
29696Is it ginger- ale, Dannie?
29696Is it righteous,says he,"t''stand by?"
29696Is it the custom?
29696Is it the same as it was? 29696 Is n''t I?"
29696Is n''t bothered, is you?
29696Is n''t ye?
29696Is that dinner?
29696Is the kettle b''ilin''?
29696Is there nothing in the world for you, Top, but that club- footed young whelp?
29696Is there nothing in the world for you, Top, but that club- footed young whelp?
29696Is ye been t''Skeleton Droch?
29696Is ye got a fire in the cabin?
29696Is you asleep, Dannie?
29696Is you got the little brown jug o''water?
29696Is you happy, child,says I, catching the trick of the thing from my uncle,"along o''ol''Nick Top an''me an''John Cather?"
29696Is you never,I repeated,"tasted roast veal?"
29696Is you quite sure, lad,he asked, with an anxious rubbing of his stubble of gray beard,"that''tisn''t ginger- ale?"
29696Is you sure you does n''t know?
29696Is you sure, Uncle Nick?
29696Is you sure?
29696John,I pleaded,"you''ll not go without saying good- bye?"
29696Judy, maid,I implored,"will He never have done?"
29696Judy,says I, most genially,"is you ever tasted roast veal?"
29696Jus''a little nip-- with a ol''shipmate?
29696Jus''for a little spell?
29696Larry Hull''s maid?
29696Maid,said I, severely,"what about your God?"
29696Maid,says I, now in wrathful amazement forgetting her afflicted state,"is you lost your senses?"
29696Me? 29696 Me?"
29696My boy,he most earnestly besought me,"will you not heed me?"
29696Nar a word-- about_ any_ lad?
29696Nicholas?
29696No complaint t''make ag''in this here hotel?
29696No impression whatever?
29696No?
29696No?
29696No?
29696None better in the world, eh?
29696Not bothered about nothin'', lad, is you?
29696Not even one?
29696Not even one?
29696Not one?
29696Not so?
29696Not troubled, is you?
29696Not_ wantin''_ to?
29696Parson,he proceeded, proudly,"good feed that there young gentleman has in the cabin, eh?"
29696Parson,he whispered,"they was n''t ar another man landed by the mail- boat the day, was they?"
29696Pearl what, Moses?
29696Sad?
29696Shall I tell you, Judith?
29696Sir,says I,"where''s the writing?"
29696Sir?
29696Skipper Nicholas,says Tom, in wonder,"was n''t you give aforetime t''the use o''Long Tom?"
29696Skipper Nicholas,says he, presently,"I''low Dannie Callaway haves a friend t''buy un all them jools?"
29696Smuggler?
29696T''what?
29696T''what?
29696That ought, you fool?
29696The bid?
29696The maid would not have you, Moses?
29696The maid?
29696The parson?
29696The tender Shepherd?
29696The wind rising?
29696The woman ever converted before?
29696Then how, my daughter, can you say that you are prepared?
29696Think you, Dannie,my uncle inquired,"that he''ve the makin''s of a fair rascal?"
29696To hell?
29696To_ hell_?
29696Top,said the stranger, leaning forward a little,"I have asked you a simple question:_ Will_ you or_ wo n''t_ you?"
29696Uncle Nick, you''ll not mislead un?
29696Uncle Nick,I asked,"what is it that strays?"
29696Uncle Nick,I inquired,"will the Shepherd find you?"
29696Uncle Nick,says I,"you''ll be havin''a chair set for Judy in the cabin?"
29696Was it a sore, wicked thing my father did?
29696Was it that crawling, staggering, limping travesty of the strength of men? 29696 Water?"
29696Well, maid,cries I, the smart of her glance and silence enraging me,"is you got no tongue?"
29696What chance?
29696What for?
29696What is it?
29696What is it?
29696What news?
29696What now, Judy?
29696What odds?
29696What the devil d''ye mean?
29696What you doin''here?
29696What you done with my Judith?
29696What you lookin''that way for?
29696What you wantin''of me?
29696What''s all this?
29696What''s that?
29696What''s this, lad?
29696What''s this, you know?
29696What''s this?
29696Whatever comes t''your knowledge?
29696Where are your matches?
29696Where did you come across o''he?
29696Where you goin'', Dannie?
29696Where''d ye get them jools?
29696Where''d you come by them di''monds and pearls? 29696 Where''s that?"
29696Why not? 29696 Why not?"
29696Why not?
29696Why not?
29696Why should I care?
29696Why, really, you know, Skipper Nicholas, I--"Is you much give t''the use o''fo''c''s''les, parson?
29696Will my feet stray?
29696Will ye not, maid?
29696Woman,he cried, in distress,"do n''t you know that you are dying?"
29696Ye do n''t s''pose, Dannie,he complained, in a righteous flash,"that I''m able t''live forever, does ye?"
29696Ye think ye''re in hard case, yourself, sir, do n''t ye? 29696 Ye would n''t say, would ye,"my uncle diffidently inquired,"that he''d be from St. John''s by the cut of um?"
29696Ye''ll be wearin''the new Turkish outfit aboard ship, Dannie?
29696Ye''ll come, Judy, will ye not?
29696Ye''ll not even try?
29696Ye''ll not trouble about me, lad?
29696Ye''ll tell_ me_, wo n''t ye? 29696 Ye''re growin''up, Dannie,"he observed;"is n''t you, lad?"
29696Ye_ will_ stand by,he cried,"will ye not?"
29696Yes,says he, sighing;"you are here, are n''t you?"
29696You are a pretty child,said my tutor, presently;"you have very beautiful eyes, have you not?
29696You are, are n''t you? 29696 You been havin''any trouble, shipmate?"
29696You do n''t mind?
29696You do n''t mind?
29696You do not care?
29696You dream,he pursued,"that you were born to some station?"
29696You have cast yourself upon the mercy of God?
29696You have made your peace with an offended God?
29696You have repented of your sin?
29696You here, Dannie?
29696You here, Dannie?
29696You here?
29696You is n''t upsot, is you, by the capers o''my ol''shipmate?
29696You know me?
29696You think, perhaps,he demanded, looking sharply into my eyes,"that you are kin of mine?"
29696You will not listen, Judith?
29696You would n''t say, would you, lad,he went on,"that_ I_ was fair on looks?"
29696You''ll be off, Moses?
29696You''ll do it again, will you not?
29696You''ll do nothing rash, will you? 29696 You''ll leave me walk with you, will you not?"
29696You''ll not forget t''be kind, will you,he pleaded,"t''them that suffer for your sins?"
29696You''ll not misunderstand me, Dannie?
29696You''ll not misunderstand, will you? 29696 You''ll wish me luck, Dannie?"
29696You''re happy, Dannie?
29696You''ve fetched me here?
29696You''ve no trouble now, have you?
29696You''ve took a look,I inquired,"at the maids o''Long Bill Hodge o''Sampson''s Island?"
29696You-- you-- you''ll not run off, Dannie,she asked, faintly,"when I-- I-- shuts my eyes?"
29696You?
29696_ Me_ touch it? 29696 _ Me_ wore out?...
29696_ You_ could n''t do no better, could you?
29696''An''does you want t''get married t''this here dam''fool?''
29696''I''low, skipper,''says he,''''twouldn''t do no hurt t''give the ring to a man''s wife, would it?
29696''Ith you sure you doth?''
29696''Twas always the same: Diamonds?
29696''Twould have been logical had he asked me:"An'', Dannie, lad, what''s a gentleman?"
29696''What is it, Liz?''
29696''What vethel''th that?''
29696''What''s a man worth,''says she,''that on''y serves hisself?''"
29696''_ But ye''re not likin''the queer red cap, eh?
29696( said he) would I never be t''bed in season?
29696A bit nippy, parson man?
29696A gentleman?
29696A peculiar case, is it not?
29696A ruby, like as not?"
29696Ah, but was I not whipped on that night by the dark and the sweeping rain and the wind on the black hills and the approach of death?
29696Alone?
29696Am I t''curse the God that would have it so?"
29696An eye he had-- age- wise ways and a glance to overawe my youth-- but what was he, after all, in such a case as this?
29696An''Nick?
29696An''now, lad,"says he, his voice turning soft and genuine in feeling,"what''s the ol''sailorman tryin''t''make out o''_ you_?"
29696An''now?"
29696An''what''s a kiss t''lack?
29696An''why?
29696An''why?
29696An''will ye come t''the haulin''-down?"
29696An''you do n''t mind?
29696An''you mean t''set there an''tell me them prophets did n''t make no mistake?
29696An''you''re glad, is you, t''be livin''all alone at Twist Tickle with a ol''feller like Nick Top?"
29696And big, blue eyes?
29696And do you realize-- you obstinate noddy!--that my heart''s in the word?
29696And her hair?
29696And must we then, lads and men, worship a God of wrath, quick to punish, niggardly in fatherly forgiveness, lest we stray into evil ways?
29696And my uncle?
29696And was there another woman aboard?
29696And what did the weather mean?
29696And what righteousness had I?
29696And whence the_ Likely Lass_?
29696And who damns his own child?
29696And why the warning?
29696And why, thinks I, should the old craft all at once be troubled by all this pother of block and tackle and hammer and saw?
29696And would he go with us?
29696And you will not?"
29696And you''ll tell un all, will you not, that I talked o''spendin''the night with Mrs. Moses Shoos at Whisper Cove?"
29696And you''ll think, will you not, that I spend the night with Mrs. Shoos?
29696And you''ve not been able to convict her of her sin?"
29696And your uncle-- eh?
29696And,"Look here, Brother Stump,"he concluded, turning,"why ca n''t_ I_ make this call for you?"
29696Brass buttons?
29696But ca n''t we do it reasonably?
29696But still''tis rather grateful to recall: for what''s a lad''s boasting but the honest courage of a man?
29696But what''s that?
29696But ye''ll fret no more, will ye, Dannie?
29696But you knew it long ago, of course,"he added, smiling in a way most captivating,"did n''t you?"
29696But"What is a gentleman?"
29696Ca n''t we do it alone?
29696Come, now, lad,"says he,"would you''low it_ could_ be otherwise than looks?"
29696Daniel,"the man solemnly asked,"do you believe me?"
29696Dannie,"says he, again leaning forward, eyes bent upon my plates,"how d''ye like them there fresh greens?
29696Did n''t you know?"
29696Do ye never give a thought t''_ me?_ Dirty business, says you, betwixt you an''me!
29696Do you know the word?
29696Do you understand me, Top?
29696Do you understand?
29696Do you understand?
29696Do_ I_ care for the lad?"
29696Does it say so_ there_?"
29696Does ye hear me, Nick?''
29696Does you hear me, dear?''
29696Does you not hear it call the folk t''come?"
29696Does you not hear it?
29696Eh, Dannie, b''y?
29696Eh, Dannie?"
29696Eh, lad?
29696Eh, lad?"
29696Eh, what''s that-- ag''in your health?"
29696Eh?"
29696Ever been t''sea in a gale o''wind, parson?
29696For mother would n''t mind, would she?''
29696Fourteen and something more?
29696Go to sleep like a babe?
29696Had he not in peace and usefulness walked the paths of the world where wiser folk had gone with bleeding feet?
29696Have you not seen my foot?"
29696He would now lean close with his poser:"Does it say so in the Bible?
29696Hear her voice?
29696Hear it ring out?
29696Hear me?"
29696Hear un?
29696Honest, now?"
29696How am I t''help you, Dannie?
29696How old is you now, Dannie?
29696How should we-- being men?
29696How''s the weather?"
29696I accuse myself for speaking, in this bold way, of the unhappy question; but yet, why not?
29696I chided, not knowing what she meant: as how should a lad?
29696I had fancied, as what lad would not?
29696Inferiority?
29696Is it a burglar?"
29696Is it crooked any more?
29696Is it the foot of a man or a cripple?"
29696Is ol''Nicholas Top a rascal?"
29696Is you goin''t''take un?''
29696Is you sure you''re happy?
29696It wo n''t matter, anyhow, will it, lad?
29696Ith--''"''What you wantin'', Liz?''
29696John Cather?
29696Lost?
29696Love?
29696Man or woman?"
29696My tooter?
29696My uncle?
29696Nick,''says he,''will ye swear?''
29696Nineteen?
29696No?
29696Now, may I have a word with you?
29696Now,"says he,"is Nicholas Top a rascal?"
29696Ol''Nick Top?
29696On the hills?
29696Sin?
29696Sir?
29696Sir?
29696Sir?
29696Some poor wee lads lost?
29696Stand by?
29696That he was scarred, two- fingered, wooden- legged, a servant of the bottle, was apart: and why not?
29696Then why?
29696Think she will, Dannie?
29696Think she will?"
29696Times is changed, is n''t they?
29696Trouble?
29696Was it I?
29696Was it not more vital to Judith''s welfare, imperatively demanding disclosure?
29696Was it the club- footed young whelp who helped you?"
29696Was it, indeed, but the name of the man?
29696Was my uncle at home?
29696Was she a slender, tawny- haired, blue- eyed, most beauteous maid?
29696Was this my fancy?
29696What appeal the man in love, confronted by his origin and shameful fostering?
29696What can I_ do_ for you?
29696What care had we for the weather?
29696What did it lack, thinks I, of power and wisdom?
29696What do I care?
29696What does I know about_ you_?"
29696What had grieved her?
29696What had this masterful little man, thinks I, to fear from Dannie Callaway of Twist Tickle?
29696What have ol''Skipper Chesterfield t''say on that p''int?
29696What have that there fashionable ol''gentleman t''hold-- underlined by Sir Harry?
29696What have the bully ol''skipper t''say-- underlined by Sir Harry?
29696What maid was that?
29696What protection had the defenceless child that had been I against these machinations?
29696What protest the boy, growing in guarded ignorance?
29696What the devil d''ye mean?"
29696What was his father to me?
29696What was his mother?
29696What was this cockney-- this wretched alien-- when the passions of our coast were stirring?
29696What was this?
29696What would she confide?
29696What you goin''t''do with Judy?
29696What you goin''t''do with she?"
29696What''s all this about?
29696What''s all this row?"
29696What''s amiss, boy?
29696What''s that?"
29696What''s that?"
29696What''s the lad to you?
29696What''s this you''re tellin''me?
29696What''s this?"
29696Whath the cook wantin''o''me?''
29696Where''d you come by them jools?
29696Where''d you come by them rubies an''watches?
29696Whither bound?
29696Who helped you up the Lost Soul turn?
29696Who is this person?
29696Who should knock?
29696Why did the woman cry out for my uncle?
29696Why introduce this ill- born whelp?
29696Will you never listen to reason?
29696Will you_ not_ hear me?"
29696Wonderful good o''she, was n''t it, Dannie, t''want t''keep watch-- on me?"
29696Would it not be possible for the more delicate readers of my otherwise inoffensive narrative to elide the word?
29696Would you say, Dannie,"he asked, turning anxiously,"that a cross- eyed maid_ could_ be fair on looks?
29696You is good, is n''t you?
29696You that said the little prayer t''the tender Shepherd?
29696You would n''t mind, would you, just sort o''givin''it a light overhaulin''for me?
29696You''d not be makin''game o''the old man, would you, Dannie?
29696You''d not tell un you_ was_ when you_ was n''t_, would you?
29696You''ll make haste, will you not?
29696You''ll never tell, will you, lad?
29696You''ll not shame me, will you?
29696You''re bound home, Dannie?"
29696You''ve no trouble, have you?
29696You_ is_ happy, is n''t you, Dannie?"
29696Your diamonds?"
29696_ Me_ think that?
29696_ You_ lost, Dannie?
29696_ You_, Dannie-- you that lies there tender an''kind an''clean o''soul in your little bed?
29696and how long, in the name o''Heaven, would the weather sulk in distance before breaking in honest wrath upon the coast?
29696cries he, dissembling great candor and heartiness,"is you got any questions t''ask ol''Nick Top?"
29696he cried;"is that you?
29696he roared, indignantly, to the amazement of our folk;"is ye thinkin''I''m past my labor?"
29696or to supply, on the spur of the moment, an acceptable equivalent, of which, I am told, there is an infinite variety?
29696or( better still) to utter it courageously?
29696quoth I;"what you doin''here?"
29696says he, in a little flare of wrath;"is he a rascal?"
29696says my uncle;"would you say that ol''Nicholas Top was_ famous_ for standin''by?"
29696she gasped;"you''ll not hurt she, will you?"
29696what had that childlike, tenderhearted old rascal accomplished against this man to make the penalty of ungodly wrath a thing meet to the offence?
29696what right had I to think that she had loved him?
29696would it blow wet or dry?
29696would it come with snow?
29696would the wind jump off shore or from the northeast?
29696you''ve no trouble, boy, have you?"