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
31049And do not these come of honest ambition?
31049What richer legacy can you hand down?
16964If we say,"A bar 81/2 feet long is to be cut into five pieces of equal length; how long should each piece be?
16964The boy was unable to lay out the work, although when asked by the foreman,"Do n''t you know how to divide 81/2 by 5?
16964What can I do to improve it?"
48344CAMPUS MARTIUS What do I mean by Campus Martius, when I claim to be living in the town of Marietta?
48344Do you remember how old I am?
48344Do you remember the Rouse family?
19701How large must be the type in textbooks in order that young children may easily read it?
19701Is light chalk on a dark ground better or worse than dark chalk on a light ground?
19701Is prismatic window glass superior to plain?
19701Shall blackboards be of slate, composition board, or glass?
19701Shall they be colored black, green, or ivory white?
19701To what extent is glare from polished desks detrimental to eyesight?
36126Near 600 miles"Well Gals, you Gals& your husbands with you?
36126To New Connecticut"You bant tho- To New Connecticut? 36126 Gals where are you going?
36126How far is it?"
36126I can not but think his cleverness( is there such a word?)
36126do you ever expect to get there?
27701( Train 3 passes 4:4(9?
27701), the"Griffin,"in which he sailed the Great Lakes to Lake Michigan,( and?)
27701After four years of study in Springfield, Ohio, he was admitted( to?)
27701Discovering the Ohio River, he travelled down possibly as far as( its?)
27701Howe purporting to show that"the historical p(art?)
27701In 1682,( after?)
27701In 1919 the corporation spent$ 1,131,446 for safety work and the like, and( 1?
27701Mayor Jones was re- elected on the non- partisan ticket in 1(899?
27701Nine miles southwest of Painesville at Kirtland was( one?)
27701The winter of 1679 La Salle passed at a post above Niagra Falls, where he built his famous( ship?
27701When he returned there two years( later?)
27701Where an inference is not certain, the presumed missing letters are in parentheses with a question mark, for example"p(art?)".
27701[ Illustration: An American Cartoon( 1813) Queen Charlotte is represented as saying,"Johnny, wo n''t you take some more Perry?"
27701many adventures, he floated down( to?)
27701which he sent back laden with( furs?)
33587Date of Federation?
33587Denomination of the first minister and of succeeding ministers?
33587Denominations of constituent bodies?
33587Do many people want to go back to the old way?
33587Do the people like the present arrangement better than the old?
33587Has attendance declined or increased?
33587Has church membership declined or increased?
33587Have church benevolences declined or increased?
33587How has the pecuniary support of the ministry been affected?
33587How have other expenditures of the church been affected?
33587Is it doing effectually the work which belongs to it?
33587Membership of each church at the time of federation?
33587Under these circumstances how can he become efficient in community service, and how can he get to know the people of his charge?
33587What effect, if any, has the formation of the federated church had upon the social life of the community?
13217Abraham Lincoln? 13217 Cookin''?
13217De Wah? 13217 De wah, honey?
13217Hosses? 13217 How did we live on the plantation?
13217How''d I cum North? 13217 I heard my mudder say dat the mistress was a fine woman, but dat de marse was rigied[ TR: rigid?].
13217Ku Klux, honey? 13217 Lincoln?
13217Mamma used to sing a song:Do n''t you remember the promise that you made, To my old dying mother''s request?
13217Me? 13217 Me?
13217Medicin? 13217 Money?
13217My gran''mammy, duz I''member hur? 13217 My mammy''s name?
13217Once, when I was milking a cow, I asked Master Ousley,''Master Ousley, will you do me a favor?'' 13217 One day I seed a man who was a doctor down dere, an''I says,''You doktah now?''
13217One day a soldier stop me an says,''Sister, where do you live?'' 13217 School?
13217Spirits? 13217 What''d I do, down dar on plantashun?
13217Wher''d I sleep? 13217 Where we liv?
13217Whip the slaves? 13217 _ Run a way slaves?_ No''em nevah know ed of any.
13217A white lady recently asked me,''Do n''t you think you were better off under the white people?''
13217Ah got me a pension, an a fine garden; ai n''t it fine now?"
13217Ah wuz asleep a dreamin bout it, an a sayin,"Mammy yo reckon axel grease goin''to he''p it?"
13217And ah got a ole histry, it''s the Sanford American History, and was published in_ 17_84[HW:18?].
13217And they sit back, and they say,''What she think she look like with that thing on her haid?''.
13217Are you the girl Mr. Meriwether''s looking for?"
13217But how could I be free if I had to go back to my massa and beg for bread, clothes and shelter?
13217De log cabins what we live in[HW:?]
13217Deh had lots of money but what good did it do them?
13217Dey tuk us all on a boat de Big Ribber-- evah heah ob de big ribber?
13217How much for the mellon?"
13217I said''What you talkin''about?
13217I seem him and I know him too but I preten like I didn, so I say,''I doan want ter buy nothin today''and he says''Doan you know me?''
13217I''d say''Hulgul''How many?
13217I''se gittin''sorta nervous, and purty soon the bushes opened, and what you think come out?
13217It wuz a senation[TR: sensation?]
13217Mah sistah Hannah wuz sold on de auction block at Richmon to Mastah Frank Maxie( Massie?)
13217Never hear of Holly Golly?
13217On which side?
13217Sales, near Brooksville, Georgia, and her mother and a sister two years younger were sold to John Grimrs[HW:?
13217Sarah Probst, Reporter Audrey Meighen, Author- Editor Folklore: Ex- Slaves Meigs County, District Three MR. WILLIAM NELSON Aged 88"Whar''s I bawned?
13217She says,''John, what are you doin''?
13217The other two- thirds?
13217What''d I like best?
13217While the sun rose from the East to the West?
13217Whut I do with my money?
13217_ Free!_ Honey, did yo''hear_ that_?
416A lot might be done with milkweed, eh? 416 Do I not know human nature?
416Do n''t you see how it is? 416 Do you know why I came clear out here afoot?
416Do you think that I''ve lived in Cleveland all these years without knowing Mark Hanna?
416Does not every man let his life be managed for him by some bitch or another?
416Has a fellow got to do it?
416Has he got to be harnessed up and driven through life like a horse?
416How many times will I have to speak of this matter? 416 I suppose you were and your wife is dead, is that it?"
416I wonder what he''s up to? 416 I''m a coward too, eh?"
416It was in a town in Iowa-- or was it in Illinois? 416 Perhaps you would n''t mind coming to walk with me?"
416Strange, eh? 416 The road is rough, eh?"
416There are people here in whom you are interested?
416Well, has it been worth while? 416 Well, is she going to stay with him all day?
416What do you know of service? 416 What good am I here?
416What good does it do me to talk to you?
416What happened? 416 What is the matter with me?
416What makes you so sure?
416What will you do up there?
416What''s the matter? 416 What''s the use?
416What? 416 Why does he want to be bragging?
416Why does n''t something happen? 416 Why now should I be tempted?
416You came to tell me, eh?
416You carry a little pad of paper in your pocket, do n''t you? 416 You do work hard, do n''t you?"
416You think that? 416 Your life is still bound up with the life of this town?"
416And was he not our superior?
416Did he not represent public opinion and had not the public opinion of Winesburg condemned the Cowleys to queerness?
416Did he not walk whistling and laughing through Main Street?
416Do I not know what will happen?
416Do n''t you see how it is?
416Do n''t you see, dear, how it was?"
416Do n''t you understand?
416Do you know Kate Swift?
416Do you not see how the old man who drives a cart looks anxiously about?
416Have I done all this waiting for nothing?"
416Have you ever thought it strange that I have money for my needs although I do nothing?
416Have you heard of that?
416How can they know?"
416How does it feel to be going away?"
416I know what everyone would say is the right thing to do, but what do you say?
416I thought I''d tell you-- it''s interesting, eh?"
416If a thing is iron, then what?
416Is this due to the particular circumstances of small- town America as Anderson saw it at the turn of the century?
416It starts your mind working, now do n''t it?"
416It will be better for you, you think, to be a business man, to be brisk and smart and alive?"
416It''s interesting, eh?
416It''s very amusing, eh?"
416Might not one by striking his person strike also the greater enemy-- the thing that smiled and went its own way-- the judgment of Winesburg?
416Now what is decay?
416Now you quit it, do you hear?"
416Only I guess you''ll have to wake up to do that too, eh?"
416Or does he feel that he is sketching an inescapable human condition which makes all of us bear the burden of loneliness?
416Or especially in Winesburg?
416Shall I do it or shall I tell Nell to go to the devil?
416Shall I marry and settle down?
416Shall I put myself into the harness to be worn out like an old horse?
416Something drove him to write, perhaps one of those shapeless hungers-- a need for self- expression?
416That would be a strange turn of things, now would n''t it, eh?"
416That''s interesting, eh?
416That''s interesting, eh?
416There is food for thought in that, eh?
416There was a fellow, eh?
416What about it, eh?
416What about marriage and all that?"
416What ails you?"
416What are you but a boy?
416What are you going to do?
416What difference does it make to me?"
416What do you want?
416What have I done that this burden should be laid on me?"
416What makes you keep saying such things?
416What makes you say you have?
416What say?"
416Where are you, George?"
416Why am I left here alone?"
416Why are you always puttering?"
416Why do I tell myself lies?"
416Why do n''t he get a new one?
416Why do n''t he shut up?"
416Why do you not look at the sky and then run away as I used to do when I was a boy back there in Winesburg, Ohio?"
416Why quarrel with an old man concerning his thoughts?
416Why should Hal pay?
416Why should I care?
416Why should I pay?
416Why should anyone pay?
416Williams?"
416Would we be done for?
416Would we be done for?"
416Yet what do we have but words?
416You ca n''t be too smart for Sarah, now can you?
416You never thought of that?
416You will go to the city and make money, eh?
416You''ve got something to tell me, eh?"
7048Am I telling the truth? 7048 Do n''t you see you have wakened the baby?
7048Do n''t you think we got to get out of here?
7048Do you hear, Walter?
7048Have you any coughs, colds, consumption or bleeding sickness?
7048Have you been well to- day, dear?
7048How would you like to have seven legs and two heads like this fellow?
7048I knew you were at home on a visit but what are you doing out here?
7048I shall understand after this, what shall I not understand?
7048If the sex impulse within it had been gratified in what way would my problem be solved? 7048 Is it hot in Chicago now?
7048It''s strange eh, that my hands should have helped a baby be born while all the time death stood at my elbow?
7048My marriage cost me twenty- one dollars-- I worked in the corn-- it rained and the horses were blind-- the clerk said,''Are you over twenty- one?'' 7048 O, you Mister,"she called,"O, you-- are you hurt?"
7048Well what of it? 7048 Well,"he began hesitatingly,"well, you have heard of Christopher Columbus, eh?"
7048What am I so eager about?
7048What is it that I am now talking about? 7048 What makes me so happy here?"
7048What makes you want to read about life? 7048 What''s the matter?"
7048What''s the use of torturing myself and thinking of a life I can not lead?
7048When you do become a woman what do you suppose is going to happen, eh? 7048 Where you been?
7048Which is it? 7048 Who did that happen to?
7048Who''s been having a baby? 7048 You are Doctor Cochran''s daughter?"
7048You are a happy man?
7048You have loved them?
7048You''ll come with me?
7048''Albert''I said,''are you sorry you killed a man?''
7048''What will he think when he sees a woman coming in my place on the evening before the day I am to be married?''
7048Are there no words that lead into life?
7048As for puttering about with a camera-- was it not a form of cheating?
7048At night-- in bed with his wife-- well, was she not sometimes with him as she was in the garden?
7048Ca n''t you run away from your husband?
7048Could anyone think she had ever wanted to become Ma Wescott, fat, heavy and old?
7048Darn him, what did he want to do like that for?
7048Did I say that we embarked in the restaurant business in the town of Bidwell, Ohio?
7048Did he hope she would never come back or did the words refer to his wife?
7048Did he lie to himself?
7048Did he not spend his days doing work he detested?
7048Did her daughter think she had no vital thing to say concerning the relationship of men and women?
7048Did her mother sit there now a dead thing in the chair beside her?
7048Did it come from the girl or from the old tired defeated woman within the Wescott house?
7048Did it have to do with his wife Ellen or Mary his daughter?
7048Did loneliness drive him to the door of insanity and did he also run through the night seeking some lost, some hidden and half forgotten loveliness?
7048Did she know them?
7048Did she really want to talk with her about things?
7048Did the words refer to Rosalind Wescott?
7048Do I make myself clear?
7048Do you live in the same place in Chicago?
7048Do you live in the same place on the North Side?
7048Fool-- do you expect love to be understood?"
7048For what?
7048For what?
7048From what?
7048Had he not said words that had startled her, torn her out of herself?
7048Had he not surrendered to the fact of a wife and growing children?
7048Had her mother died?
7048Had mothers something of importance to say to daughters and if they did when did the time come when they were ready to say it?
7048Had she come home from Chicago because she really wanted to see her father and mother?
7048Had she suddenly begun to love two men, both older than herself?
7048Had she thought, by again breathing the air of her home town, to get strength to face life and its difficulties?
7048He would lie awake eager, expectant--expecting, what?
7048How long would it endure?
7048I take warts from the hand-- I can not explain how I do it-- it is a mystery-- I charge nothing-- my name is Tom-- do you like me?"
7048I wonder if you will understand what I mean?
7048If he could n''t what would he be there for and not pulling a plow?
7048If it be true what does it matter?"
7048In what way does it matter?
7048Into what knowledge of life and death was she being led?
7048Is it the test of life and death?"
7048Is it you Mary or is it Ellen?"
7048Is that clear to you?
7048It was an accident and anyway what''s the matter?
7048It would startle people, frighten them a little, eh?
7048It would startle people, frighten them a little, eh?
7048She''s a little stuck up and needs to be brought down a peg, but what do I care?
7048The male element in life-- what did it want?
7048The two men-- what did they want of her?
7048Then?
7048Was death but denial?
7048Was it Ellen or that other woman or my little Mary?"
7048Was it merely her heart beating?
7048Was it possible that her father also felt as Melville Stoner sometimes did?
7048Was it the fate of women to be consumed by men and of men to be consumed by women?
7048Was it the silence of death?
7048Was the fire intended to consume her quite?
7048Was the song a male thing, the call of the male to the female, a lie, as her mother had said?
7048What did he do it for?
7048What did it matter?
7048What did mothers say to daughters?
7048What did mothers think in regard to the lives led by their daughters?
7048What did that matter?
7048What did that matter?
7048What did they want her of her?
7048What do they do?
7048What does it matter?
7048What else was there to sing about?
7048What had Melville Stoner to do with the matter?
7048What had Rosalind''s mother been thinking all through the three days since her daughter had so unexpectedly come home from Chicago?
7048What kind of a life will you lead?
7048What makes people want to think about life?
7048What of it?
7048What will happen to you?"
7048What would her mother have to say to her?
7048What you been a doing?"
7048What''s that?"
7048When the song stopped singing within one did death come?
7048Where did the truth lie?
7048Where did they come from?
7048Where was the wonder of life?
7048Where were they going?
7048Who were they?
7048Who''s been having a baby?
7048Why am I dumb?
7048Why are babies always being born?"
7048Why do I not say a word out of myself to the others?
7048Why do n''t they leave books and thoughts and schools alone?"
7048Why do n''t they live?
7048Why else did she do it?
7048Why had he never before noticed her beauty?
7048Why had she come from Chicago, there by the lake, to Willow Springs, in the hot month of August?
7048Why had she not, like the other woman, remained silent?
7048Why had she wanted to marry?
7048Why should a weed that is to be destroyed pretend to a vegetable existence?
7048Why was I not given words?
7048Why would the words not come?
7048Why, in all our life together, have I never been able to break through the wall to my wife?
7048You see how that is?
20460All Union people, I suppose?
20460Are you quite sure Mrs. Hobart said''egad,''Colonel?
20460Beg pardon, madam, is this the direct road to Shallow Ford?
20460Black square? 20460 Bless your sowl, Captain, and do you think I had nothing to do but to watch the boys?
20460But, Corporal,inquired Captain Hunter,"what were the other soldiers of your company doing all this time?"
20460Do they miss me at home; do they miss me?
20460Do you recollect a stroll down to the bay shore one moonlight night?
20460Goin''home on furlough, eh?
20460Hell,shouted Buckner,"does de Capin''spose I''m guiane to eat wid a d-- n common nigger?
20460How do you form an oblique square, sir?
20460How is that, Parson,said Davis, affecting to misunderstand him;"not worth a damn there?"
20460Indeed,said the Captain;"what about Chattanooga?"
20460Is he a loyal man?
20460Is he secesh?
20460Mary Patterson?
20460Never pay the Lord?
20460Thou, thou reignest in this bosom, There, there hast thou thy throne; Thou, thou knowest that I love thee; Am I not fondly thine own? 20460 Tom, you scoundrel, how dare you slander the white man in that way?"
20460Well,he continued,"you are a general now, are you?"
20460What are a th- thousand men,said he,"when( hic) principle is at stake?
20460What can you do? 20460 What do you say, gentlemen, to a second lieutenancy for General Beatty''s friend?"
20460What do you want to go church for, CÃ ¦ sar?
20460What is your master''s name?
20460What kind of light,he will ask,"is that kind which is the opposite of heavy?"
20460What time?
20460Where did you learn to cook?
20460Where do you all come from?
20460Where is the officer of the day?
20460Who comes there?
20460Why so, CÃ ¦ sar?
20460Why you are a fool, John; did you suppose I wanted you to make me tea out of tobacco?
20460Why, how is that?
20460You have not heard that Longstreet was defeated at Knoxville, and compelled to fall back with heavy loss?
20460You have not heard, then, that Bragg was whipped; lost sixty pieces of artillery and many thousand men?
20460You knew General Patterson?
20460A room?
20460A voice came out of the darkness, asking,"who are you?"
20460Am I not fondly thine own?
20460Are they friends or foes?
20460Are you a inviten''me to pound you over the head with a saw- log?
20460As the column approached, said one of the women to a soldier:"Is these uns Yankees?"
20460As they passed, our men made many good- natured remarks, as,"Well, boys, you''re tired of soldiering, ar''n''t you?"
20460At another time he gave an order to a soldier which was not obeyed with sufficient alacrity, when he yelled:"What regiment do you belong to?"
20460Black square?"
20460Buckner, astonished at this unceremonious intrusion, exclaimed:"What you doin''har, sah?"
20460Can you cook?"
20460Captain Mitchell called, and the boys said:"Sergeant, do n''t you know him?"
20460Colonel Marrow sought to question this same fellow in regard to the strength of the enemy, when the boy said:"Are you a commissioned officer?"
20460CÃ ¦ sar said to the Adjutant,"Massa Wilson, may I go to church?"
20460Did the new moon, which I saw so squarely over my left shoulder when riding him over Waldron''s ridge, augur this?
20460Did you ebber know a man ter get black when he''s scard, sah?
20460Do a man''s har git black when he scared, sah?
20460For sacrifice of children, wife, and friends?
20460For sacrifice of firesides-- genial homes?
20460Governor(?)
20460Had you not better cease this sort of warfare?
20460Hailing a little knot, I said:"Boys where do you live?"
20460Has he wife and children in that mountain nest?
20460Has the great experiment failed?
20460He thanks God that he is not an American; and should not we, in a spirit of conciliation, meet him half way, and feel thankful that he is not?
20460He thought the straws in his bunk were thorns, and would pluck at them with his fingers and exclaim:"My God, ai n''t they sharp?"
20460Hostler, you d-- d scoundrel, why do n''t you wipe Jerome''s nose?"
20460How comfort mother for the loss of son?
20460How do ye do?"
20460How was he dressed?
20460How were their days spent, and amongst what surroundings?
20460I approached the door and rapped, and a woman''s voice from within asked,"who was there?"
20460I asked:"Do you call this money?"
20460I asked:"Where have you been, Lieutenant?"
20460I introduced my friends to Lieutenant Van Pelt, of Loomis''battery, and Mr. House asked:"Lieutenant, will these guns shoot with any kind of decision?"
20460I said to him,"Are those our troops?"
20460I said to one,"what is your name?"
20460I told him I was not sure yet, and he said:"Is it uncertainty or modesty that makes you doubt?"
20460If the enemy is too strong for us to attack, what must be the fate of Rosecrans''four regiments, cut off from us, and struggling against such odds?
20460If the husbands, brothers, and fathers of these people, their natural leaders and guardians, do not care for them, why should we?
20460Is country naught to thee?
20460Is freedom nothing?
20460Is he a man of dogs and guns, who spends his years in the mountains and glens hunting for bear and deer?
20460Is it a pleasant home?
20460Is it not ancient Pistol come again to astonish the world by deeds of reckless daring?
20460Is it the desire for freedom, or the dislike for his overseer, that prompts him to run five miles of a Sunday to give this information?
20460Is not that rather more than a farm hand who gets but twelve dollars a month can afford to pay for boots?"
20460Keep quiet; what the h-- ll yer''bout there, now?
20460Lord, when will this war end?
20460May it not be the baronial castle of"old Leather Breeches"himself?
20460May we not hope that their darkened minds caught glimpses of the sun of a better life, now rising for them?
20460McCook is, doubtless, to blame for being hasty; but may not Buell be censurable for being slow?
20460Meeting Captain Loomis yesterday, he said:"Do you know you captured a regiment at Chaplin Hills?"
20460Naught an honored name?
20460Now we hear the yell which betokens encouraged hearts; but whose yell?
20460On last Sunday Captain Wells found him dressed very elaborately, in white vest and clean linen, and said to him:"What''s in the wind, Buckner?"
20460One day CÃ ¦ sar said to me,"Co''nel, you belongs to de meetin do n''t you?"
20460One of my companions asked,"are you Union soldiers?"
20460Poking his head into my tent, and, taking off his hat, he said:"Is de Co''nel in?"
20460Riding on a little further, a private passed without touching his cap:"Hold on, here,"said the General,"do n''t you know how to salute a superior?"
20460Said the Parson to an old man:"My friend, are you religious?"
20460Saw a man, did you?
20460Says he, Dick says he, how did they hit you so many times?
20460Shall CÃ ¦ sar be stuffed or not?
20460Shall we continue to protect the property of our enemies, and lose the lives of our friends?
20460That was a pleasant conceit of Holmes,"What did poor Katy do?"
20460The Captain said:"Sergeant, do n''t you know where you are?"
20460The General hallooed after me,"How d''ye do?"
20460The boys laughed and said:"If this is called an academy, what sort of things must their common school- houses be?"
20460The former checked up, shook hands, and said:"How d''ye do?"
20460The other day Davy had him out for exercise, and when he came rearing and charging back, I said:"How does he behave to- day, Davy?"
20460These days of marchings, nights of lonely guard?
20460They say:"You would not disturb peaceable citizens by levying contributions from them?"
20460This terrible expenditure of health and life?
20460To- night I received a bundle of Northern papers, and among others the Union(?)
20460Was he large or small?
20460What are his thoughts about the war, and its probable effects on his own fortunes, as he trudges along over the hills?
20460What balm to soothe a widow''s aching heart?
20460What balm to which her heaviest grief must yield?
20460What could I do?
20460What did you see when you came up street?
20460What hour, what gift, will ever make amends For broken health, for bruised flesh and bones, For lives cut short by bullet, blade, disease?
20460What is a room?
20460What were their thoughts, fears, hopes, acts?
20460What''s home, if in craven shame We seek its hearthstone?
20460Where balm to heal the widow''s heart, or what Shall soothe a mother''s grief for woes like these?
20460Where is the glory?
20460Where is the glory?
20460Where is the reward, For sacrifice of comfort, quiet, peace?
20460Where is the reward?
20460Where, and under what circumstances, have I heard other bands?
20460Which end of it should I take?
20460While there, a good- looking non- commissioned officer of the battery came up to me, and, extending his hand, said:"How do you do, General?"
20460Who can really know what an army is unless he mingles with the individuals who compose it, and learns how they live, think, talk, and act?
20460Who comes there?"
20460Who lived in the town of Athlone, Alone?
20460Who lives in that house?
20460Who were their associates, and on which side of the great questions of the day did they stand?
20460Who were they?
20460Why not?
20460Why should they not be as contented as himself?
20460Why, at any rate, did he not notify me of the order which he had received from the division commander?
20460Why, my lads, dinna ye march forward in order?
20460Why, when the battle was progressing so advantageously for our side, did they not go on?
20460Will the man ever come to consolidate these innumerable detachments of the National army, and then sweep through the Confederacy like a tornado?
20460Wo n''t you take a seat?"
20460Would it be regarded as an act of presumption and treated with ridicule and contempt?
20460broke in the boys;"never pay the Lord?
20460do you want me to hit you a lick over the snoot, now-- do you?
20460his wings are shorter than they were, and of what use is his head without wings?
20460who comes there?"
20460who comes there?"
20460who comes there?"
28663All ready?
28663And have they not the forest? 28663 And you saw others yesterday, did you?"
28663Are the doors secured?
28663Are there any of the imps with you?
28663Are there any of''em upon the other side?
28663Are we never to be rid of these brutes?
28663Are you hurt any?
28663Are you listening?
28663But have we not the house to protect us?
28663But how is that to be done? 28663 But suppose the ranger is captured himself?"
28663But will you not assist a person in distress?
28663But, brother, will not the kindness which our parents showed them while living be a guaranty of our protection?
28663But, even then, can he overtake you?
28663Ca n''t either one of you two chaps make out what sort of ship that is coming down- stream?
28663Can it be possible?
28663Dar, how does dat set on your stummich? 28663 Did n''t hear nothin''of the red- skins?"
28663Did they get Miss Leland?
28663Did you see how my gun kept twitchin''and jumpin''? 28663 Do you not think that they will abandon pursuit?"
28663Do you really think,pursued the sister,"it can be true that the Indians have perpetrated the outrages which have been reported?"
28663Do you see them bushes hangin''a little further out in the stream than the others?
28663Do you think, Cap''n, there''s likely to be a scrimmage where you drive your stakes?
28663Do you_ think_ that we are?
28663Forget it? 28663 Forty- two what?"
28663Frightened any?
28663Give out?
28663Gorra mighty,_ who''s dat_?
28663Gorra,he shouted,"is n''t you gwine to help dis pusson too?"
28663Have they made the proposition yet?
28663Have you heard anything hinted of the manner in which they intend to dispose of you?
28663Have you lost much of your wool?
28663How did you succeed in freeing yourself?
28663How do you propose obtaining it?
28663How does I know? 28663 How is it that you are here, then?"
28663How long do you intend to remain here?
28663How long is it that you have felt thus?
28663How soon do you intend discharging your piece?
28663How would you relish being roasted at the stake?
28663Hurt?
28663I have never told you, I believe, why the sight of a red- skin throws me into such a fit, have I?
28663If I tells de truf dey''re sure to t''ink I''s lyin'', and what''s de use?
28663Is it her friends that wish her?
28663Is she with you?
28663Is this the place?
28663It certainly seems probable, but why do you ask?
28663Of course Leslie and his friend are good marksmen, and why can we not do enough to deter and intimidate the savages? 28663 Say, you, you''ll get into trouble, wo n''t you, if you go back?"
28663Sha n''t I carry dat sick leg while you walk wid de oder one?
28663Shall I eat up your cords?
28663Shall we give ourselves up?
28663Still,continued George,"what can we do, even then?
28663Suppose they come upon all sides?
28663That you, Kent?
28663That''s what?
28663Then Kent is gone, is he?
28663Then,said she, bending toward him and lowering her voice still more,"I wish to ask you, Zeb, whether you would do me a favor?"
28663They are going to pursue us, are they not?
28663Well, admitting what you say,continued Leland,"did you leave a trail after getting in the boat, that will be easy for him to follow?"
28663Were you not taken off together?
28663Whar''s de use ob jumpin''? 28663 Whar-- whar?"
28663What are we to encounter now?
28663What did you come nosin''out here fur then?
28663What is it?
28663What is that?
28663What is the news? 28663 What noise is that?"
28663What reason had you for firing upon me?
28663What reason have you then for thinking that we shall meet him?
28663What shall I tell him?
28663What time, Kent?
28663What was it, Zeb?
28663What were you abusing him for, a few minutes ago, when he brought your food?
28663What''s the matter?
28663What, dis yere wool of mine? 28663 Where do you suppose that Kent can be?"
28663Where is George Leland?
28663Where is George?
28663Where is Miss Leland?
28663Who are you?
28663Who de debbil was dat?
28663Who is that you spoke to?
28663Who''s dat?
28663Who''s in distress?
28663Why did he not come here?
28663Why do they misuse you, if they intend to elevate you?
28663Why, what''s the matter, Kent?
28663Why, who would be there?
28663Yes; how came you in this scrape, Zeb?
28663Yes; what of them?
28663You are acquainted with Roland Leslie, Zeb?
28663You mean cut up?
28663You shoot Indian, eh?
28663You shoot Indian, eh?
28663( Then, to the person upon shore):"What might be your name?"
28663A savage approached her and commenced a conversation:"How is the pale- faced maiden?"
28663And clenching his hands he stalked boldly forward and demanded:"Whar''s dat lady?
28663But had I oughter to go dar or not?
28663Can they not lurk around until we die of hunger, or until they fire the building?
28663Could it be possible?
28663Could_ he_ do anything toward rescuing her from bondage?
28663Did n''t I pick dat darkey off awful nice?
28663Did they capture George Leland?"
28663Did you really see an Indian, though?"
28663Do you think, George, that I could rest as long as your sister is in the hands of those savages?"
28663For a few moments the boat glided rapidly down the stream, when Whiteman spoke:"Where''d you put up last night, Leslie?"
28663Goin''to help?"
28663Had I not better run in to the other shore?"
28663Have you seen anything lately to excite suspicion?"
28663He had no more than reached it, when Zeb asked:"See noffin''?"
28663Heigh, Miss Rosa?"
28663How could any one imagine that to be anything else than a genuine flat- boat?
28663How is it, Kent?"
28663I ran in under the bank and had an undisturbed night''s rest?"
28663If he''s done got away, how am I to find him?
28663If the sight of her dress sets you in such fits, what do you s''pose''ll''come of you when you set your eyes on her?
28663In the meantime, what do you propose that we do with ourselves?"
28663Is n''t dat old Kent?"
28663Leslie did as he was bidden, and again spoke:"What is it, Kent?"
28663Leslie?"
28663Might not some other party be misleading them?
28663Mind to help?"
28663Now, s''posen an old feller that do n''t know nothin''says somethin''?"
28663Red- skin?"
28663Rosalind, what did you see?"
28663She could ride down those immediately around her, and what was there to prevent her making good her escape?
28663She resumed:"Are you bound, Zeb?"
28663Was it not a dream?
28663Was it not possible that the party had subdivided, and the one that held her taken an entirely different course?
28663Was she alive, or already slain?
28663Was she living or dead?
28663Was there any hope of meeting her again?
28663What did you let''em cotch_ you_ fur?"
28663What do you make of it?"
28663What reason have you for being here?"
28663What would you advise us to do under the circumstances?"
28663What you say?"
28663Where has he come from?
28663Where was she?
28663Who war jestin''?
28663Why, is that you, George?"
28663Would Kent come back without information or hope?
28663Would he see her, and clasp her to his bosom, or was she a hopeless captive?
28663You know that it would be the best for you to have a companion, and who can you take but me?"
28663You remember Roland Leslie, who was here last summer?
28663[ Illustration:"Does the maiden remember Pequanon?"]
28663[ Illustration:"You shoot Indian, eh?"
28663ca n''t you let a feller''lone, when he''s yarnin''as good as he can?"
28663do you s''pose dere''s anything that''d make_ me_ afeard of dem Injins?
28663does yer s''pects I can jump dat?
28663is Leland there?"
28663massa George, what''s up?"
28663said the latter, in a hurried, husky whisper,"where am de cussed niggers?
28663says I,''what you doin''here?''
28663she murmured,"did you see it?"
28663whar did_ you_ come from?"
28663whar''d_ you_ come from, George?
28663what you wastin''your bullets on dis nigger''s head for?
28663what''s that?"
28663what''s wantin''?"
28663who is this?"
45674A traitor warned the doomed paleface; Shall_ he_ yet live to brave our race? 45674 Cold lips,"I murmured,"breast without breath, Is there no voice, no language in death?"
45674Fair- childof Heaven''s august plan, how comest thou to we d yourself to Man?
45674Has SisterMinn,"whom I used to play with In days of youth, forgotten me?
45674The shock, so sudden, will be great; They''ll quail beneath their hearts own hate Of being there exposed to all; Oh, wo n''t it be an awful fall? 45674 True, my dear; O will you come here?
45674Will they think of me-- a prisoner-- I, who was once their pride and joy? 45674 You''ve named your only son from me; Trueman it is,_ True- Man_ he''ll be, And now must I sit by in shame And can not seal my daughter''s fame?"
45674Am I mistaken?
45674Am I so wicked, sinful, that I can not move Thy loving kindness, to a slight reprove?
45674Am I to Thee, O Christ, as dead?
45674And for my cruel, wicked crime no joy above all this?
45674And he softly, fondly questioned:"Shall I know such bliss once more?"
45674And is man''s inhuman conduct pleasing in Jehovah''s sight?
45674And what if the down of the thistle Is ripened and scattered away?
45674And what if the down of the thistle Is ripened and scattered away?
45674And when the judge my doom proclaimed, And three long years of exile named, Who looked indignant and ashamed?
45674And when twelve men, in one compound, For me a guilty verdict found, Who came to stanch the bleeding wound?
45674Apply his heartless rule, and can you truly say Any man or woman would be left to slay?
45674Are all our hopes in vain?
45674Are you forgetful that the crown of fame Is purchased torture and expiring shame?
45674Art thou so good, so free from sin That thou should''st judge thy fellow men?
45674Bid me to draw a servile, galling chain, Nor wish to murmur, nor murmur to complain?
45674Both principle and policy declare this course is wise; Then why longer act the fool and wisdom''s voice despise?
45674Bows my heart in adoration-- Shall my lips repeat Amen?
45674Can abuse and brutal treatment purge the sinner of his guilt?
45674Can enemies, vile, cruel things, Twist truth all out of shape, And cause one who''s not guilty To morally wear death''s crepe?
45674Can it be That I must dwell forever in this wretched misery?
45674Can rock- ribbed walls and bars of steel Deprive man of the power to feel?
45674Can such beings know the rapture Heaven decrees to poet souls?
45674Can you the stream of Lethe roll In maddening torrents o''er the soul, Pluck from my brow love''s garland fair And brand me"Victim of despair?"
45674Canst I at this late day by full repentance see The divine, the holy, ever cleansing love In Thee?
45674Canst Thou be Christ and have no love for me?
45674Canst thou not bid the empty realms restore That form, the symbol of thy heavenly part?
45674Did life roll back its record, my dear, Showing all past deeds dark and clear?
45674Do not his senses thrill?
45674Does not conscience loudly thunder:"Sin is but the fruit of hate, And who stones a helpless brother most deserves that victim''s fate?
45674Dost Thou doom it to endless misery?
45674Dread you man''s censure or admire applause?
45674Dreams he not of beauty who, with open arms, Calls for lust to enter and revel''mid her charms?
45674For radiant ones in the world above Forget those whom on earth they love?
45674Have the days any brightness for you?
45674Have you felt their sweet control?
45674Have you heard their wondrous music?
45674Have you plans or dreams for the future?
45674He is not worthy of your love; Let my sister choose a mate; Oguchu''s lodge is open, Will my sister spurn her fate?"
45674He said:"I know we are both rich In lands and kine and gold, And why not join these vast fortunes Before they are all sold?
45674How can you, then, a prisoner make, When his Mind''s as free as space?
45674I, who have lived by a false name To hide a step- mother''s wicked shame?
45674If death is but oblivion''s gate, Why younger grows the soul with years?
45674If ever again I shall be free Will the wreck of my life still haunted be?
45674If such petty crimes as this deserve such prison fare, Come now, honest reader, what is_ your_ just share?
45674If that will prove recreant to Jehovah''s trust, Pays he not the penalty in self- consuming lust?
45674If, amid these prison shadows, These pale lips should breathe their last, Would my friends regret the summons, And forgive my guilty past?
45674In this cold and darkened cell, dost Thou reprove My soul?
45674Is all religion but a myth?
45674Is heaven affectation''s child, Born of disordered brain?
45674Is his eye not captive?
45674Is my destiny Hell?
45674Is that my cruel sentence because in sin I fell?
45674Is the change with retrogression or with onward progress fraught?
45674Is there no justice here on earth?
45674Is there no power to bring to light The_ truth_ of my offense?
45674Is this his soul''s desire?
45674Is this poor fallen man?
45674Is this the harp so late unstrung?
45674Is this the horrid, horrid place my mother taught was Hell?
45674It may not be so good nor bad, Nor bad nor good indeed, But is it plenty good enough As a standard for a creed?
45674It might not be the blackest crime Known to the criminal code, But can it be sufficiently white To call it very good?
45674Lenora confided in his worth, Receiving each promise as truth-- How could she doubt her only love In the trustful hours of youth?
45674Live, die in Hell, and yet a Paradise so near?
45674Most I but perish in this den To end this wretched life?
45674Must I live here in earthly fear, and never, never hear The sweetest voice to me of all, I''ve heard not for a year?
45674Must I this torture feel, year after year?
45674Must his spirit suffer through unending years For the shame he purchased with agonizing tears?
45674Must perjury and bribery Prevail forever hence?
45674Must truth remain crushed down And vile and wicked, cruel man Forever look and frown?
45674Naught but some poor chicken or a ham he stole-- Shall the devil purchase at such price a soul?
45674Oh, can it be That you do really care for me?
45674Oh, did love, sweet mistress of bliss, Affrighted, vanish to shun death''s kiss?
45674Oh, fearful, fearful fire of hell, what can it be within?
45674Oh, shall I plead and plead with you in vain To bring love''s sunlight to my soul again?
45674Oh, sweetheart of the days of yore, Shall we meet on earth no more?
45674Oh, what base deed has these my fingers wrought To wake a malice with each vengeance fraught?
45674Oh, whence the strains the soul can hear When all is hushed in sleep, And none, save God and angels, near When souls their vigils keep?
45674Oh, yes; forgive me, darling, I did almost forget; But how can mortal silence keep By such sweet eyes beset?
45674Old Satan, canst thou speak?
45674On what liner did you sail"?
45674Or do pitying angels shudder, as the cruel lash you ply, Wondering man can be so brutal and the laws of God defy?
45674Or do they walk with joyful tread Heaven''s ever radiant shore?
45674Or have you lived in Paris long?
45674Or in the barren fields of silence pour That voice, the perfect music of thy heart?
45674Or shall I tell you, dearest one, Why yonder''s rippling stream First gained the name"Tululah"In an age that''s now a dream?
45674Or shall it be That morning''s light shall break, And from my soul such music bring As earth could never wake?
45674Or shall truth be crushed and bleeding, ever bound in prison chain?
45674Or was it a greater marvel to feel The perfect calm o''er agony steal?
45674Other eyes beside our own Have seen the Phantom Boat, And other ears than ours have heard That wild, weird?
45674See, I listen with soul, not ear; What is the secret of dying, my dear?
45674Shall I languish all alone Without one sympathetic tone-- One glance of love, one word of cheer From eyes and lips I hold so dear?
45674Shall acts repented, bred of undue haste, Lay all my stock of future pleasures waste?
45674Shall empty words defy our proud behest, Or useless offering prevent our guest?
45674Shall it be yours to touch that vibrant chord And share the honor of the great reward?
45674She watched me with a languid smile, And pointed to her heart:"You have destroyed the proof,"she said,"But can you ease the smart?"
45674Should your old- time friends forsake you-- Those who were strong and true-- And leave you helpless, homeless-- What are you going to do?
45674Tell me frankly, honest reader, can two wrongs create a right?
45674Theorize and reason as we may, How little we can really know; We only learn to live, then die, And who may say to what we go?
45674They come not as invited guests To while away the tedious hours-- Are they not lights from heaven sent To teach the soul its wondrous powers?
45674Think you man''s plaudits or his causeless hate Can either ope or close the pearly gate?
45674Think you my proud and haughty soul to cower With scorpion lashes of tempestuous power?
45674Think you the spirit''s rapid flight to mar With dungeon torture and by iron bar?
45674Tho''you tell me, who will believe''twas said?
45674To Satan must I bow?
45674Was it only but a dream?
45674Was it the infinite wonder of all That you could let life''s flower fall?
45674Was that old Greek right, who, tho''a man of sense, Could mete out death to all for each small offense?
45674Was the miracle greatest to find how deep Beyond all dreams sank down that sleep?
45674We kindly took a homeless wanderer in, And dare he brand our greatest pleasure sin?
45674What are you going to do?
45674What are you going to do?
45674What care we for the pang at heart?
45674What care we for this hand?
45674What if all conscience could be searched Clear through with cathode rays, How many would cheerfully submit, Who''d reached their manhood days?
45674What if our hearts are lonely As we toil in our enemy''s hand?
45674What if our sad looks betray us As we take a true manly stand?
45674What if the gold of the corn lands Is faded to somber grey?
45674What if those who are dearest Live ever away so far?
45674What is left the tempted one save his feeble will?
45674What means that frightful yell?
45674What of this wretched body?
45674What pen can picture or what brush can paint The endless rapture of a raptured saint?
45674What''f our friends are far from us And they know not where we are?
45674What, can it be that I am lost and''ll never know thy bliss?
45674What, never?
45674When the long weary days are over And the front gates open to you, Are you again to be a wild rover?
45674When, at the sheriff''s stern command, I for the train was told to stand, Who longest shook and squeezed my hand?
45674When, sick in jail, I senseless lay, Who took my watch and case away, Lest prowling thieves on me should prey?
45674Where are the friends of earlier years-- Sleep they to wake no more?
45674Where is the man on this broad earth, so pure, so good, so true, That never gave an action birth he dared not bring to view?
45674Where is the man on this vile earth But what has done some wrong, And in his mind''s concealed it, Tho''it stings him like a thong?
45674Which loved her best, the man who_ died_ Or he who_ lived_ to cheer his bride?
45674While I sleep in the churchyard yonder Will they think of their wayward boy?
45674While prayers ascend from sacred fane Shall penitent tears be shed in vain?
45674Who closed the mortgage on my lot, And drove my family from my cot, And left them homeless on the spot?
45674Who ever placed in man implicit trust, Nor saw his idol, soon or late, in dust?
45674Who is it, in this life so drear, That pines for the wandering boy, And ever ready with words of cheer To turn sad thoughts to joy?
45674Who is it, when all others do forsake And leave us to our grief, That will for long hours lie awake And pray for our relief?
45674Who is it, when from prison freed-- The boy goes forth so sadly-- That receives him in his hour of need With tears of joy-- yea, gladly?
45674Who is it, when the end has come, Looks fondly on her child, And prays to God for a happy home For the boy that''s been so wild?
45674Who is it, when the world laughs on And gives our sighs no thought, That thinks of the boy who looks upon This life that''s come to naught?
45674Who knows but legends the Muses tell Are truths encased in a mighty dream?
45674Who knows but the angels of earth and air Are the beautiful nymphs beside each stream?
45674Who knows but what we call a brute Is with immortal reason blest?
45674Who knows man is alone divine And destined to immortal rest?
45674Who said my time within the wall Would be exceeding brief and small, The minimum, or none at all?
45674Who to my wealth tenacious clung, And for me wagged his oily tongue, And at my foes hot embers flung?
45674Who told me I should not confess, That he would all my wrongs redress And set me free from all distress?
45674Who told me he was dreadful smart And knew the law- books all by heart, And always took his client''s part?
45674Who, in the court, with peerless pride, My rights affirmed, my guilt denied, And swore the State''s attorney lied?
45674Who, when he had me safe confined, No more concerned his crafty mind, Nor was, for me, to grief inclined?
45674Who, when of prison clothes I''m stripped, And from these walls am homeward shipped, Will get himself immensely whipped?
45674Whose are the faces that we see When melts the hearts in tears?
45674Why thus pursue an ever fading wraith?
45674Why thus torment my swift declining age With useless torture of unreasoning rage?
45674Wil''t thou but listen-- hear?
45674Will Christ ascend to a prison cell And deign in a convict heart to dwell?
45674Will every branch of the family tree Still bud and bloom till I am free?
45674Will my foul crime forever haunt my brain?
45674Will the absent ones I love the best''Neath heaven''s smile serenely rest?
45674Will the fountain of life, now bathed in tears, Ebb and flow ten weary years?
45674Will the much loved friends in the days of yore Spurn me from their open door?
45674Will the soul escape the horrible blight That stalks in prison''s gruesome night?
45674Will this volume change your custom or relieve our horrid pain?
45674Will you be a poor homeless creature?
45674Will you cast your glances backward, gathering age along by age, Proof that man is wholly brutal when controlled by maddening rage?
45674Will you deprive my hungry soul of love, Nor leave one spark of happiness above?
45674Will you listen, while we''re watching For the far- famed Phantom Boat?
45674Will_ you_ sit by nor vengeance take?"
45674Would the gates of glory open To let this weary wanderer in?
45674Would these hours of retribution Prove sufficient for my sin?
45674Would they know how oft and earnest I had plead before the throne For the place my crime made vacant In the bosom of my own?
45674Would they know the dire temptations I had met and nobly braved Ere the tears in guilty passion My pale cheeks in torrents laved?
45674Yet when vice allures him with seductive ray, Gives he not to passion undisputed sway?
45674[ Illustration]_ A PRAYER FOR JUSTICE._ Oh, God in heaven up on high, How long this cruel strife?
45674[ Illustration]_ A PRISONER''S THANKSGIVING._ What if the gold of the corn lands Is faded to somber grey?
45674[ Illustration]_ MY LAWYER._ When grappled in the law''s embrace, Who first betrayed an anxious face And fain would shield me from disgrace?
45674[ Illustration]_ WOULD THEY KNOW?_ BY 25700.
45674_ FORGET?
45674and I still live?
45674can a human cry Reach that resounding shore?
45674can it be that all was wrought obedient to God''s plan"?
45674can it be they look like men and''stead of hearts they have but sin And grinning hang around me?
45674do people care what''s in another''s brain?
45674he cried,"am I deceived?
45674how watchful Is that victim, who can say?
45674in yonder chapel shrine I hear sweet music as of yore; I ask,"What music is that sounds so fine?"
45674is it night?
45674is there no remedy For earthly subjects thus To be relieved from wretched pain Without this earthly fuss?
45674pale brother,"laughed the wine,"Can you boast of deeds so great as mine?"
45674thou passeth on so slow, Keeping my soul in terror, in bondage, and in woe; Was I to blame?
45674what means that fierce warhoop, Resounding loud and clear?
45674where is my brave?
45674whither shall I fly?
45674who this stranger gave The right to judge us and our will to brave?
45674wilt Thou not hear?
16869''Oh death, where is thy sting? 16869 A Huron Indian?
16869A bullet struck you?
16869Ai n''t dere notting else to tell him?
16869Ai n''t hurt, eh? 16869 And I suppose you do not wish me to eat of them?"
16869And I suppose you find occasion to use them all?
16869And are the Shawnees upon Fluellina''s trail?
16869And breaks mine own neck, too, eh?
16869And did you make dem pieces of bark to come swimming down by me?
16869And is their baby, too?
16869And shtirred de water wid yer hand and moved de limb?
16869And vot will become of me?
16869And what did he say?
16869And what of the gal?
16869And when did they-- the Shawnees-- go away?
16869And when saw you the Shawnees?
16869Are they all sound asleep-- your Lily and children?
16869Are you a prisoner, also?
16869But Keeway-- your wife?
16869But what am I about?
16869But where is it?
16869But will your Lily allow me to depart?
16869But you_ expect_ to rescue her, do you not?
16869But, as there were no evidences of a storm coming very soon, why should you get in there just now?
16869Ca n''t you tell me more precisely than that?
16869Ca n''t you think as well while you''re_ fishing_?
16869Can any of these around me understand English?
16869Can he not go with Fluellina to- day?
16869Cato go with us?
16869Certainly-- you have been there and back you said, did n''t you?
16869De gal? 16869 Dey burnt de place, I shpose?"
16869Did I growl at you?
16869Did n''t t''ink Cato was afeard, Massa Canfield?
16869Did she send Niniotan for him?
16869Did you drop down out te clouds?
16869Did you see anything more of Miss Mary?
16869Do I look like one?
16869Do n''t you know me, Cato?
16869Do n''t''spect none of dem Injines will be back here?
16869Do you feel sleepy, Cato?
16869Do you want to know''bout her?
16869Does he know Oonomoo?
16869Does n''t t''ink I''s_ afeard_?
16869Does you know Oonomoo?
16869Friends or foes?
16869From which direction do you think they come?
16869Had you no warning of their approach?
16869Has Fluellina the choicest food these forests can afford?
16869Has he a wife and family?
16869Has the Moravian missionary given Niniotan two tongues that he should think Oonomoo speaks idle words?
16869Have you ever been there yourself?
16869Have you told me when you built this house of yours?
16869Have you, indeed?
16869Her mother? 16869 How are you going to get her?"
16869How came you here?
16869How came you to wander so far out of your way as to get here?
16869How did you get them in these different places? 16869 How did you get wet?"
16869How do you do, brother?
16869How do you know, Cato, that this was the reason she remained behind?
16869How does matters progress with my brother?
16869How far are we from the Shawnee village?
16869How fur does you live from here-- dat is, how fur did you live?
16869How gets along our prisoner?
16869How long will it take Niniotan to guide Oonomoo there?
16869How should I know? 16869 How soon go back?"
16869How was it Miss Mary remained behind?
16869How was it that_ you_ escaped?
16869How would you like to go there?
16869How- de- do, brudder?
16869I have a dear young friend--"Who ish he?
16869I shpose you wanted to see me?
16869I shpose your folks will feel bad when dey finds dese Shawnees have got you, wo n''t dey?
16869Is he dead?
16869Is her husband, that rascally Ferrington, living?
16869Is mother and sister well?
16869Is n''t this an impressive sight, Oonomoo?
16869Is the water very deep?
16869Ish dat you, Oonomoo?
16869Keewaygooshturkumkankangewock, ai n''t you got dat cooked?
16869Keewaygooshturkumkankangewock? 16869 Know de way to settlement?"
16869Know me here? 16869 Me?
16869My God, Oonomoo, why do you say that?
16869No trouble, I trust?
16869No, no, Oonomoo, you need n''t be afraid--"Afraid who?
16869None of Captain Prescott''s family were in the house besides Mary, were they?
16869Not yours?
16869Notting to send to Lieutenant Canfield, eh?
16869Of whom are you speaking? 16869 Oh, dat''s de difference, am it?
16869Oh, den he do n''t know notting about it?
16869Quanonshet, you little Dutchman, and Madokawandock, you little bigger Dutchman, vot does you t''ink of yourselves? 16869 See her dis mornin''?"
16869See who?
16869Shall he be a merciful warrior?
16869Shawnees know here?
16869Shawnees wo n''t come here?
16869Take gum?
16869Then why do you linger?
16869To de village, do you mean?
16869Voot''s your name?
16869Vot makes you falls on mine head, eh?
16869Vot you got dere?
16869Was dat you on de tree out dere?
16869Well, Oonomoo, what''s to be done with him?
16869What are_ you_ going to do?
16869What brings you thus far in the woods?
16869What do you want, Oonomoo?
16869What does she there?
16869What in the name of creation is the meaning of that concern, and what sort of animal is caged in it?
16869What is it?
16869What is it?
16869What is the matter with him?
16869What is the matter?
16869What possible motive could influence him to risk his life in my rescue?
16869What think the missionary of Niniotan?
16869What time''spect him?
16869What was the first thing you heard, Cato? 16869 What will become of them?"
16869What ye want to do dat ar?
16869What ye''scussin''ob my name for?
16869What you going to do, my dear frau?
16869What''s the matter, Hans? 16869 What''s the matter?"
16869When are we to go to the Shawnee village?
16869When did Fluellina and my son leave their home on the island in the water?
16869When did dey took her?
16869When did you see Annie Stanton last?
16869When has Fluellina seen the Moravian missionary?
16869When will he return again?
16869When will we rescue her from the dogs-- the Shawnees?
16869Where be Niniotan?
16869Where did it hit you?
16869Where in dunderation did dey come from?
16869Where is Fluellina hid?
16869Where is Fluellina''s hand?
16869Where is Niniotan?
16869Where is he? 16869 Where''d you come from, Oonomoo?"
16869Where''s mine pipe?
16869Where''s the girl? 16869 Where?
16869Who cares, sis? 16869 Who has come?
16869Who is it that supports them now and takes care of them? 16869 Who ish dat friend?"
16869Who might be you wid your big bread- basket?
16869Who?
16869Why I build dat? 16869 Why did you build such a looking concern as that?"
16869Why no marry den?
16869Why wo n''t he? 16869 Why would it be a good thing?"
16869Why, what do you mean, my friend? 16869 Why, what''s the matter?"
16869Will we bofe git on de hoss?
16869Will you answer it?
16869Wo n''t get her?
16869Would it not be best to move to prevent discovery?
16869Would it not be best to take a look outside and see whether there is any danger of our being discovered?
16869Yes, I do; but, why in the name of common sense did you set up such a growling when I came near your old cabin?
16869You ai n''t agoin''to leab me here, be you?
16869You does n''t t''ink de baby will dies, does you?
16869You ishn''t ashleep bees you?
16869You know how to dig, I presume?
16869You know the way?
16869You say my brave Hans let her go, eh? 16869 You sick too?"
16869You understand, Cato? 16869 You washn''t left all alone?"
16869You''re Hans Vanderbum, eh? 16869 _ And none shall ever hang there again._""Not the scalp of the Shawnee?"
16869_ The Shawnees have discovered the home of Oonomoo!_"And where is Fluellina?
16869''What you doing, Mose?''
16869And how is my dear father and mother and sister Helen?"
16869And what did she say?"
16869Are we going to stand by and let him do it alone, when for twenty years he has worked night and day for us?"
16869Are you sick?"
16869Are you unharmed?"
16869Brushing the luxuriant hair from the face of the dying Indian, the preacher said:"Oonomoo, is there anything I can do for you?"
16869But what reason could he have had for rearing such a structure?
16869Can I do anything to relieve your pain?"
16869Carry them there yourself?"
16869Did you expect to meet him in this place?"
16869Did you get many?"
16869Do n''t you b''lieve dey did?"
16869Do n''t you see dem Injines dar?"
16869Do you know him too?
16869Do you know whether there is a spade or shovel lying about?"
16869Do you suppose that_ I_ could ever remunerate him for the happiness he has brought_ me_?"
16869Does n''t you fink I does?"
16869Eh?
16869Great was his amazement, therefore, when, instead of rebukes and blows, she came smilingly forward and asked:"Has my husband been sick?"
16869Had n''t you better goes out, my dear, good, kind Keewaygooshturkumkankangewock, and see vot it is?"
16869Have n''t I you left?
16869He who appeared to be the leading warrior now asked:"Whither does my brother Huron wish to go?"
16869Here he is working himself to skin and bone-- Keewaygooshturkumkankangewock, ai n''t you got dat cooked?"
16869How did you got here?"
16869I see''d Miss Mary----""Did they harm her?"
16869I would shust like to know if dere ishn''t some feller dat is in love mit you, and you is in love mit, and dat both ish in love mit each oder, eh?"
16869Ishn''t dat breakfast ready, my dear wife?"
16869Know what Keewaygooshturkumkankangewock means?"
16869Looking sternly at the two, he asked, in a threatening voice:"Which of you put dat powder in mine meerschaum, eh?
16869Oder Injines_ mought_ be around dese parts and would n''t it be a good idee to git in de woods whar dey would n''t be so apt to see us?"
16869See here, men,"said he, turning around,"Oonomoo''s wife is in danger, and are we going to help her out or not, eh?
16869Shall I call him?"
16869The quick eye of the Huron had caught a glimpse of the girl behind the Dutchman, and he now came up and addressed her:"Is my friend''fraid?"
16869The young soldier continued musing for a moment and then asked:"How far from here is the settlement to which Mrs. Prescott has gone?"
16869Vot do you t''ink of yourself?"
16869Vot does you t''ink will become of you, disgracing your parents in this manner?
16869Wal, you see I and Big Mose had just gwane to bed and blowed de candle out----""Had Miss Mary retired?"
16869Whar''d you want thar graves?"
16869What caused one hand to close over his knife, and the other to grasp his rifle?
16869What kindled the fire in his dark eye?
16869What made ye ax me dat queshun?"
16869What possible purpose could it serve him?
16869What sign caught the notice of Oonomoo?
16869What you ax?"
16869What''s that?"
16869When did you put those logs together, Cato?"
16869Where am dey?"
16869Where ish your parents?"
16869Where''s the pale- faced captive?"
16869Who cares?
16869Who is it that does that?
16869Who you talking about-- Keewaygooshturkumkankangewock?"
16869Why did you not go?"
16869Why do n''t you come to the arms of your father, sis, and let him hug you?"
16869Why do you speak of him in that manner?"
16869Will you go with me?"
16869Will you see him?"
16869You going now?"
16869Your wife is in danger, eh?
16869[ Illustration:"Keewaygooshturkumkankangewock, ai n''t you got dat cooked?"]
16869ai n''t dem two talkin'', and ca n''t I frow in an obserwashun once in a while, eh?"
16869ai n''t you an Injine, Massa Canfield?"
16869alone?"
16869am it Injines?"
16869dat you, Oonomoo?
16869dat you, ole swill- barrel?"
16869did n''t I hear her tell Missis so?"
16869is that you, my good, kind Oonomoo?"
16869ish it pizen?"
16869on the rock?"
16869vot do you t''ink of yourself, eh?
16869vot made tat tree fall on me?"
16869what are you talking about?"
16869what did he say?
16869what have we here?"
16869what is it?"
16869what makes you fink so, old hogsit, eh?
16869what''d you ax that fur?"
16869when shall I see him?
16869which of you done dat, eh?"
16869who are you?"
16869will you not stay by me?"
16869you does n''t know, eh?"
27231Afraid of what?
27231Ai n''t you sleepy?
27231Ai n''t you tired?
27231Ai n''t you_ afeard_ they might come down on you?
27231And much more comfortable, I suppose?
27231And was it you who fired those shots?
27231And what difference does it make? 27231 And why are you alarmed on my account?
27231And will they accompany us?
27231Are you frightened?
27231Are you going to stay up all night?
27231Are you going to warn others?
27231Are you offended?
27231Are you sure?
27231Attack purty soon-- keep eye peeled-- don''t see notting?
27231Be you really the leader of the Riflemen?
27231Believe it? 27231 But do n''t you notice the bank gets so low down yonder that it wo n''t hide us, and we''ll have to show ourselves?"
27231But see here,pursued the Rifleman,"how comes it you are in these woods at all?
27231But where are your men?
27231But where''s the gal?
27231Ca n''t you understand what they''re driving at?
27231Can I go''long with you?
27231Can you shoot?
27231Did he lick you for nothin''?
27231Did n''t it strike you that he acted queerly then?
27231Did n''t lose his?
27231Did you do it on purpose?
27231Do n''t anybody know? 27231 Do n''t you believe I love you?"
27231Do n''t you feel able to walk?
27231Do n''t you see they''re pointing up the river and across it? 27231 Do they carry such articles with them?"
27231Do you think there is any one following us?
27231Do you think,asked Dick, in a low tone, for he entertained a strong affection for his leader,"Do you think it is_ certain_ Lew has been catched?"
27231Do you want me to tell you?
27231Do you wish to keep me here longer, to mortify me?
27231Done eatin''?
27231Eber seen logs afore?
27231Father,said son Jim, with a meaning smile,"you remember the night that Lew brought Edith to our house?"
27231Got long eyes?
27231Have I ever seen them logs before? 27231 Have you discovered danger?
27231How are_ we_ going to find it?
27231How came you in these parts, my friend?
27231How do you feel?
27231How do you know it is, eh?
27231How do you know that, I should like to know? 27231 How do you know that?
27231How do you know that?
27231How far, dear friend, did you say it is to the settlement?
27231How get him?
27231How is it that you are here, then?
27231How is this? 27231 How is this?
27231How shall I know whether it is you or not?
27231How t''row white men off scent, eh?
27231How they look when last see him?
27231How will you do that?
27231How?
27231I guess yer ai n''t used to cookin'', be you?
27231I s''pose we''ll hunt as we did yesterday?
27231I say, Lew,said his brother,"I''ve asked yer half a dozen times, whether there''s any thing that need keep us here any longer?"
27231I say, father, how much further ahead is that creek we''ve got to cross?
27231I wonder what they are going to jabber about?
27231I? 27231 Is n''t the bird cooked well enough?"
27231Is that so?
27231Is that their dispute?
27231Is the row done with?
27231It''ll scare''em, I guess, wo n''t it?
27231It''s pretty plain they''re going to cross the river, but, confound it, how can we tell where it''s going to be done? 27231 Know it?
27231Know what I''ve done? 27231 Leave you?
27231Let''s see-- we''ve come over forty mile, hain''t we?
27231Me fire? 27231 Nobody else?"
27231Of course she does,said Tom,"so what''s the use of talking?
27231Over the same ground that I come over?
27231See here, Zeke, was there any Injins chasing you, just now?
27231Shawnee got him? 27231 Shawnees, I s''pose?"
27231She is n''t with him, then?
27231Should they accidentally come across our trail, it would be easy enough for them to follow it, would it not?
27231Suppose we_ are_ overtaken?
27231Sure?
27231That is, did you_ know_ we should be pursued and persecuted as we have been when we started?
27231The Huron-- Oonamoo?
27231The Indians will not trouble us again?
27231The creek?
27231Then why do you ask me such a question? 27231 Then you''ll take a tramp with me?"
27231They did n''t catch you?
27231Want to fire again?
27231We can reach it, then, by traveling all night?
27231Well, what of that?
27231Well, what''s the next move? 27231 What are they waiting for?"
27231What are they waiting for?
27231What are you going to do with that?
27231What can have become of the fools?
27231What can_ that_ red- skin mean by being in these parts? 27231 What do you mean?
27231What do you want the gal caught for?
27231What do you want to know for, eh?
27231What else have you to tell?
27231What has made you sick?
27231What is the matter with this cooking, I should like to know; eh?
27231What is the matter? 27231 What made you fire, Jake?"
27231What made you leave it?
27231What makes you act so strangely-- and keep away from me as though you hated me?
27231What makes you think so?
27231What makes you think so?
27231What makes you think so?
27231What might be your name?
27231What seems to be the general expectation?
27231What sort of a chap is he?
27231What the deuce is the matter?
27231What want to do? 27231 What was it for?"
27231What''s the matter, Lew?
27231What''s the matter? 27231 What''s the matter?"
27231What''s the matter?
27231What''s their idea, Oonamoo?
27231What''s up now?
27231What''s up? 27231 What?
27231Where do you suppose that will be?
27231Where is it you belong?
27231Where is she?
27231Where lost? 27231 Where shall we fly?"
27231Where the deuce did they get their bows and tow from?
27231Where the deuce has Lew gone to?
27231Which way are you going?
27231Who can this chap be?
27231Who finished it?
27231Who is with you?
27231Who said they was n''t?
27231Who the deuce wants you to pay us?
27231Who wants it to hide us? 27231 Who?"
27231Why did n''t he do as you did-- come over and join me?
27231Why do n''t you go back?
27231Why do n''t you want to hear it?
27231Why do you think he has n''t used this tree?
27231Why do you think he would n''t take the shortest way home?
27231Why does n''t he show himself, the coward? 27231 Why no killed-- no hurt?"
27231Why not rejoin our friends?
27231Why this change of direction?
27231Why, Edith,_ did n''t you squeeze my hand_?
27231Why, how did I do it?
27231Why, what need is there of that?
27231Why, what''s up now?
27231Wo n''t any of these logs burn?
27231Wo n''t get over afore morning then?
27231Wo n''t you even look at me?
27231Yes; did n''t I tell you that?
27231You all seen him, did n''t you?
27231You do n''t s''pose the Injins will see it, do you?
27231You going to turn me off? 27231 You have, eh?"
27231You know what I''m certain of?
27231You please tell her that it is_ necessary_, then, will you?
27231You see, him and the gal----"Gal with him?
27231You think we can keep out of their hands?
27231You will not leave me?
27231_ Anybody go with him?_"He took a female, believing that her safety demanded such a course.
27231_ What of that?_he exclaimed, indignantly.
27231Ai n''t there any Injins in the neighborhood?"
27231And what''s the odds whether they''ve daubed themselves up with their stuff or not?"
27231Any danger?"
27231Are we pursued?"
27231Are you hurt?
27231As soon as-- where''s Oonamoo?"
27231At length he questioned the Huron:"Where''s Tom?"
27231Be you two hunting?"
27231Been up late at night, I s''pose?"
27231Both welcomed him, and when he had been seated, Edith asked, rather abruptly:"Now, Lewis, what is the matter with you?"
27231But how is he going to throw the dogs off the scent?"
27231But, I say, do you know the head feller of them Riflemen?"
27231But, father,"asked Jim, in an earnest whisper,"how is it about the Injins?
27231Ca n''t a chap rub his eyes without your gaping at him that way?"
27231Can you stand it till then?"
27231Come, now, where is Lew?
27231Confound''em, what''s the use?"
27231Dick, who, by the merest accident, glanced in his face was nearly startled off his feet by the irascible fellow shouting:"What you looking at?
27231Do n''t you think so?"
27231Do you know what you have done?"
27231Do you wish to go with us?"
27231Foller him-- catch him?"
27231Go back to her friends, I s''pose?"
27231Got any thing to eat?"
27231Have you been hanging around here all night?"
27231Have you seen him?"
27231Hope you''re never taken for him, be you?"
27231How are we to know where to look for his trail?"
27231How came you to be so interested in a stranger?"
27231How could she, being a woman, help it?
27231How do I know why I ai n''t sleepy?
27231How far did you say the settlement is off?"
27231How much longer will it take us to reach it?"
27231How was it?"
27231How will they know enough of our direction to keep up the pursuit?"
27231I do n''t s''pose you''ve traveled the woods much, have you?"
27231I''ve promised them that we will see them through-- where''s Sego?"
27231If we get over the creek without much trouble with the oxen, we may fetch up there by sundown, eh?"
27231Miami got him?"
27231Of course you may, provided she is willing, for where could she be safer than in the charge of Lew Dernor?
27231Out on a scout?"
27231Pray, what is it?"
27231Sam, in front, is n''t likely to get asleep, is he?"
27231Say, you, did you ever hear of the Riflemen of the Miami?"
27231Shall I tell you where he''s going?
27231Take a longer way home, and a safer one, or the short route?"
27231Take her?
27231The Riflemen of the Miami----""Are you the men who are known by that name?"
27231The bronzed face of the hunter took a deeper hue as he asked:"Is she-- Edith with you?"
27231The latter drew his knife, and said:"Keep off, Lew Dernor; do n''t you know me?"
27231They''ve got somebody''s gal there, hain''t they?
27231To set up a yell and pitch after them?"
27231What are you doing?
27231What caused it?"
27231What did you mean by saying that?"
27231What did you play''possum for?"
27231What good could that possibly do?"
27231What has occurred that makes you walk faster, and look so constantly about you?"
27231What is the meaning of that?"
27231What is the rest?"
27231What is there about that name that so troubles you?"
27231What shall I do?
27231What would I wish to hurt you for?"
27231What''s the gal want to do?
27231When this was announced, he turned round, and with an impatient exclamation, demanded:"Who fired that gun last?"
27231Where are they?"
27231Where does the trail lead to now, Oonamoo?"
27231Where see him last?"
27231Where were they?
27231Who''s been kindling a fire at this time of day?"
27231Who''s that with you?"
27231Why did he whip you this last time when you run away?"
27231Why did n''t you do it?"
27231Why do n''t the cowardly dogs rush in upon us?
27231Why do n''t you feel sleepy?"
27231Why do you ask again?"
27231Why do you ask?"
27231Will he be back to- day?"
27231Wo n''t that be the best we can do, Tom?"
27231Wo n''t you fight, Lew?"
27231You ai n''t on a scout or hunt just now, then?"
27231You did n''t come all the way from Pennsylvany alone?"
27231You mind the time, Jim, when he went with us over into Kentucky, and he saved us from running into that ambush?"
27231Young Smith noticed his emotion, and asked, with some alarm:"What''s the matter, Lew?
27231anybody hurt?"
27231are we to be burnt alive?"
27231did n''t he jump?
27231eh?
27231eh?
27231has n''t the boy used his pegs along here?"
27231hear those shouts-- but how can you prevent it?"
27231how long afore you''re goin''to start?"
27231it''s got to come to that sooner or later, and who could she get better than Lew Dernor, the leader of the Miami Riflemen?"
27231what are they saying?"
27231what is it that pleases you, Oonamoo?"
27231what''s the matter?"
27231who intended to refuse it?
27231who said we could n''t?
27231you ai n''t going to lick me too, are you?"
42111A kangaroo?
42111Alis,the speaker called to her,"was that really Senator Thebold?"
42111All right, but why me?
42111And he has the item with him?
42111And who are you?
42111Another drink?
42111Any further orders, sir?
42111Any word from down there?
42111Anybody find His Majesty yet?
42111Anything?
42111Are n''t you underestimating the Gizls? 42111 Are there any particular times I''m to report?"
42111Are we going to Europe?
42111Are we ready?
42111Are you alone now?
42111Are you connected with the college?
42111Are you the duly constituted authority?
42111Are you thinking,he asked,"that Mayor Civek was perhaps just a little less than completely honest with us?"
42111Are_ you_ the boss?
42111Asteroida? 42111 Behind it all?"
42111Bottle over the side?
42111But even if this crazy machine could knock out Hector''s and Thebold''s men and the Garet- Rubach Axis reigns supreme, then what? 42111 But not_ bringing_ them down, eh?
42111But where''s he going with it?
42111Ca n''t you stop them? 42111 Can he hear you or shall I repeat everything?"
42111Can you hear me?
42111Can you?
42111Can you?
42111Cheeky McFerson?
42111Come to shoot a little pool?
42111Did anybody say anything while I was gone?
42111Did it have a nose, ears, mouth?
42111Did they see you?
42111Did you see the whole face?
42111Do I look like a man?
42111Do n''t you think this is at all peculiar? 42111 Do n''t you think you''ve had enough?"
42111Do you know Geneva Jervis?
42111Do you mean you''ve been listening in ever since I strapped on the transceiver?
42111Do you read me?
42111Do you still think Civek is fronting for the Cavalier crowd?
42111Do you think that''s Bobby Thebold?
42111Does Superior have an airport?
42111Does your father claim that_ he_ levitated Superior off the face of the Earth?
42111Don? 42111 End partition?"
42111Father broke with Hector?
42111First, where from, eh?
42111Foghorn Frank?
42111Going on?
42111Have n''t you even got an inkling of what he''s up to?
42111Have n''t you ever been to New York? 42111 Have you got a title yet?
42111Have you noticed the guns in the upstairs windows?
42111Have you noticed the rush to emigrate? 42111 Have you seen Miss Jervis?"
42111Have you seen him since the excitement?
42111Hector?
42111Hey, Jack, did you forget to bring the crown?
42111Horses?
42111How about Cavalier?
42111How about Neworld?
42111How about the golf course?
42111How did you know?
42111How do you feel?
42111How do you get down from an elephant? 42111 How do you see me now?"
42111How does Civek intend to get his message to Washington?
42111How long ago was that?
42111How old are you, Miss Garet, if I may ask?
42111How silly can you get?
42111How would you get air across space?
42111How''d we find out about Magnitogorsk?
42111How''s business?
42111How?
42111I assume you''ve already introduced yourself?
42111I beg your pardon?
42111I mean, does he have any theory about it?
42111I suppose the''path of neutrality''means Superior might consider hiring itself out to the highest bidder?
42111I wonder if that''s Indiana way over there?
42111I?
42111If it were on the edge, and if I took a rowboat out on it, I wonder what would happen?
42111If you mean you do n''t know, why the hell do n''t you say so? 42111 Iron curtain getting rusty?"
42111Is it an Air Force job? 42111 Is it still?
42111Is it your money, Vince?
42111Is it?
42111Is n''t anybody_ doing_ anything?
42111Is n''t that Ed Clark going into the Gripe Room?
42111Is n''t that so, sweetest of all the pies?
42111Is that all?
42111Is that somebody talking to you, Don? 42111 Is that the Hudson River?"
42111Is that what you thought, Alis?
42111Is that what you were doing in Senator Thebold''s Gripe Room on the midway?
42111Is that why he wants to go with the Master?
42111Is that why you''re not eating any more?
42111Is the lake entirely within the town limits?
42111Is there any other?
42111Is this the gadget?
42111It is n''t? 42111 It''s big, is n''t it?"
42111It''s impressive, is n''t it?
42111It''s not going to shoot us down, is it?
42111Look,Don said to Rezar,"how far advanced are these plans?
42111Making this deal?
42111Mars?
42111McFerson? 42111 Me?
42111Mr. Fogarty, are you aware that I have n''t had a single minute alone with this human radio station since I''ve know him? 42111 Name?"
42111Negative_ what_?
42111Negusburger?
42111No?
42111No?
42111Not much I can do about it, is there? 42111 Nothing?
42111Now can I ask him?
42111Now what?
42111Nut factory? 42111 Oh?
42111Okay,he said"where''s the edge?
42111On such short notice?
42111PP?
42111Pittsburgh?
42111Pittsburgh?
42111Professor of what?
42111Q. R u trying set up Spr as separate city- state w/ govt independent of U S or Earth? 42111 Q. Wht u xpct gain?
42111Raleigh? 42111 Retroactively?"
42111Rezar?
42111Rhetorical questions at this time of night, Donny? 42111 Shall we go across town and take a last look at the States?"
42111She''s radiant, have you noticed? 42111 Sir Cheeky?"
42111Six of them, eh? 42111 Skating?"
42111Somebody with you?
42111Stagg Field? 42111 Tell me, Vince, how do you keep a straight face?"
42111That describes it perfectly, does n''t it? 42111 The Garet- Rubach Axis?"
42111The Good Gizls versus the Bad Gizls?
42111The country, eh? 42111 The old fellow with the whiskers and the riding boots?"
42111The other end of the creek?
42111The press?
42111The splendid triumph of justice in court this morning?
42111Then who is? 42111 This show would bring anyone outdoors, but even if they see her what do you suppose they can do about it?
42111To Hector?
42111Told you what?
42111Transportation?
42111Us?
42111Was that bad?
42111Was there any sort of explosion?
42111Washington?
42111We''ve established definitely that Sergeant Cort was on that train, have we?
42111Well, sir,she said, giving him an intent look,"how was the rendezvous?"
42111Well,Alis said,"what does happen next?"
42111Were you expecting someone?
42111Were you in the Medical Corps, sir?
42111What a night, eh? 42111 What are they saying in Washington?
42111What are you doing up there?
42111What are you going to do?
42111What attracted you to Superior, of all places?
42111What can he offer that your king has not provided? 42111 What did the kangaroo tell your son?"
42111What do you mean by that?
42111What do you mean, you swore fealty?
42111What does this remind you of?
42111What for?
42111What happened to Negus, sir? 42111 What is all this, Hector?"
42111What is that silly hat he''s wearing? 42111 What palace?"
42111What shall I ask for?
42111What shall we do, sir?
42111What was that?
42111What were you doing out there?
42111What will you call your new planet?
42111What''s going on?
42111What''s happening?
42111What''s he up to?
42111What''s it for?
42111What''s it supposed to do?
42111What''s that you''re setting-- an anti- Hoover handbill?
42111What''s that?
42111What''s that?
42111What''s the matter, boy? 42111 What''s the other source, besides the faucet in your bathroom?"
42111What''s the population of Superior?
42111What''s the principle? 42111 What''s the story about?"
42111What''s this about an alien? 42111 What?
42111What?
42111What?
42111What?
42111What_ can_ I do?
42111Where did the food come from?
42111Where does that go?
42111Where is the water going?
42111Where were you when your boy friend and his daredevil aces came over?
42111Where''d you get it?
42111Where''d you get this?
42111Where''s Doc Bendy? 42111 Where''s Hector''s crown?"
42111Where''s it all going to end? 42111 Where''s the Empire State Building?"
42111Where''s the old town going?
42111Where?
42111Who asked the Senator here? 42111 Who else?
42111Who gave him that crackpot idea?
42111Who stands behind you?
42111Who taught you_ that_?
42111Who turned you loose?
42111Who were you talking to in the sand trap?
42111Who''s controlling them, then? 42111 Who''s he?"
42111Who?
42111Why is n''t the_ Sentry_ out this week? 42111 Why not?"
42111Why the gum factory?
42111Why? 42111 Why?
42111Why?
42111Will there be air up there among the asteroids?
42111Will we be here long?
42111With quick- frozen inhabitants? 42111 Wo n''t it work on people?"
42111Wo n''t you join me?
42111Wo n''t you sit down, sir?
42111Would you deprive the people of their right to know? 42111 Would you like a cup of tea?"
42111Yes?
42111You did n''t say anything to Clark about our talk with the Gizl, did you?
42111You do n''t like me, do you, Donny- boy?
42111You do n''t think a king walks, do you?
42111You hear me, Mr. Gizl- Rezar? 42111 You hope to?"
42111You know my name?
42111You mean Civek admits he''s only a figurehead?
42111You mean I ca n''t turn it off? 42111 You mean Superior''s drifting across the United States?"
42111You mean Thebold_ is_ leading it?
42111You mean there was something under the ice?
42111You mean they do n''t believe in the Gizls?
42111You mean we''ve gone as high as we''re going to go?
42111You mean you''ve burrowed under each one of those''communities''?
42111You represent them?
42111You think it''s a conspiracy?
42111You think it''s time to use it? 42111 You think the mayor''s behind it all?"
42111You were n''t serious about that king business, were you? 42111 You''re not exactly a fount of information, are you?
42111You''re two of the people from the train, are n''t you? 42111 Your passports are in order, I trust?
42111& I.?"
42111( Conductor Jas Brown) Wht abt Mayor''s proclamation Superior seceded frm Earth?
42111A tunnel starting under an abandoned grandstand, running all this way and ending in a locked door?"
42111Agreed?"
42111And a little funnel?"
42111And how secure_ do_ you feel as you whip through the atmosphere like an unguided missile?
42111And how?"
42111And the factories?
42111And the trucking companies?
42111And what''s Gorel- zed?"
42111Anybody down there?"
42111Anything new at your end?"
42111Anything you''d like at the same time?
42111Are n''t you the boss?"
42111Are there any others?"
42111Are you Dame Jervis?"
42111Are you a sergeant?"
42111Are you going to do something about that?"
42111Are you not at this moment bargaining away a piece of a sovereign State of the sovereign United States?
42111Are you with the FBI?
42111As they regained their footing he asked,"Do you feel heavy in the legs?"
42111Ask your puppet king who provides this food-- and for what price?
42111At the University of Chicago?
42111Big supply?"
42111Bigger.__ Human?
42111Business as usual?"
42111But are n''t you worried about being up in the air like this?"
42111But could he speak for the United States constitutionally?
42111But do n''t you have any classes?"
42111But how about the people who do business out of town?
42111But what did he say the kangaroo talked about?"
42111But what''s this Garet- Rubach Axis?
42111But when they eventually run out, like you, then what?
42111But why?"
42111Can do?
42111Can you describe it?"
42111Civek?
42111Cort?"
42111Could I have-- how many ounces in a pint?--sixteen one- ounce stoppered bottles?
42111Counselor Lynch, we take it you represent the defendants?"
42111Did n''t you hear anything?"
42111Did you go down and look?"
42111Did you have something to say?"
42111Did you kiss her?"
42111Did you see the planes?"
42111Do n''t you like it here?"
42111Do you ever talk to yourself about a man named Osbert Garet or Hector Civek?"
42111Do you have a pocket mirror?"
42111Do you mean there are more of you, aside from the kangaroo- people?"
42111Do you see any Gizl- sticks?
42111Do you think Professor Garet and his magnology cult has anything to do with it?"
42111Do you think he''s king of the kangaroos?"
42111Do you think there''s a connection?"
42111Do you think they could whip one up?"
42111Do you?"
42111Does anybody put any stock in this magnology stuff of Professor Garet''s?"
42111Does he claim he can get Superior back to Earth?"
42111Does n''t everybody?"
42111Don Cort, sitting in the back seat of the car with the redhead from the club car, asked,"Cavalier?"
42111Don asked Rezar,"But if this built- in morality of yours is so strong, why did n''t it prevent you from taking off with Superior?"
42111Don asked,"Did I understand you to say you plan to re- establish your race?
42111Don asked,"What will you trade for the transubstantiator and the paralysis scepter you gave Hector?"
42111Don said to Rezar,"Was it your decision to burrow under New York and Magnitogorsk and Heidelberg?"
42111Don, what are you going to do?"
42111Don, why do n''t you take the little lady out to lunch?
42111ETA?
42111Even''How was that?,''though corny, would have been preferable.
42111Everybody freeze to death?"
42111Got it?
42111Group Captain Perley, that is?
42111Hand?
42111Has Hector told you about the creatures?
42111Has he told you they''re aliens from another planet?
42111Have you seen any planes besides the skywriters?"
42111He asked Garet,"Would n''t you say that magnology was sufficient for our purposes, Professor?"
42111He barked, long distance:"Jack Perley?
42111He described the landing and asked,"Is this an authorized landing or is it Senator Thebold''s private party?"
42111He''s just a kid, is n''t he?"
42111Here?"
42111How are you this fine altitudinous day?"
42111How are your wife and the boy?"
42111How did you know?"
42111How do we know they wo n''t take us up higher-- up where there''s no air?
42111How do you plan to get down from Superior?"
42111How high could they be, and did n''t anybody care?
42111How high did you have to be before you got up where it did n''t snow any more?
42111How much are they paying you?"
42111How''re you fixed for liquor?
42111How''s that, General?"
42111How''s that?
42111How?"
42111I can do that, ca n''t I, General?"
42111I guess you''d know, Mr. Clark-- is there any communication at all out of town?"
42111I mean has n''t it all poured off the edge by now?
42111I mean, how do we know Superior is maintaining the same position up here as it used to down there?"
42111I mean, is there a deadline for this mass levitation?"
42111I said,''What?''
42111I wo n''t have any privacy?
42111If so, when?
42111If you could hold off the troops till I ask for them...."Foghorn Frank said,"Want to make a deal, eh?
42111Is he dead?"
42111Is that the general attitude?
42111Is that where you''d like to come down?
42111Is there another submarine?"
42111Is this something for the Un- Earthly Activities Committee to investigate?"
42111It''s what we pay him for, ai n''t it?"
42111Kaliz barked at him:"Well, Ezial?
42111May I make a suggestion?"
42111May we introduce two of our associates?
42111New world-- Neworld?"
42111New?
42111No red blood?"
42111Now, son, are you ready for a little action?
42111Objective?
42111Or did you escape from jail?"
42111Or should it be kanganaped?
42111Or should it be supra?
42111Or the bubble gum king, whoever he is?"
42111Or would it be_ down_ there, relatively speaking?
42111Planning to settle down here?"
42111Professor Garet''s daughter?"
42111Rat?
42111Remember the time they tried to run the pipeline through town and Doc formed a citizens committee and stopped them?"
42111Remember, Jen?"
42111Rubach?
42111Rude, was he?
42111Secretary?"
42111Secretary?"
42111Secretary?)
42111Sergeant Cort?"
42111Shall I answer some of your obvious questions?
42111She said,"You do n''t suppose--""Suppose what?"
42111Should I go back and investigate that underground room again?
42111So what?"
42111Something like that?"
42111Sovereignty?
42111Superior rising again?
42111Takes a bit of getting used to, does n''t it?"
42111Tell me, who do_ you_ think is behind it all?"
42111That is-- are you going to take us back to Earth?
42111That right, Alis?"
42111The chief of police?
42111The old town''s really come up in the world, has n''t it?"
42111The question is who or what, and what are you going to do about it?"
42111The question is, will we?"
42111The redhead across the aisle in whom Don had taken a passing interest earlier in the evening asked,"Why did we stop?"
42111The thing Hector used on Negus?"
42111Thebold increased his volume and boomed:"Ah, but_ do_ you have independence, my friends?
42111Then where is it going?"
42111There''ll always be somebody listening?"
42111This is n''t one of your father''s brainstorms come to life, is it?"
42111To the clerk he said,"Frank, see to our horses, will you?"
42111Under the stands where they first made an atomic pile work?"
42111Underneath, in smaller letters, it said:_ How long since you''ve heard from your loved ones on Earth?
42111Vince, will you put that gun away?
42111Want a drink?"
42111Want another shot?"
42111Want some more buttons?"
42111Want to come?"
42111Was that Superior''s water supply?"
42111We''ll know better in the sober light of morning, wo n''t we?"
42111Well, r u?
42111What better way to find out what he''s up to?
42111What did you have to do?"
42111What did you say your name was, miss?"
42111What do you conclude from your information- gathering so far?"
42111What do you do for a living?"
42111What do you do in Washington, Miss Jervis?"
42111What do you know?"
42111What do you think?"
42111What do you want me to do now?
42111What is it with you people?
42111What''ll it be?"
42111What''s Western Union doing, for instance?
42111What''s everybody up to?"
42111What''s it like in Washington?"
42111What''s old Bobby so worked up about, I wonder?
42111What''s your theory?
42111What?
42111What?
42111What?"
42111Where are you going now?"
42111Where do you start?"
42111Where do you work?"
42111Where is he?"
42111Where would that be?"
42111Where?
42111Which one is she?"
42111Who do_ you_ think is behind him?
42111Who is this, anyhow?"
42111Who knows at what second the controls may break down and dump us all into the freezing water?"
42111Why?
42111Why?
42111Will your father be there?"
42111Wonder what they''re up to?"
42111Would that be too extravagant?"
42111Would you like to tidy up, Don?
42111Would you like to try it?"
42111You do n''t think Father is making all this happen, do you?"
42111You mean Cavalier?"
42111You mean on the Senator''s side?"
42111Your friend with the whiskers?"
42111said to Frank Fogarty, Secretary of Defense,"has the mission been accomplished?"
42111you crazy or something?"
46250A duty? 46250 A relative?"
46250Ah, brother beloved, why were we so soon parted by grim death? 46250 Ah, dear one, life has been a terror to him for many years; and shall I mourn that he has at last gotten the victory?
46250Ah, what have I been doing?
46250Ah? 46250 Am I to go''long, mother?"
46250An''what o''that?
46250And am I so utterly, so abominably selfish, that I can not rejoice in her happiness, though it be with another? 46250 And can you tell me in which Major Lamar lives?"
46250And he has never appeared to you?
46250And it was her child, the older woman''s?
46250And my friends have been anxious for my safety, you say?
46250And the rest?
46250And the son does n''t get it all, as is usually the way with us?
46250And this young doctor, Nell,pursued Clare, with a meaning smile,"what is he like?"
46250And what may that be? 46250 And who is this wretch?"
46250And who may you be?
46250And you must go?
46250And you, you who look so like the dead, who are you?
46250Are ye a goin''to tell me what I asked?
46250Are you going to build?
46250Are you mad, old man?
46250Are you not growing rather large and heavy for that?
46250Are you not mistaken? 46250 Are you the bearer of evil tidings, Coe, an accident, some one hurt?
46250But any others? 46250 But if you lose your life?"
46250But look ye here, stranger,he interrupted,"what if he should get free and peach on us?"
46250But she seems quite alone, is there no more of the family?
46250But the signal, why was it given?
46250But what saved you?
46250But what sort of doctor should you think me if I were afraid to face wind, rain and sleet at the call of sickness?
46250But where is Tig? 46250 But why not?
46250Ca n''t you lie down too, Nell?
46250Can I see the ladies?
46250Can you doubt that we love you well enough to tell you all if it would add to your happiness?
46250Can you take my place for to- day? 46250 Can you?"
46250Captain Herrod not dead?
46250Dangerous?
46250Dear me, who''s been rakin''ober dis fire? 46250 Dear mother,"he said, again taking her hand and speaking low and tremulously,"can you not cast this burden also upon the Lord?"
46250Did I?
46250Did it require any great stretch of courage to order your valet out of the house?
46250Did you come out in search of me?
46250Dish night, mynheer?
46250Do n''t be troubled about me,Kenneth said cheerily,"I am young and vigorous, and shall rather enjoy roughing it, in the pursuit of my calling?"
46250Do you not agree in my opinion?
46250Do you think you can take care of her, Tig?
46250Doctor, would you recognize the thief?
46250Does n''t any body hear from him?
46250Does the pale face forget?
46250Except to be something far nearer and dearer? 46250 Excited over this news of poor Captain Herrod?"
46250Find much to do about here?
46250For Pennsylvania, it''s very sudden, is n''t it?
46250Go? 46250 Going away?"
46250Hans,said he, while the man was busied about his person,"you are from Hesse, I think, and were over here during the war?"
46250Has my friend heap money?
46250Have the Indians begun war?
46250Have we ever met before?
46250Have you ever met with any whites living with them?
46250He has made you his confidante?
46250He has, eh? 46250 He successful with Miss Nell?"
46250He''s likely to be in his hole any how, is n''t he?
46250Here is Prospect Hill,remarked Kenneth;"do you feel equal to climbing it?
46250How are all our friends here?
46250How did you find Miss Lamar, doctor? 46250 How did you like him Marian, dear?"
46250How do you do, mother?
46250How do you do?
46250How do you know?
46250How is it possible you can have escaped alive?
46250How is that?
46250How long since you left England?
46250How many?
46250How much ahead are you, did ye say?
46250How so?
46250How''s that? 46250 Hurt?
46250I feel very selfish in so doing, dearest Nell,he said,"but will you go?"
46250I hope she''s no kin o''yours?
46250I shall never see him again in this world,she was saying to herself,"and oh, shall I meet him in another?
46250I-- I''m after-- a job; and you-- you wa-- want these trees cut down?
46250If we take the other course shall we not be running into a certain danger in the effort to avoid one that may never threaten us?
46250Is Dr. Clendenin here?
46250Is he riding? 46250 Is it dead, have you killed it?"
46250Is it nice in Philadelphia, Aunt Nellie?
46250Is it you, Godfrey Dale?
46250Is n''t it running a great risk? 46250 Is there any positive proof that Herrod met his death at their hands?"
46250It?
46250Kenneth, Kenneth, why ca n''t we have you always? 46250 Major,"exclaimed the captain,"do you remember your big Hessian?"
46250May I ask where you are from?
46250Mine?
46250Miss Nell?
46250Mother,whispered the girl with a shudder,"what did he fear?
46250Much the matter, Zeb?
46250Nell, are you ready to see the doctor?
46250Nine, nine, mynheer; not so goot as dot; vat you galls a brivateer?
46250No insinuation I hope?
46250No,returned the major, gazing meditatively into the fire;"what right would he have to haunt me, captain, seeing he was killed in battle?"
46250No; but here in the woods?
46250Now which way shall we travel?
46250Now? 46250 O, Kenneth, Kenneth, you ca n''t mean it?"
46250Of poor Captain Herrod? 46250 Of what kind, sir?"
46250Officer?
46250Oh what''ll we do? 46250 Oh, Nell, you are not hurt?
46250Oh, ca n''t you get Wawillaway to go with you all the way? 46250 Oh, dearest, how soon may I claim the right to call you by that sweetest of names?"
46250Oh, doctor, is she hurt?
46250Oh, then we must be near Chillicothe, are we not?
46250Oh, why did you come at all,she sobbed,"if you must go away again?
46250Oh, why is it that I am not to be trusted?
46250Oh, will you?
46250Only too gladly, ah, you can not doubt that, but have you thought of the long, tedious journey overland, and the dangers of the voyage?
46250Possibly,returned Dale, with gravity,"but can you conjecture what that business is?"
46250Pray tell me, are the Clendenins wealthy?
46250Shall I go to her at once?
46250Shall you be sorry to see me go?
46250She has grown? 46250 She is safe then?
46250She is then of a literary turn, this young heroine of yours?
46250She is your sister, is she, sir? 46250 She mout put some pizen in de wittles, massa doctah, do n''t you tink?"
46250So, so, Fairy, be quiet, will you?
46250Something is amiss with you, and surely you will tell me what it is, that I may try to relieve you?
46250Suppose then you go with the party in the pirogue, down the river to Cincinnati?
46250Then what''s to be done?
46250Then you are indeed Reumah Clark?
46250There''s even- handed justice for ye, stranger?
46250To you, Miss Nell? 46250 Uphold him?
46250Vat ish dot, mynheer?
46250Vell, mynheer, an''you gan keep von leedle segret, I dinks dot gan be found?
46250Very well,he said looking back,"am I to let the thief escape rather than keep you waiting for an hour?"
46250We''re worth a good deal, are n''t we, Ralph?
46250Well, fair lady, will you vouchsafe an answer to my question now?
46250Well, old girl, what have you bagged?
46250Well, what more?
46250Were you all alone?
46250What can have become of him? 46250 What can he want here?
46250What can we do for her?
46250What can you mean, my poor, poor child?
46250What can you mean?
46250What de mattah, chile?
46250What do you know of her, little one?
46250What do you think of her?
46250What do you think of this Englishman?
46250What do you want, sah?
46250What gentlemen, Tig?
46250What has that to do with it?
46250What is it, Gotlieb?
46250What is it, Nell?
46250What is it, doctor?
46250What is it, little sister? 46250 What is it, mother?"
46250What is it? 46250 What is it?
46250What is it?
46250What is it?
46250What is it?
46250What is it?
46250What is the disease?
46250What is the matter?
46250What kinds?
46250What more can you ask, pray?
46250What shall we call you, mother?
46250What then?
46250What things, Hans?
46250What was it, and on which child?
46250What was the matter? 46250 What were the circumstances?"
46250What would you have me do? 46250 What you, too, sir?"
46250What''s a- keepin''that thar confounded Britisher and his Dutchman? 46250 What''s that?"
46250What''s wanted?
46250What''s wrong? 46250 What''s wrong?"
46250When will your master be home?
46250Where are the men? 46250 Where did he go?"
46250Where now?
46250Where''s your man now?
46250Where''s your master?
46250Where, my dear?
46250Where? 46250 Who can he be?
46250Who is that, Grimes?
46250Who?
46250Why did n''t he come in and take breakfast with us?
46250Why did n''t you bring one?
46250Why did n''t you drive it out of doors?
46250Why do n''t they get out of the way when the tree''s going to fall? 46250 Why do you all talk so much?"
46250Why had she let herself care for him when he was going away and would never, never come again?
46250Why should I grudge to him the prize that can never be mine?
46250Why should I trouble myself about it?
46250Why should you hesitate to say to me all that is in your heart?
46250Why that shudder, my sweet girl?
46250Why you more than the rest of us?
46250Why, have n''t you heard that the Indians have killed Captain Herrod?
46250Why, where did you come from?
46250Why, ye ai n''t goin''a''ready? 46250 Will you step up and look at them?
46250With Nell, pray what has she to do with it?
46250Would you, oh, would you?
46250Ye do, eh?
46250Ye''ll be a wantin''supper, wo n''t ye?
46250Yes, yes; why not?
46250Yes,answered Clare,"do you not know that the Indians have a way of lighting up their wigwams with torches made of the splinters of birch and pine?"
46250Yes; and how can I let you meet them alone?
46250Yes; do you think Philadelphia is the only place where one may shop?
46250You and he were both born at Glen Forest?
46250You are a white woman, why should you wish to conceal the fact?
46250You are all quite well?
46250You are here as a settler?
46250You are not hurt?
46250You did n''t? 46250 You have found her?"
46250You have had some encounters with them?
46250You promise?
46250You think it a duty to be happy? 46250 You understand me?"
46250You will be in danger?
46250You, too, Kenneth, my poor dear Kenneth?
46250Your errand shpeed so petter as goot, mynheer?
46250Ah, is it you, doctor?"
46250Ah, must that deadly curse fall on her?
46250Ah, was he utterly blameless, Kenneth Clendenin?
46250All medical works?"
46250An unspoken fear lay heavy at Nell''s heart, Dr. Clendenin, where was he?
46250And Nell?
46250And he?
46250And if it were not?
46250And she has passed this trying ordeal safely?"
46250And she, how could he blame her if her love had at last turned to aversion and she had given herself to another?
46250And was life indeed all dark to him?
46250And what right had he to accuse the dear girl in his heart of fickleness and coquetry?
46250And yet, and yet-- had he, beyond a doubt or peradventure, read that look aright?
46250And yet-- and yet, was not the Love which permitted them to remain, infinitely greater than his?
46250And you, darling?
46250Any women?"
46250Anything more?"
46250Anything much the matter?"
46250At his own door he was met by Major Lamar with the question,"Any news of the doctor yet?"
46250Be on the lookout for them and warn them to hurry back, will you?"
46250But could it be possible that she would throw herself away thus, that she would give her hand without her heart?
46250But first, has any one called?"
46250But how came they there?"
46250But should she ever see him again?
46250But then, on second thought, how would he know anything about the woman or your interest in her?
46250But what could be the cause of this strange, silent anguish?
46250But what''s that thought of yours?
46250But, Kenneth, the child is certainly ill, have you discovered the cause of her malady?"
46250But, Kenneth, what shall we do?
46250Ca n''t you help me to think of something new?"
46250Can I be of any assistance in getting yours there?"
46250Can you get help in capturing him?"
46250Can you sit your horse now?"
46250Clendenin?"
46250Clendenin?"
46250Did he not save my life?
46250Did n''t I tole you to clean de knives?
46250Did you not suffer terribly?"
46250Did you observe any mark upon either, anything at all to distinguish him from the other?"
46250Do you not love me?
46250Do you think I could be so selfish as not to prefer to do it?"
46250For was not that all his own, had not those beautiful, eloquent eyes betrayed her secret to him spite of herself?
46250Godfrey, you surely said they were all well?
46250Has some one been unkind to you?
46250Has there been any letter or message for me?"
46250Have you heard the news?"
46250Hedwig?"
46250Hedwig?"
46250Her woman''s heart longed to speak a word of sympathy and comfort; but how should she when she knew not what his sorrow was?
46250Here?"
46250How are Clare and the children?"
46250How could he bear it if she did?
46250How did you manage it?"
46250How fares it with you, my boy?
46250How long since they went up there?"
46250I can see him, I suppose?"
46250I''ll try to be content not to know anything; but just tell me one thing: Why do you search for a white woman among the Indians?
46250I''ve learned from some of your letters about your long journeys in the wilderness, why are you so anxious to find her, so grieved when you fail?
46250In some measure?
46250In vain she asked herself what concern was it of his, what right he had to object?
46250Is it from--""Glen Forest?
46250Is it his life you want, or not?"
46250Is it not so, dearest?"
46250Karl Hedwig was in de war, an-- vat you call it?"
46250Kenneth, Kenneth, the child will surely be sought in marriage, and what shall we do?"
46250Lyttleton?"
46250Marian, child, will you call Kitty to see what he wishes?"
46250May it not be a mere fancy on your part?"
46250Minister, are ye?"
46250Mr. Lyttleton, shall I have the pleasure of your good company to our hotel?"
46250Must have had trouble in crossing some of the streams, had n''t you?"
46250Neither had spoken for several minutes, when Lyttleton, leaning over, said softly,"Do you know, pretty one, that I leave you to- day?"
46250Nell, you saw Washington more than once?"
46250Now shall we go on with our reading?
46250Now what else?"
46250Oh, if he might but go to her, pour out the story of his love and sue for hers?
46250Ole Aunt Vashti she tole me watch out hyar an''ax you ef you''s had yo''suppah, sah?"
46250Plunging into a snowdrift his foot caught in something and he had nearly fallen over-- what?
46250Shall I tell you?"
46250Shall we not let her remain in ignorance of that which could bring her nothing but sorrow?"
46250Shall we not try, daughter?"
46250She saw the pain in his face, and redoubling her caresses,"What is it, Kenneth?"
46250She seemed much disturbed, and alarmed, inquiring anxiously,"Do you dinks she fery bad sick, doctor?
46250She started up, saying,"Why you''re airly, ai n''t ye?
46250Surely I may know that, may I not?"
46250Tell me, can I do anything more for you?"
46250That he had reason, intellect, education, health and strength, that God had given him skill to relieve pain and suffering?
46250That he is gone home to his Father''s house, where there is perfect safety and fulness of joy forever more?"
46250The prisoner being arraigned at the bar of justice, the squire turned to McMurdy and asked,"How can you prove this collar to be yours?"
46250Then glancing about as they entered the house,"Where is Marian?"
46250Then looking tenderly upon him she asked:"But what of your quest, Kenneth?"
46250Then who was he that he should be so fierce against this other transgressor?
46250Then, taking her hand,"My darling, my own, is it not so?"
46250This hesitation, this shirking from the result of his quest, grew upon him as he advanced; but at length,"What weakness is this?"
46250Was it he?
46250Was it nothing that a terrible dread had been taken away?
46250Was it unrequited love?
46250Was there not something familiar in the face, the form, the stride with which he crossed the room?
46250Wawillaway, my poor friend, whose fiendish work is this?"
46250Well, did ye find it all out?"
46250Well, whose fault is it but his; why do his lips refuse to speak what his eyes have said over and over again?
46250Were you an officer?"
46250What ails you, Marian, dear?"
46250What cared he for the helpless girl whom he had left lying insensible and alone upon the hill top?
46250What could it mean?
46250What had happened?
46250What if you should be drowned?"
46250What is thought of it, that it''s the doing of the Indians?"
46250What shall I do?"
46250What was life worth without his love, his darling?
46250What was there that she could eat?
46250What was to be done?
46250What woman''s heart could withstand such a siege?
46250What would my friend with White Swan, the warrior Black Eagle''s squaw?"
46250What''s wanted this time of night?"
46250What, live in suspense till another day, while within three minutes walk of her who held his fate in her hands?
46250What, who was that coming slowly and with limping, halting gait to meet her from the other direction?
46250When will he come?"
46250Where can he have gone?
46250Where was Kenneth?
46250Where was she?
46250Where would she like to go?
46250Where''s your clothes line?
46250Where''s your woman?"
46250Who am I that I dare complain or murmur?
46250Who could it have been?
46250Why could he not learn how utterly useless it was to attempt to justify himself under the accusations of his wife?
46250Why did she stay in the house so constantly of late?
46250Why had he not yielded to his impulse that stormy night as they stood alone together by the fire, and poured out the story of his love?
46250Why have I never been told?"
46250Why should we not be kind and affectionate to each other?
46250Why, why did I never speak to him of Jesus?
46250Wife, why do you grieve?
46250Will money open her lips?"
46250Will you have me, have me for protector and provider, lover, husband and friend?"
46250Wo n''t it?"
46250Wo n''t the other girls envy you?
46250Wonder how ole marster is''bout dis time?"
46250Would he return that evening?
46250Would it not be better to tell her all-- to warn her in time?"
46250Would she never revive?
46250Yet there was; for how could the girl gain such an insight into the noble generosity and unselfishness of his character, without learning to love him?
46250You go on to Chillicothe?"
46250You''ll take me''long, I s''pose?"
46250Your arrangements are all completed?"
46250an intimate and particular friend of yours?
46250and do you go alone?"
46250and where did they live before that?
46250and you''re having a good time in his absence?"
46250are we not bidden to be content with such things as we have, and to be always rejoicing?"
46250are you actually here_ in propria persona_?
46250bitten?"
46250cried Kenneth, breathlessly;"and is this what you speak of?"
46250do you not want to share my home?"
46250enquired Kenneth,"there is no distillery in the vicinity?"
46250exclaimed Nell, tears starting to her eyes;"can it be?
46250he asked facing her again,"is it not enough?"
46250he exclaimed,"Lysander Lyttleton?
46250he of all men to sue in vain?
46250he said again,"is he to have all and I none?
46250he said inquiringly,"you have not forgotten your native tongue?"
46250here in this little out of the way village?"
46250how dare you?"
46250how long?"
46250in this most inclement season of the year?"
46250is it not?"
46250mynheer, vat ish happen you, to see von pig ghost?"
46250not bitten?"
46250not risking a greater danger than the one avoided?"
46250offer my services as assistant to Silvy the cook, Maria the nurse- maid, or Tig the stable boy?"
46250said Clare;"why do you lie here if you are not ill?"
46250she asked,"you did n''t hear no bad news?"
46250she cried,"ca n''t you see that my body is not sick, that it''s my heart that is breaking?"
46250she exclaimed; then blushing deeply, as she saw his face light up with pleasure while he asked,"Do you really care for that?"
46250she said in low, tremulous tones,"has he wronged you too?
46250she sobbed, almost wringing her hands in her bitter grief and distress;"why should I be deemed unworthy of confidence, even by my own mother?
46250then I reckon you hain''t no love for''em either?"
46250those sweet eyes never open again?
46250through the woods where they are probably swarming?
46250to- night?
46250vil she die?"
46250was it a log?
46250what had he done, won this dear heart that he dared not claim as his own?
46250what is it?"
46250what is it?"
46250what''ll we do?"
46250what''s become of my Tom?"
46250what''s up?"
46250where was Kenneth born?"
46250where?"
46250why do n''t you take it away, some of you?
46250wo n''t you take me up behind you?"
46250would it not be wiser to put off your journey till spring opens?"
46250you do n''t mean that the Indians have begun hostilities again, Wolf?"
46250you mean God was with you?"
46250you''re not going to leave Chillicothe to- night, are you?"
46250you''ve got Clendenin?"
59640''William Tell,''hey?
59640After all,said the doctor inwardly,"am I my brother''s keeper?
59640Ah, thin, I''ve been investin''--investin''in stocks-- or is it shares, I dinnaw?
59640Ah? 59640 Ai n''t I right, John?
59640And she refused him? 59640 And who was Capoul?"
59640And_ I''m_ simply having the most_ awful_ time-- you do n''t know of a good cook, do you, Huddesley?
59640Arch? 59640 Are any of you related to them?
59640Are they nice? 59640 Are you another detective, sir?"
59640As we went back to the house, I said to the colonel:''That was rather startling, was n''t it, being shouted at to halt that way?'' 59640 Bad men to throw stones at, on the whole----""Champagne, sir?"
59640Beg parding, Mr. Breckinridge, sir, but you ai n''t goin''to give hup the plays on haccount of Mr. Theodore, are you?
59640Beg parding, sir, did you say----?
59640Billy Rice?
59640Bob? 59640 But right now you''re not going near Mrs. Pallinder, d''ye hear me?
59640But was n''t that last a funny thing for a man like that to say? 59640 But why do you suppose Gwynne----?"
59640But, beg parding, sir,''ow''ll you hexplain?
59640Cents or dollars, ma''am?
59640Could n''t you give him some stuff-- something strong that would bring him around, Doctor?
59640Did Muriel ask after any of us?
59640Did they laugh at Teddy?
59640Did you ever see her, Cousin Charlotte?
59640Did you say he''d gone out? 59640 Do I understand that Huddesley has got himself in trouble owing someone?"
59640Do n''t you remember me-- Judd-- don''t you remember me at the bank?
59640Do you need money, Cousin Eleanor?
59640Do you remember what she wore, Doctor?
59640Do you suppose I''ll ever get home with this thing?
59640Do you suppose Mr. Potter really looks at all like a detective?
59640Do you suppose he really did''square it''after he got out?
59640Doctor Vardaman?
59640Does n''t he ever talk to you about Governor Gwynne? 59640 Does n''t your father ever tell you about him-- what a great man he was, and all?"
59640Ever think of investing, Doctor?
59640Fiddle- de- dee, what''s the difference? 59640 Fresh paint?"
59640Funny they do n''t teach''em to_ dance_, on the other side, is n''t it?
59640Gloves?
59640Good- bye, Doctor; you''ll come up this evening, anyway?
59640Got himself good and tanked, did n''t he?
59640Has Tim got well? 59640 Has she changed much?"
59640Have they got a telephone? 59640 Have they got someone to take his place?"
59640Have you talked to Mr. Templeton? 59640 He ai n''t dangerous, is he?"
59640He went the kilt one better, did n''t he?
59640Here''s a nice how- de- do, now what''s to be done?
59640Hey? 59640 Hey?
59640Hey?
59640Hock, sir? 59640 Hope you ai n''t forgetting that it''s Sam''s money, too, you''ve been letting go all this year and a half?"
59640How could Huddesley-- what possible motive----?
59640How do you do, Mr. Carson? 59640 How is Bob doing?"
59640How long you had him anyway, Doc.?
59640How old she''s beginning to look, is n''t she?
59640Huddesley got the necklace?
59640Huddesley is n''t likely to get mixed up about it, is he?
59640Huddesley? 59640 Huddesley?"
59640I do n''t understand?
59640I repeat, sir, no Southern gentleman----"If we had the money, do n''t you suppose we''d pay your old bill?
59640I should think anybody''d like it, would n''t you?
59640I''d have asked his opinion anyhow-- I meant to-- that''s what I''m here for----"You have n''t been to the Pallinders''then?
59640Is Doctor Vardaman there?
59640Is anyone hurt or sick?
59640Is it a telegram? 59640 Is that package the diamonds?
59640Is that you, Doctor? 59640 Is the fellow that owes you responsible-- solid, I mean, you know?"
59640Is-- ah-- is this your card, sir?
59640Is_ that_ it? 59640 It''s a lie, ai n''t it, Hannah?"
59640It''s a pity about that young Peters''folks being that way, so many of''em, ai n''t it?
59640It_ is_ pretty, is n''t it?
59640Kind of stagey, was n''t he?
59640Look here, how do you happen to be here yet, my son? 59640 Louise?
59640Mazie was n''t with them, was she?
59640Mazie''s grandmother is not-- well-- er-- she''s not at all-- you know?
59640Me? 59640 Me?"
59640Miss Pallinder?
59640Most of your American jokes are like that, are n''t they? 59640 My Lord, Mr. Gwynne, whatever is the matter?"
59640Nice job for the Pallinders, is n''t it? 59640 No, you do n''t say?
59640Nobody''s sick, is there?
59640Now what is it you want me to tell Gwynne? 59640 Oh, Lord, that was n''t a client, Doctor, that old creature-- what was her name now, MacGonigal, MacGilligan, MacSomething?
59640Oh, Mr. Carson, we-- I ought to give Huddesley something, ought n''t I? 59640 Oh, is n''t it?"
59640Oh, look here, it has''John to Louise, June, 1839,''on it,''John to Louise''--who was that, do you suppose?
59640Pardon me, Mrs. Botlisch, you were saying----?
59640Save trouble how?
59640Say, Huddesley, did n''t you see me shake my head when you gave Mr. Johns that last glass? 59640 Say, Teddy''s had a lot of substitutes this evening, has n''t he?
59640Say, have you heard anything more about the colonel? 59640 Shall you be going up to Mrs. Pallinder''s to dinner this evening, sir?"
59640She looked more like Mrs. Langtry, did n''t she?
59640She? 59640 Sir?"
59640Somebody hurt?
59640Taylor-- what Taylor?
59640Teddy''s part-- the part Huddesley contrived to get himself substituted in, was that of a butler who steals the diamonds----"_ Well_, WELL?
59640Tell that Hopple man, will you?
59640Templeton, their agent, has a desk with us-- do you know_ him_?
59640That fellow can hump, ca n''t he?
59640That him?
59640That old Gwynne feller''s crazy, ai n''t he?
59640That''s all right, Mr. Taylor, you just sit right down in your chair-- it''s a nice chair; you just sit right down, now wo n''t you?
59640The question is, what next?
59640The wistaria on the dining- room porch is going to bloom, do n''t you want to see it?
59640There is something you wanted to see me about, Cousin Mollie?
59640There''s been a fuss with the Colonel, has there? 59640 They ai n''t but that one Pallinder in town, is there?"
59640They keep it up pretty late, do n''t they? 59640 This here party, Doc., I guess it was goin''to be pretty swell, was n''t it?
59640WHEN?
59640Waiting to see Gwynne?
59640Was it? 59640 Was that slang?"
59640Was that your last place?
59640We''d better start out to see them, the Pallinders, you know-- right away, had n''t we?
59640Well, I guess I wo n''t wait-- if you''ll be so kind as to tell him I was here? 59640 Well, but what''s all this got to do with Gwynne?"
59640Well, but whose advice_ did_ you take?
59640Well, what''s happened?
59640Well, who from then?
59640Well?
59640Were n''t you frightened?
59640Were you looking for him?
59640What I want to know is, what are we going to do now?
59640What about the Pallinders_ now_?
59640What are they going to do with things like that?
59640What did you think of it?
59640What have you been doing since?
59640What have you been doing?
59640What is his business, Gwynne?
59640What is the bottom of all this? 59640 What is your name?"
59640What on earth do you suppose has happened?
59640What on earth is the boy arguing with himself about?
59640What you got there, Johnny?
59640What''s the matter? 59640 What, all of us?
59640What, behind? 59640 What, it is n''t?
59640What-- what''s that you say?
59640What? 59640 When he went?"
59640When he went?
59640Where did you get it? 59640 Who for?"
59640Who''s that, Huddesley?
59640Why are those rods there?
59640Why did you leave it? 59640 Why do I wear the kilt and all the rest of it?
59640Why do n''t they tell''em to go home, and let us have a little peace and quiet?
59640Why do n''t you believe us? 59640 Why not let the Dutchman have it?
59640Why not, if he''s funny?
59640Why, I''ve been to Doctor Vardaman''s, mister, how''d you s''pose I happened to come here?
59640Why, how could he? 59640 Why, no, why should it?
59640Why, no-- what for?
59640Why, yes, especially in''Tell,''do n''t_ you_?
59640Will you come with me over to Pallinder''s office now?
59640Will you drive me into the street?
59640Wo n''t you sit down, Mr. Grimm? 59640 Yes, Huddesley, had him about eight or ten weeks, ai n''t you?
59640Yes, and what do you think that daughter of mine said to me the other day? 59640 Yes, what is it?"
59640Yes-- very unfortunate, was n''t it?
59640Yez will have yer joke, now, wo n''t ye, Docthor?
59640You all think Mr. Johns is very good in his part, do n''t you?
59640You have a reference?
59640You have n''t been there yet?
59640You mean it was braided?
59640You mean to the house? 59640 You surely asked_ somebody_ besides Caleb What''s- his- name?
59640You wanted to see me about something, Cousin Eleanor?
59640You''re not going?
59640You''re not going?
59640You''ve talked to Pall----?
59640You-- you''re not vexed, are you?
59640You_ will_ come to dinner, wo n''t you, Mr. Gwynne? 59640 _ Do n''t_ you?
59640_ So_ interesting, is n''t it? 59640 _ What!_ Did n''t you_ know_?
59640''An''what''ll th''docthor be doin''for somewan to clear- starch his shirrts th''way he loikes?
59640''Do you think my stock is all right?
59640''E''as''ad a leetle too much, ai n''t''e?
59640''I know_ you_, Mr. Gwynne; you''re Governor Gwynne''s cousin, and that''s good enough for me, or anybody----''""Who''s Jake Bennett?"
59640''If you''ll partake, sir----?''
59640''Is this your chicken- thief, Huddesley?''
59640''It''s a riddle, is n''t it?
59640''Lordy, Mistah Pallindah, you would n''t tu''n me off for not gwine to yo''doctah?''
59640''Muriel''_ is n''t_ that_ English_?
59640''Now ca n''t you say something nice to_ me_?''
59640''Oh, Lord, Colonel Pallinder, sir, is it you?''
59640''Really?''
59640''Really?''
59640''Say, you do n''t mind asking questions, do you?''
59640''What on earth is all this?''
59640''Who are you?''
59640''Why, good heavens, my child,''I said,''do you think I''m_ made_ of money?
59640''You mean you were the burglar all the time?''
59640''You were the burglar?''
59640''s voice?"
59640("Now was n''t that_ Gwynne_ all over?"
59640After all, he''s had a pretty hard time for a young man-- he''s not over thirty, I think-- what would you have?
59640All ready?"
59640Am-- Am-- Amirkhanian-- there, now, what do you think of_ that_?"
59640And Miss Baxter, too-- what will_ she_ think?
59640And Mr. Peters is such a dear, is n''t he?
59640And Mrs. Botlisch began again:"What''s the matter?
59640And Sam-- was Sam"queer"?
59640And anyway my name''s Peters-- Gwynne''s just my given name-- so it would n''t be true, see?"
59640And as they walked away, the doctor heard Bob say,"Is n''t Huddesley_ immense_, though?
59640And he went right on, without paying much attention,''Ah, indeed?''
59640And of whom had he been thinking, if not solely of himself?
59640And then the darky waiter got hold of it somehow, and wore it to the party?
59640And we-- we bought some stock, Gwynne-- it was''Phosphate''--a mine, or was it a well, Sister Mollie?
59640And what have you been doing in the meantime?"
59640And what on earth ought I to do?"
59640And when Mrs. Gwynne went away she said she''d had a_ lovely_ time-- wasn''t it nice of her?
59640And when at last the smoke of conflict lifted, where were the Pallinders?
59640And where are the snows of yester- year?
59640And you pay that manure- fellow as soon as you get home, will you?"
59640And, besides, what was there to blush about?
59640Any doctor will always pull an ass out of a ditch on the Sabbath day-- what''s that they say about the letter of the law killing the spirit?
59640Are ladies taught these things from their cradles?
59640Are we grown better, or only more prudent?
59640At that very moment, the length of the table away, Archie Lewis was saying,"Suppose you''ve heard that about Gwynne Peters, Doctor?"
59640B. with increasing mildness,"perhaps you will be good enough to explain what you are doing here?"
59640B. wrote the verses-- it''s awfully funny, do n''t you think, Muriel?
59640B., Muriel?"
59640B.?
59640B.?
59640B.?"
59640B.?"
59640Bob Carson had it, did n''t he?"
59640Botlisch?"
59640Breckinridge, do n''t you know me?''
59640But I-- I should like to ask you if you have ever had any business dealings with Colonel Pallinder?
59640But Steven, eying him, suddenly growled out,"You''re Judge Lewis''son, ai n''t you?"
59640But did n''t you ever have any suspicions?"
59640But has Gwynne ever mentioned Mrs. Pallinder to her?
59640But he''ll be along in a little while, I dare say,"said the doctor easily-- and wondered within him what Steven was about_ now_?
59640But if the men were a weird crew, what were we?
59640But that''s one of the things they''re laughing at; is n''t that funny?"
59640But what do you think Pallinder did?
59640But who''s going to tell''em?"
59640But who, indeed, young or old, is not somewhat moved by the brave and sad and beautiful words of the Service?
59640But you know that song you sing in''Tell,''''The Maiden on the Icy Plank,''that first verse-- would you mind explaining?
59640But, say, did n''t I play it smooth?
59640Ca n''t anybody-- can''t one of you fellows take his part?
59640Ca n''t you hear the bell?"
59640Ca n''t you_ see_?
59640Can I do anything?"
59640Carson?"
59640Carson?"
59640Come here to Cousin Jennie, dearie; what have you got there?
59640Come home and take lunch with us, wo n''t you, Doctor?"
59640D''ye suppose Adam, the great father of mankind, wore gloves?
59640Did I, or did I not write you, answer me that?"
59640Did n''t it strike you as kinder queer he should''a''been so well up in the stage- business?
59640Did she enjoy listening to old Steven''s dreary, everlasting talk?
59640Did you know that all these boys have been going down to your house to get Huddesley to hear them their parts?"
59640Did you meet the old lady-- Mrs. Botlisch?
59640Did you say you were looking for Huddesley, Mr. Grimm?
59640Did you tell him about this?"
59640Do n''t you know whether he''s in or not?
59640Do n''t you know you may disturb your Aunt Caroline?"
59640Do n''t you remember?"
59640Do n''t you think there''s some mistake?"
59640Do n''t you want me to enjoy the comedy?"
59640Do you suppose Adam wore mittens?"
59640Do you suppose anyone suspects?"
59640Do you suppose he ever asked her, though?"
59640Do you suppose it was a good likeness?
59640Do you suppose she has ever heard that those blue India- ware plant- tubs, those great big elegant things were intended to be given to Lucien''s wife?
59640Do you think four dips of that is going to cure six- foot- two of nigger?
59640Doctor Vardaman, how-- in-- thunder, now--_how_--_in_--_thunder_ do you suppose they came to have that-- that----?"
59640Does n''t anybody ever tell you to remember that you''re a Gwynne?"
59640Dozens of others are daily doing the same thing; why not?
59640Drag their noble name through the mud and riot of a Common Pleas suit?
59640Eh, Louise?"
59640Eh?
59640Eh?
59640Faith, there''s stocks an''_ stocks_, think o''that, now?"
59640Five dollars?
59640For coming this evening?
59640Give up the game, and so betray her husband''s interests, or engage in a little harmless flirtation to put off the hour of his reckoning?
59640Go ahead, Mr. Grimm, what do you want?"
59640Good Heavens, do you suppose the doctor expects us to eat all that pudding and jelly stuff, and fruit and nuts and cheese into the bargain?
59640Gwynne, dear, how did you get that great black bruise on your forehead?"
59640Gwynne?"
59640Gwynne?''
59640Has n''t he, girls?"
59640Have n''t you heard about the fuss with Pallinder and all?"
59640Have n''t you made enough by this last deal in Phosphate to satisfy you_ yet_?''
59640Have we not seen them rejecting poor Silberberg''s offer with contumely?
59640Have you seen Miss Pallinder?
59640He called to the carpenters to stop their racket; it was warm, was n''t it?
59640He cleared his throat, and said yes, he had heard about the robbery-- they did n''t get anything after all, did they?
59640He gave it to Tom Corwin, did n''t he?
59640He hails a friend:"Hi, Joe, want to ride?"
59640He menaced them with a closed fist; and they went on shamelessly:_ Gessler_(_ in a loud voice_)--Who are these fellows?
59640He ought to sue, ought n''t he, John?"
59640He paused and then some indefinable feeling prompted him to add:"Fine office Colonel Pallinder has, has n''t he?
59640He took an''wrote,''Why am I like Desdemona?
59640He was generous to the last penny-- with money that was shadily come by, to be sure, but what would you have?
59640He wrote just that:''Why am I like Desdemona?''
59640He''d have Hannah get us something, some lemonade, would n''t we like it?
59640He''s dropped out of the play-- did you know?"
59640He''s short and stout and wears spectacles, does n''t he?"
59640He''s your real agent, you know; he does the collecting, does n''t he?
59640Her father is Sir Julian-- no, it''s Lucien-- no, Mr. Peters, I believe my eyes are failing-- can you make out what that word is?"
59640Here, Ollie Hunt-- or you, Joe?"
59640Here, you, one- o''-the- finest, what''s your name?"
59640How can I sit in judgment on him?
59640How dare you say that, Sam?
59640How dare you tell?"
59640How did it happen you did n''t go to dinner at Doctor Vardaman''s with the others?"
59640How much had she overheard?
59640How''d that happen?"
59640Huddesley, you can get us up something, ca n''t you?"
59640I asked him if he had ever been to see his great- grandfather''s portrait in the State- House?
59640I mean ladies all diked out with diamond earrings an''breast- pins, hey?"
59640I mean-- anybody we''d_ know_?"
59640I saw Gwynne Peters on the street to- day----""Hock or madeira, sir?"
59640I should n''t have known what to ask for, you know; why, there''ve been millions and_ millions_ of plays written-- did you know that?
59640I should think your hands would be cold this weather, Cousin Steven; do n''t you want to buy a pair of gloves?"
59640I suppose you think all this--"he waved his hand around--"market- place-- beasts at Ephesus, hey?"
59640I thought she was stunning in that red dress and the diamonds-- why did n''t she put them on again?
59640I told him that there big house standin''back with them big pillows up the front, ai n''t that right?"
59640I would n''t have dreamed of suspecting Huddesley; why, he''s been in and out of the house all day long for_ weeks_, has n''t he, ma?
59640If you will oblige me with your name, sir, and the object of this visit----?"
59640If you-- you have ever bought any of his mining or''Phosphate''stocks, in short?"
59640In the hall one of the men could be heard asking what was the matter, and excuse him, but could he be of any use?
59640Irving cards and spades, though?
59640Is he going back to work?"
59640Is he here now, do you know?"
59640Is he in the house now?"
59640Is it fire?
59640Is my bonnet straight?
59640Is n''t he the_ dearest_ old gentleman?
59640Is n''t it a beauty?
59640Is n''t it funny you never see actors standing still, and looking stumped for something to do?
59640Is n''t that_ interesting_?
59640Is that all you wanted to know, Mr. Grimm?
59640Is the house took fire?"
59640Is there a picture of her?
59640Is there any other outside- doors, Doc.?"
59640Is there anything else-- any other joke, I mean, that you''d like to get at the true inwardness of?"
59640Is-- ah-- is Miss Pallinder going to come and help her mother receive?
59640It''s all in the start a man gets, ai n''t it?''"
59640It''s not bad news for anyone, is it?"
59640It_ is_ cold, is n''t it?"
59640Jack, where''re my gum- shoes, please?
59640Jack?
59640Just read that, will you?
59640Keerful, cahn''t yo''?
59640Kitty was undoubtedly a cat, but----"You''re in the play, too, are n''t you, Miss Oldham?"
59640Like you and Muriel, was n''t it?"
59640Little dark, stocky fellow; talks like he was English; says he was butler to the nobility over there-- ain''t that him?
59640Lo, the hour was arrived, but where was the man?
59640Lord, what difference does it make to you whether he turns it into a beer- garden or a cemetery?
59640Maginnis?"
59640Maginnis?"
59640Maybe it''s being sent to storage?
59640Mirandy, where are you?
59640Miss Pallinder told you about Huddesley, did n''t she?
59640Miss Pallinder, do you remember when he went?"
59640Mr. Peters had said something about them-- I think he''s_ lovely_, do n''t you?
59640Must I spank me own che- ild?"
59640Must you be going?
59640My wife sometimes accuses me of extravagance in the table, but I always say:''Well, Miranda, we''ve got to_ live_, have n''t we?''
59640No?
59640Not long since, as we were discussing it in a company, someone said:"Was n''t it awful when I fell over the jardinière right out by the footlights?"
59640Now is n''t that like Jennie Gwynne?
59640Now who are you and what do you want?"
59640Now you quit it, you hear me?"
59640Now you''re getting your December money in November, see?
59640Of what stuff are we all made?"
59640One of the boys in the office says:''Oh, come now, Mr. Scheurmann, let him down easy, knock off the eight cents, wo n''t you?''
59640Only how do they think up all the things they do?
59640Or how much guessed?
59640Pallinder''s a great friend of yours, is n''t he, Doctor?"
59640Pallinder?''
59640Public Library?"
59640Quit practice?
59640Remember what a sweet voice he had?
59640Right at the end there, where they find them, I mean?"
59640S. P.?
59640Sam?
59640Sam?
59640Say it were not such a habit, what then?
59640Say, Doc., it''s a good ways to Broadway, ai n''t it?"
59640Say, have you heard that about Gwynne Peters?"
59640Say, if I''d been different, if I''d been born and brought up like you, for instance, I''d have cut a pretty wide swath, now, would n''t I?
59640Say, maybe he ai n''t been on a bat, ai n''t he?
59640Say, you got a man named Huddesley, ai n''t you?"
59640Shall I put you down here?
59640Shall I write the English?"
59640She''s got some sparklers, you know, regular headlights; you''ve seen her wear them?
59640Shut up, will you?"
59640So she comes to me:''Oh, papa, would n''t it be nice if we could have a real tiara?
59640So we want to have some of the young men, too-- of course you, Mr. Peters, and do you think Mr. Lewis would come?
59640Somebody, recovering from the contemplation, wanted to know what"William Tell"would be like with only men in it?
59640Sounds just like Dickens, do n''t it?"
59640Steven?"
59640Tankerville,''no dinner at Doctor Vardaman''s-- who can say what might have happened instead?
59640Taylor?"
59640Taylor?"
59640Tell you, the telephone''s an institution, is n''t it?
59640Ten dollars?"
59640That admirable argument, at once so condensed and so forcible, what respectable person would dare to utter it to- day?
59640That poor tiara, what has become of it?''"
59640That seems to me a very small thing-- a woman''s duty-- what else are we for?
59640That''s a hundred and twenty apiece that''s coming to us, John, ai n''t that correct?"
59640That-- that_ settles_ it, do n''t you see?
59640The Colonel''s a great old blatherskite, is n''t he?
59640The bottle?"
59640The day came and the hour-- why was it that something invariably prevented him?
59640The fact is--_yeast_, you know,_ yeast_, well, it makes things_ rise_, and she_ fell_----''"Oh, she_ ate_ the yeast?"
59640The house?
59640The uninformed might very well inquire, as did Doctor Vardaman, what under Heaven Arnold von Winkelreid was doing in this_ galère_?
59640The veil of the sanctum was rent in twain-- what would he do or say next?
59640Then:''Will you''ave''ock with your hoysters, sir?''
59640There was a dreary odour-- an odour?
59640There wo n''t be anything coming to you from the house the first of December, understand?
59640There''re a whole lot of medicine- bottles upstairs, over three hundred-- do you think the doctor could use them?
59640There''re those three large rooms in the wing at the back, and the small one over the hall-- plenty of room, do n''t you think so, Mr. Gwynne?
59640These are whole, prosperous and victorious; these maimed, mad, dull, helpless, or hopeless-- and who is to blame?
59640These ladies must not be disturbed any more, do you understand?
59640These opinions were shared by everybody who heard the circumstances; what made us change our minds?
59640They could-- they could make oath before a notary, could n''t they?"
59640They had been given him who knows how long ago, and by whom?
59640They have to find''em on you, do n''t they?
59640They used to get him to sing''Comfort ye, my people,''in Trinity the last Sunday in Advent, do n''t you remember?
59640They would keep him from having a voice in his own proper affairs?
59640They''re always walking around, or they''ve got something in their hands to fuss with, or----""Well, that''s_ business_, is n''t it?"
59640They''re perfectly lovely people, are n''t they?
59640Think I''d be roped in by any such con game as that?
59640Those Pallinders are kind of dressy people, hey?
59640Those people?
59640Tinkleton''?
59640To be sure, Huddesley had hinted-- but what does a servant''s chatter amount to?
59640To the back?
59640Upon what bank of misty Acheron does he now perform his melodies?
59640Upstairs?
59640Was I so wise at twenty- four?
59640Was Mr. Peters''brother one of''em that died in the house?
59640Was it pleasant for Mrs. Pallinder to blarney Gwynne into forgetfulness?
59640Was it possible, he asked himself, that he ought to revise his opinion of Pallinder?
59640Was it to this party to- night?
59640Was she with them?"
59640We have changed all that; who so plain- spoken as the lady- novelist of to- day, whom everybody reads, and, what is more, discusses?
59640We''re all going down there to dinner Friday night, did you know it?"
59640Well,_ will you look_?
59640What a terrific big red nose the old boy had, did n''t he?"
59640What are you staying around here for?
59640What became of Huddesley toward the last there?"
59640What care had he given to Sam or Sam''s interests of late?
59640What could it have been?"
59640What do they do?"
59640What do you suppose they''ll do with Caroline_ now_?
59640What do you think?
59640What for?"
59640What had Mrs.--ahem!--what had those two poor women done?
59640What had the doctor done?
59640What has become of her?''"
59640What has happened?"
59640What if the Pallinders were besieged by duns, and their servants unpaid?
59640What is all that infernal din about?"
59640What is the amount, if I may----""Say, ai n''t you barking up the wrong tree?"
59640What on earth was the matter with her?
59640What ought I to give him?
59640What was it about?"
59640What was the matter with all the Gwynnes?
59640What will everybody say?
59640What will the girls think?
59640What''s that thing you''ve got on, that tight jacket thing-- or is it a-- a waist?
59640What''s that?
59640What''s the difference anyhow?
59640What''s''forcible entry,''Cousin Gwynne?"
59640When I heard someone say''The Incurables''Home?
59640When?"
59640Where his anathemas?
59640Where is he?
59640Where was his animosity?
59640Where''d he go?
59640Where''s his room?
59640Where''s that Taylor feller?"
59640Where''s the money?
59640Where''s your telephone?"
59640Who ever heard of a washerwoman with a husband that was worth anything?
59640Who is so care- free, so luxurious in his habits, so open- handed and open- hearted as the man who never pays his debts?
59640Who so wise as our young people?
59640Who was Cynara?"
59640Who was that I heard you having such a squabble with at the kitchen door yesterday afternoon, Huddesley?"
59640Who went up and drank at that sempiternally flowing spring-- who, in plain language, invested with Colonel Pallinder?
59640Who''s that upstairs?"
59640Who?"
59640Why ca n''t you finish?"
59640Why did n''t you come to me-- or Cousin Jennie?"
59640Why do n''t you come and look on a while, Maze?
59640Why do n''t you come to see_ me_, ever?
59640Why do n''t you go away?
59640Why have any circulating medium?
59640Why have any?
59640Why was he standing up?
59640Why, I thought somebody said Sam Peters was in Honduras or Alaska or somewhere-- is it the same one?
59640Why, it''s my money just as much as yours, and am_ I_ worrying?
59640Why, then the dialect was put on, like a garment; and for what reason?
59640Why, we''ve got a little business together, forgot that, hey?"
59640Why-- why-- Sam had gone-- had gone back to Canada, did n''t we know it?
59640Will anyone ever forget her appearance as_ Astarte_ at the Charity Ball?
59640Will it go any higher?
59640Will it go any lower?''
59640Will the rising generation treasure so picturesque a memory?
59640Will you kindly ask all those ladies if they''ll take account o''stock and see if they''re missing anything?"
59640Will you please let me have my chair, Cousin Steven?
59640With-- with Sam, I mean?"
59640Wo n''t something else take a rise?''
59640Would n''t it be nice if these people turned out really-- really_ nice_, so that the house would be the way it was in your grandfather''s time?"
59640Would n''t we sit down?
59640Yez did n''t see me in the Turrner Buildin''th''marrnin''?"
59640You do n''t mind our being here, do you?
59640You hear_ me_?''
59640You''d just as lief go and see Doctor Vardaman, would n''t you?"
59640You''ve been at your country- place all winter, have n''t you?"
59640You''ve been out to the house?"
59640You-- you have n''t seen him going up to the Pallinder''s, have you?"
59640_ Gessler_(_ louder, pointing to Tell_)--Who''s that fellow with the freckles?
59640_ Mercy!_ is n''t that_ awful_?
59640_ You_ can let things alone, if you choose, Mr. Peters, but_ I''m_----""What are you going to do?"
59640and was going to have all her family call on us-- wasn''t that kind?
59640but we had n''t any idea there was such a big connection; the house belongs to all of them-- did you know that?
59640it shouted,"What d''ye mean by_ this_?"
59640where''s my hundred and twenty dollars, Gwynne Peters?"
12249A brother of Major Ridgeley?
12249All at one time?
12249All through what woods, Georgie?
12249Always?
12249Am I not more than repaid, proud and happy? 12249 Am I to read the rest?"
12249Am I to tell first? 12249 And Bart?"
12249And did Providence send him off last night?
12249And do n''t we understand you?
12249And has not returned?
12249And is it not about time? 12249 And so Roberts has suited you all, for once, has he?"
12249And so you call him Prince?
12249And the Indianess?
12249And what do you ask, and what response do you get?
12249And what profit do you find in such communication?
12249And what would become of Bart?
12249And when will that be?
12249And where is Bart?
12249And who is to see you in French millinery, here in the woods?
12249And why do n''t you go, Barton?
12249And would you never love and we d, woo and marry?
12249And you always loved me? 12249 And you are content?"
12249And you are in doubt about that?
12249And you have always loved me?
12249And you?
12249And your husband?
12249And, mother, you knew it, too?
12249Are you glad, Arthur?
12249Are you not glad, Julia, that he has acquitted himself so well? 12249 Barton?--was he with you?
12249Be prudent, when his name is assailed, and he absent, and no brother to defend him?
12249Because I am crazy, too?
12249Because things of mere painted wings, all wing and nothing else, can float in the lower atmosphere, are all winged things to be despised? 12249 Ben away, hain''t ye?
12249Blank verse? 12249 But does not that demand exist?
12249But this boy-- what is he to us, or what can he ever be? 12249 By the way,"asked the Doctor,"would n''t you like to go fishing one of these nights?
12249Can you give this young lady shelter and food?
12249Can you walk? 12249 Could he not, mother, when he saved my life?"
12249Did anybody believe this of Bart?
12249Did he belong to your financial association?
12249Did his mother tell how he came to think Julia had crossed the old road?
12249Did it ever occur to you, Bart, that you might be an orator of some sort?
12249Did the Doctor see him?
12249Did you ask him to call and see mamma?
12249Did you call, Julia?
12249Did you meet Julia Markham anywhere?
12249Did you really think, Arthur, that I had no eyes; that I had no ears; that I had no woman''s heart? 12249 Did you?
12249Do n''t you hear of it in barbarous and savage conditions of men, now? 12249 Do n''t you though?"
12249Do women really think? 12249 Do you envy them, Barton?"
12249Do you ever seriously think?
12249Do you hear, Prince? 12249 Do you propose in thus getting back to nature, to go back to what we call savagery?"
12249Do you suspect Bart of anything wrong?
12249Do you think he is actually shattered?
12249Do you think so? 12249 Do you think that absolute ugliness could be overcome in that way?"
12249Do you think these are to be leading men?
12249Doctor,said Barton, in the little office of the latter,"I''ve called to borrow your Euclid; may I have it?
12249Does a student have to read all of these?
12249Does he know anything?
12249Does that make them better?
12249Dr. Lyman, what do you think of this young man? 12249 Envy them, mother?
12249Father, do you know this Mr. Wade with whom Barton has gone to study?
12249For that matter he dined on a gill of milk, and one ounce of honey yesterday,said the Judge,"Do n''t you ever eat?"
12249General Ford, I believe?
12249Girls, what are you loitering along there for? 12249 Has he had any unusual history, any heart agony?"
12249Has he told you the story?
12249Have I heard the worst?
12249Have I not been permitted to save you? 12249 Have I really been away?
12249Have you a horse?
12249Have you discovered any reason to think that Julia cares in the least for him?
12249Have you ever practised speaking in public?
12249Have you heard from Henry lately?
12249Have you never heard the story of the lost girl? 12249 Have you now, or have you ever had any business connection with him?"
12249Have you slept any?
12249He hunts well, and fishes well-- don''t he?
12249He was ready, nothing detained him, why not have the final pain of going over at once?
12249He would have to be a good waltzer, I presume?
12249How are you, Bart? 12249 How can you go, mother?"
12249How dare you utter such words to me?
12249How do you do?
12249How do you feel after it?
12249How do you like our town?
12249How does that suit Julia?
12249How far is it to Markham''s?
12249How had you ever lost that, Arthur?
12249How long is it expected that an ordinary dullard would require to master Blackstone?
12249How many hands has he with him?
12249How old are you?
12249How old is he?
12249I am a little like my mother, I presume; but who would win you, and how, I wonder?
12249I am alone-- may I save you?
12249I do n''t know,--perhaps so; why?
12249I guess I did;and pretty soon,"Doctor, is this your robe?
12249I guess so,said the man;"been out all night?"
12249I know it is; but how can that be made to appear? 12249 I presume Judge Markham do n''t care to drive him?"
12249I see; but why do you care, you girls in this far- off, rude region?
12249I? 12249 I?
12249If his soul was dark, why was he blindfolded?
12249In what?
12249Is Miss Markham asleep?--is she quiet?
12249Is he still alive?
12249Is it a misfortune to be loved, mother?
12249Is it possible,said Bart,"that this was an educated, strong, and brilliant mind, capable of dealing with difficult questions of law?
12249Is it?
12249Is n''t he as smart as his brother Henry?
12249Is she alone?
12249Is that a reason why a woman would not?
12249Is that all?
12249Is that the awful dance where the gentleman takes the lady around the waist, and she leans on him, and they go swinging around? 12249 Julia, was this poor youth more than human?"
12249Julia, what under the sun is the matter?
12249Lost, George?
12249Mamma, do you hear that? 12249 May I ask that you will permit that to stand with my other misdemeanors until some rare fortune enables me to atone for all at once?"
12249May I just look at her one moment?
12249May I know why you wish this?
12249Me? 12249 Might not his lamp of genius aid him somewhat?"
12249Mother,said Barton, stepping up and placing his hands about her,"do n''t you feel it?
12249Mother,said Julia,"are all young men really like this proud, haughty, sensitive fellow?
12249Mr. Bingham,said Bart very quietly,"will you read?"
12249Mr. Greer wrote it for you? 12249 Mr. Ranney,"continued Bart,"what is the reason of this universal failure of law students?"
12249Mr. Ridgeley,said Miss Giddings,"ca n''t you give us an American book?"
12249Mrs. Ford, is the judgment satisfied?
12249My poor scared little things, it is all over now, and we are all so glad and happy, are n''t we?
12249No matter, Julia would marry him?
12249Now what is the effect of our American literature upon the general character of English literature? 12249 Now, Frank,"said Mr. Giddings,"why not go a step further, and perfect the man, and say that religion should add its strength and grace, as a crown?"
12249Of course you know Judge Markham?
12249Oh, dear, that was the loveliest bit of woodland, in the bend of the creek, in all the magnificent woods; well?
12249Old King Cole? 12249 Papa Judge,"said Julia, suddenly springing to her father''s side,"may I have him?"
12249Prince Arthur?
12249Ridgeley, what are your views?
12249Shall I annoy you if I sit down and read Blackstone a little?
12249Silvertail?
12249So that, Mr. Ridgeley,said Ida,"we may not in our time hope for the American novel, the great American epic, or the great American drama?"
12249So they seem to us, and yet how much of that is due to our egotism-- because it is ours-- who can tell? 12249 Such an orator as Brutus is-- cold, formal, and dead?
12249Suppose I finish it in a week?
12249Tell me how_ you_ come to be here, to- day, of all the things in the world?
12249That I met Barton? 12249 That I purchased and had engraved, and perhaps-- what would you have done had you seen my name?"
12249That is n''t a bad theory of prophecy,said Case approvingly;"but all these marvels were in the old time; how came the faculty to be lost?"
12249That is n''t for you to ask, Papa Judge-- is it, mamma?
12249That? 12249 The one with weak, washed- out gray eyes?"
12249The past-- forget the past?
12249There is none-- who gave it to you?
12249There, Papa Judge, are you satisfied-- not with our arguments, but with us?
12249They are lovers, are they not?
12249Thirty- five, perhaps; why?
12249This is a compendious confession of faith,said Henry; and, pausing,"why do you put genius first?"
12249This is an English work; is there an American which answers to Blackstone?
12249Was Julia a beauty?
12249Was he acquainted with Judge Markham''s people?
12249Was it unpleasant to be hardly civil to him?
12249Was that particularly creditable?
12249Was there ever such a singular and brilliant compound?
12249We must go home, must not we, Prince?
12249Well, Doctor, you flatter me; but really is not the imagination one of the highest elements of the human mind? 12249 Well, Major, you see a shrewd man can be mistaken, do n''t you?"
12249Well, Ranney,said Wade,"what can we do for this young man?
12249Well, can it be productive of good? 12249 Well, how goes Blackstone?"
12249Well, poets''lap- dogs do n''t fight duels, much; and Miss Giddings, do you think a lap- dog could have written this?
12249Well, what is your conclusion?
12249Well, what was the conclusion?
12249Well,said Mrs. Ford,"what of that?"
12249Well,said the Judge, after a thoughtful pause,"what can I do?
12249Well?
12249What about his colts?
12249What about the people?
12249What ai n''t in him, Old Testament?
12249What ails you, Bart? 12249 What are you doing here?"
12249What can I do? 12249 What can he do?
12249What could I say? 12249 What did I tell you?"
12249What did I tell you?
12249What did you do, badinage apart?
12249What do you mean, Rose?
12249What do you say now?
12249What do you say now?
12249What do you say to that?
12249What do you say, Ranney?
12249What do you think of that part of the State which you saw?
12249What do you think of the English Constitution?
12249What do you think you can see?
12249What has been the trouble?
12249What has happened to Ransom?
12249What has happened?
12249What is the matter with him?
12249What is the matter, Bart?
12249What is the young man talking about now?
12249What is there that my brother Henry may not hope to win, I would like to know? 12249 What is your youth doing in his, now?"
12249What old wreck is it?
12249What others?
12249What progress are you making?
12249What reply did you make?
12249What the devil is there in it?
12249What were they doing?
12249When?
12249Where did he go?
12249Where does he live?
12249Where have you been?
12249Where under the heavens did you get this?
12249Who is Miss Walters?
12249Who is that dancing with Julia?
12249Who is that dark, singular- looking young man, with full beard and open throat? 12249 Who is that fine- looking, fine- featured, florid man?"
12249Who is that little, old, hump- backed, wry- necked chap hoisting his face up as if trying to look into a basket on his shoulder?
12249Who is that man on the left of Bowen, and beyond, with that splendid head and face, and eyes like Juno, if a man can have such eyes?
12249Who shall I say?
12249Who was he?
12249Whom do you mean?
12249Whose name is to it, Judge?
12249Why did he go?
12249Why did you go to him?
12249Why do n''t I shriek, and tear my hair, and make some fitting moan over this awful loss? 12249 Why not?"
12249Why, Bart, what is the matter? 12249 Why?"
12249Why?
12249Why?
12249Will you accept him?
12249Will you mind the dew?
12249Will you say a prayer for us?
12249Will you say this in writing?
12249Will you submit to that rule?
12249Will you take the spear, or wo n''t you?
12249Will you take the spear, or wo n''t you?
12249Will your brother Barton be here this evening?
12249With the love of such a woman, what may not a man do?
12249Would it not be more blessed to live, love?
12249Would n''t he come?
12249Would that be an objection?
12249Would you like literature for a pursuit?
12249Yes, mother, I have come; are you glad to see me?
12249Yes; how do you feel? 12249 Yes; will you walk in?"
12249You are not overcome?
12249You believe in the Prophets?
12249You do n''t like that?
12249You find him improved in appearance and manners?
12249You have changed his name?
12249You have tried?
12249You know Barton Ridgeley?
12249You know the place and remember the day? 12249 You may remember my brother Henry?"
12249You returned earlier than you anticipated?
12249You saved my life, Arthur, and will you not take little things from me?
12249Your friend Miss Walters?
12249_ If_ he sees you, Julia?
12249and did Barton really find you?
12249After all, are not these things to be known?
12249After all, was not this young man one of the few destined to distinction, and on all accounts would it not be well to give him countenance?
12249And are some spirits so acutely attuned as to be over- sensible of this vibration?
12249And if I really have, am I to be permitted to take your hand, and asked how I really do?
12249And little lisping George, staring at him curiously,"Are you Plinth Arthur?"
12249And the same hand wrote me the generous warning against that wretched Greer?"
12249And then, would Bart come back with Julia?
12249And what business had the birds to be glad and joyous, and the perfume of flowers to steal out on the bright air?
12249And what next?"
12249And what was it all to him?
12249Are there not enough to do all that work as fast as it needs to be done?
12249Are there really such things as actual presentiments?
12249Are you a Latin scholar?"
12249Are you already shelled over with accepted dogmas, and without the power of receiving new ideas?"
12249Are you hurt?"
12249Are you sick?"
12249Arthur, can you thank Him for us, now?"
12249At any event, before that April, something should be asked and answered-- but how answered?
12249At last Rose ventured:"Where is he-- this Mr. Ridgeley?
12249Bart asked him if he was there to oppose a judgment in favor of his own clients?
12249Bart looked around and bowing to each:"I see Mr. Ranney is not in;"and with another glance around,"I presume Mr. Wade is not?"
12249Barton, you believe God communicates with men through other than his ordinary works?"
12249But was he to be overcome by a girl?
12249But what became of Barton?
12249But why should they, if he did not?
12249Can any one tell why a young girl laughs, save that she is happy and joyous?
12249Can it be that an idea has been committed to his skull, lately?
12249Can one be a lawyer by reading Blackstone?"
12249Can you tell what is electricity or life?"
12249Can you walk?"
12249Could he have done it before?"
12249Could she hold out till morning?
12249Did he care?
12249Did her riding skirt really get under her feet?
12249Did it cost her anything to say this?
12249Did n''t he go voluntarily, because he would?
12249Did not Mrs. Ridgeley fear the animal that had been heard to scream in these woods?
12249Did she really know which way home was?
12249Did you ever hear of that?"
12249Did you go to anybody''s house?
12249Did you see my old client, Cole,"the King?"
12249Do n''t I follow him about to feel the gladness that he brings?
12249Do n''t I live on the praises of Henry?
12249Do n''t I love the world for loving Morris?
12249Do n''t you hear?
12249Do n''t you see that your mind is always sky- rocketing and chasing thistle- down through the air?"
12249Do we not need, as well as wish for, a new?"
12249Do we overlook it?
12249Do we stumble over it, perish, wanting it, with it in our hands without the power to see or feel it?
12249Do you hear?"
12249Do you hope it will be soon?"
12249Do you know anything about it?
12249Do you know that my mother and I both believe that that prayer was answered, and that she was impressed with my safety in answer to it?
12249Do you know, I half suspect this is all a dream, and that I shall wake up in Albany, or Jefferson, or somewhere?
12249Do you know, I sometimes half feel that I would like to be a man?"
12249Do you think me crazy-- mad?"
12249Do you understand?"
12249Do you want to try yourself on the_ pons asinorum?_""What is that; another bridge of sighs?
12249Do you want to try yourself on the_ pons asinorum?_""What is that; another bridge of sighs?
12249Doctor,"he went on,"can a man have half of his faculties shut off and retain the others clear and strong?"
12249Does that surprise you?
12249For them can another day so bright and happy ever dawn?
12249George at first did not quite comprehend:"Julia, are you going to be Bart''s wife?"
12249Had Mrs. Ridgeley received a letter recently from Henry?
12249Had he slain his brother, that he should care so little?--that his voice should sound so hoarse and hollow?
12249Has he any of it-- the least bit?"
12249Has he ever said a word about it?"
12249Has n''t there been a clamor for the American novel?
12249Has some rift opened to a hidden store of truth, and has a gleam of it come to the eyes of this man, filling him with a hunger of which he is to die?
12249Have not the old done for us about all they can?
12249Have we lost the clue to this knowledge?
12249Have you faith, in anything?"
12249Have you read Pickwick?
12249Have you really been away?"
12249He felt in his soul what would come to him finally, but then, in the lapsing time?
12249He finally turned to the last page, and asked questions with the same result, closing the book with:"Well, what else have you been doing this week?"
12249He was then asked what defects in pleading would be cured by a general verdict?
12249He was with you, wa''n''t he, studyin''something or other?"
12249Henry, with unchanged gravity:"Do you believe in anything?"
12249How could I ever have had the beautiful revelation of your high and heroic qualities, Julia?
12249How could I?''
12249How could he be blamed?
12249How could he overcome her father''s dislike?
12249How could you think so meanly of me, and so meanly of yourself?"
12249How do you come on?"
12249How do you know they want them?
12249How do you like it?
12249How far had she gone?
12249How is Sarah?"
12249How under the heavens did you ever find your way here?
12249How was it?
12249How was this?
12249How''s all the folks where you ben?"
12249I did not think to restore it, and I want very much to keep it-- may I?"
12249I suppose he is very poor, but--""But what, Rose?"
12249If Mr. Ridgeley sees me, had he not better find me in my mother''s and father''s house?"
12249If lost, had she wandered round and round, as lost folks do?
12249In the wide world''s history was it not a crowning, and one of the most useful qualities of many of the greatest men?"
12249Is he a lawyer?"
12249Is he married?"
12249Is it day?"
12249Is it good classical Latin?"
12249Is it manly to waylay me in this lonely place, and force yourself upon me, and insult me with this?
12249Is it more marvellous, than that we should have been here before?
12249Is somebody to come from somewhere else?
12249Is that to be worn by all of you?"
12249Is the haying done?"
12249Is the subtle soul- atmosphere capable of a vibration at the approach and in advance of an event?
12249Is there not a clamorous need of brain- work, and who is there to do it?
12249It certainly was a mistake, his going; could it be a blunder, his returning?
12249It is the mother part, is n''t it, mamma?"
12249Julia?
12249Just come in?"
12249Like her father, she disliked him; and if, like her father, she would openly let him see and hear it-- but does n''t she?
12249Look over all the young men whom you know, and who promises to be fit to lead?
12249Mamma, do you remember the night of Snow''s ball, when you playfully complained of his inattention to you?
12249May I be permitted to know which of my thousand faults is now specially remembered against me?"
12249May I know your pleasure in reference to him?
12249Mother,"appealed the Judge, with uplifted hands, to Mrs. Markham,"where did this young lady get her notions?"
12249My dear husband, do n''t you also understand that if you fully comprehended us, or we you, we should lose interest in each other?
12249Now, Ed, what has been going on on the farm?
12249Of course he was acquainted with Julia, who was thought to be the belle of all that region?
12249Or was the act of Bart, like many of his, due to sudden impulse?
12249Ridgeley?"
12249Ridgeley?"
12249Shall we die when we know?
12249Shall we know when we die?
12249She arose with--"Oh, Barton, have you come?"
12249She stood and tried to think back: where was she, and how came she there?
12249Should I go?
12249Such as ours has been, my love, wo n''t we?"
12249Surely it was most his fault; if he really had such feelings, why should he tell her, and tell her as he did?
12249Talking over the young lawyers, I''ll bet; who takes which?"
12249The girl-- who can tell what a girl thinks?
12249Then he referred to a certain other grave matter, and wanted to know when?
12249Then what in himself was wrong?
12249They give you the result of their experience on two or three very important practical points; what do you think of it?"
12249They may ride her; and when this prince wants his charger, as he will, he must come to me for him-- don''t you see?"
12249They wondered why Bart should go away; and would n''t he be there that night?
12249Think of the high moral considerations involved?
12249Turning to his wife,"Would you have me follow him to Jefferson?"
12249Was I not too good to go, and be lost?
12249Was father at all like him?"
12249Was it something to be adventured for, fought for, found anywhere?
12249Was life and its ambitions to be crushed out and brought to nought by one small hand?
12249Was n''t the money his?
12249Was n''t there space and breath for him?
12249Was not his brother Henry studying law at Jefferson, and were they not all proud of him, and did not everybody expect great things of him?
12249We dress to please ourselves and plague each other-- don''t you know that?
12249Weary he looked, and worn, as from a heart- ill."What has happened, Barton?
12249Well, Kennedy, what do you say?"
12249What are you made of, young man, all spring and whalebone?
12249What business had you to be?
12249What can I say?
12249What commands had she for him?
12249What could I say?
12249What could it be?
12249What could she ever be?
12249What did either think?
12249What did he care?
12249What did you say?"
12249What do you think of them?"
12249What had he to offer her?
12249What is it?"
12249What is the matter?"
12249What is the reason for that, do you suppose?"
12249What is there in Irving, that is not wholly and purely English?
12249What mattered one day?
12249What other place was there for him?"
12249What put this into your head?"
12249What remains for me to ask?"
12249What was she to him?
12249What will Jo Keys say now, I wonder?"
12249What would people say of his return?
12249What would you have me do-- change myself, or try to change him?"
12249When I came away they might have known-- but then, who and what am I?
12249When all was done that occurred to the tender, thoughtful youth, and the eyes of the maiden were dreamily closing:"Have you said your prayers?"
12249When did Fowler die?
12249Where did you take him?
12249Where have you come from?
12249Where is my father?"
12249Where is the handsome youth you clung to, on a winter morning, we know of?
12249Who can help you?
12249Who can tell how many sets of faculties are possible to us?
12249Who ever heard of that before?
12249Who is to govern, and manage, and control twenty years hence?
12249Who knows but it may be the just- arrived light of an old, old star which has just come to us?
12249Who shall keep me from him?"
12249Who shall say that I have them not?"
12249Who was she?
12249Who was to blame?
12249Who would have thought it?"
12249Who would tell him?
12249Who?"
12249Whom did you see?"
12249Why ca n''t I feel it?
12249Why could not he leave it there and to the future?
12249Why did he go?
12249Why did n''t Ford explain this matter to this green bumpkin, and save his client the costs?"
12249Why did n''t you call to us to meet you?"
12249Why did n''t you come to my little party?
12249Why did they care to say anything to me?
12249Why do n''t you mourn?"
12249Why do you inquire about him?"
12249Why kindle such a light, to quench it so soon in the dark river?
12249Why not?"
12249Why place them under our eyes so that a child of five years will ask questions that no mortal, or immortal, has yet solved?
12249Why should I awake them again?
12249Why should he die, and now, plucked and torn up by the root, just at flowering?
12249Why should such qualities be so bestowed, to be so wasted?
12249Why should you have known me"?
12249Why the devil should n''t they snub me one day and pat me on the head the next?
12249Why under the heavens did you risk that old log?
12249Why was it not hidden by thick clouds, and why should they not weep?
12249Why was not I taken?"
12249Why would you go up to the source of that ray?
12249Why?
12249Will you come?"
12249Will you ever reach discretion, and deal with things seriously?"
12249Will you leave it to me to pass judgment upon him?"
12249Will you read another?"
12249Will you show me some of them?"
12249Would Barton probably go and study with his brother?
12249Would Mrs. Ridgeley permit Mrs. Markham to send her home in her new buggy?
12249Would he ever know?
12249Would he have caught her in his arms if she had not fallen?
12249Would it have been better to remain a day or two and meet Julia?
12249Would you expect to find God and heaven there?"
12249Would you like to be wooed in that way?"
12249Would you really have him buy an axe and chop cord- wood, or work as a carpenter, or sell tape behind the counter?
12249You are material, and go by lines and angles; can not you understand that a God whose existence you would have to prove is no God at all?
12249You see that little knob there in front?
12249You would not fancy that tipple, would you?"
12249am I a wretch without nature, or heart, or soul?
12249and affecting to notice the passage of the sun towards the meridian-- she turned to him a little anxiously--"What time is it, Arthur?"
12249and could n''t he do what he pleased with it?
12249and do n''t I tear every man that utters a doubt of his infallibility?
12249and may I ask Miss Markham if it was the spring and summer style not to say good- bye at a parting?"
12249and"where is he?"
12249are you ill?"
12249as if you really cared?"
12249asked Uncle Josh;"do n''t you agree with me?"
12249asked the Judge,"and where did he go?"
12249cried Bart, catching him up,"do I look like a prince?"
12249did he come in?"
12249did she think he was slow?
12249did you go, yourself?"
12249do n''t you know?
12249exclaimed Julia,"could you leave him, away there, weary and alone?"
12249exclaimed her mother, coming forward,"is that you?
12249exclaimed that young lady,"put Prince in harness?
12249had-- what the devil did George have?
12249how is this-- this coming of Heaven to me; this marvel of your love?"
12249is that you?"
12249it is you, is it, this bright day?
12249make a draught horse of him?"
12249not more than that?
12249repeated Sartliff;"and why weeds and nettles?
12249said Bart;"the moustache?
12249something that he could climb up to and take?
12249something to plunge down to in fathomless ocean and carry back?
12249that if His works and givings out do n''t declare and proclaim him, He is a sham?
12249that now we may be a perpetual revelation and study to each other, and so never become worn and common?"
12249these ribbons?"
12249what are you doing, that you call work?"
12249what should be fought against?
12249what under the heavens has happened?
12249who says he is dead?
12249with your wealth, beauty and friends, who may, where you will, look and choose?"
23768''Stashie, you don''t-- you do n''t think she''s--_sick?_She brought the word out with horrified difficulty.
23768All about what?
23768All of that?
23768Alone?
23768And I was going to ask you really seriously, just straight out, what you are so down on the Emerys for? 23768 And he''s coming back?"
23768And of Muvver and''Stashie?
23768And so this is where you work?
23768And what in the world do you think_ would_ be the right thing in this case?
23768And why should they be so eager to accomplish that?
23768And you think I did n''t?
23768And you want to do something nice to make it up to me?
23768Anything the trouble specially?
23768Are n''t girls the_ dearest_ things?
23768Are they so much worse off than most American business men?
23768Are you coming in?
23768Are you fit to be a mother?
23768Are you really going, my dear? 23768 Are you still bothered with that nausea?"
23768Back- to- all- fours?
23768Besides, you_ had_ to wean her-- don''t you remember?
23768Big contract?
23768But does n''t it seem a pity that you never see anybody but people who''d bore you to death if you did n''t stop their mouth with cards?
23768But here''s this very motorman you know about-- what could he do?
23768But how can we change it?
23768But how to change it?
23768But is n''t it a pity we could n''t make connections?
23768But what does he-- what do people do about him?
23768But who''s to decide which our conditions are?
23768But why? 23768 But, Paul, what if he_ did_ divide the field with you?
23768Come in, wo n''t you, and see Lydia?
23768Come, let''s go over to the Derby''s for a game of bridge, will you, Lydia?
23768Dear Godfather,she said wistfully,"if it were only myself-- but the children--""What do you mean, Lydia?
23768Did I ever think we were?
23768Did n''t Mrs. Hollister say?
23768Did n''t Paul come home and give it to you? 23768 Did n''t you?
23768Did you ever see her?
23768Did you never hear of wills being contested? 23768 Did you use my writing desk last evening?"
23768Did you?
23768Do I? 23768 Do n''t they get over things quickly?"
23768Do n''t you always want to know what men are thinking of you?
23768Do n''t you call bringing up children worth while?
23768Do n''t you just love her?
23768Do n''t you know a woman with your expectations ought n''t to go hurling herself around that way?
23768Do n''t you lock up your house when you go away?
23768Do n''t you remember me?
23768Do you cry, too?
23768Do you know him?
23768Do you know why I am bald?
23768Do you like it? 23768 Do you mean you would dare to lay hands on a woman?"
23768Do you mean-- there''s work for them?
23768Do you promise?
23768Do you realize what you are proposing to yourself? 23768 Do you really think that he-- that Lydia--?"
23768Do you think that none but wicked people are written about in serious books? 23768 Do_ you_ see anything out of the way in publishing the details of Miss Lydia''s dress the day before?
23768Does it do such a lot of good to go off in the woods by yourself and do your own cooking?
23768Does n''t it take your breath away to think of them? 23768 Eh?"
23768Eh?
23768Eh?
23768Flora Burgess''mother? 23768 From what?"
23768Had the Judge lost any money-- do you know?
23768Hallucination?
23768Have they gone out of fashion while I was away?
23768Have you a vase?
23768Have you asked me anything?
23768Have you come all the way from Endbury alone, then?
23768He ai n''t musical himself, is he?
23768He did n''t say anything to you, did he?
23768He''s very distinguished looking, is n''t he?
23768How about to- morrow?
23768How are you, Hollister?
23768How did those waists come out that you sent to the cleaner''s, Madeleine?
23768How do you like Paul, now you know him better?
23768How do you mean?
23768How does Marietta get into the game?
23768How is Lydia?
23768How is Lydia?
23768How long has this been boiling?
23768How long''ll that be?
23768How much would you see of them? 23768 How should I?"
23768How should I?
23768How so?
23768How so?
23768I can''t-- if you had seen her--"But how did you hear? 23768 I do n''t doubt that,"said her husband gallantly;"but did you ever know anybody who_ was_ her own cook?"
23768I gather, then, Lydia, that what you''re asking me to do is to neglect my business in order to read socialist literature with you?
23768I know it does-- but does it_ have_ to? 23768 I might as well rest myself while we talk, might n''t I?"
23768I wonder what made Lydia so sure beforehand that she would n''t live through this?
23768If you do n''t think, what do you_ do_?
23768If you think it''s so wrong, why do n''t you reform it?
23768Is Marietta giving another lunch- party for Lydia? 23768 Is it?"
23768Is not the trouble,he began,"that the women have too much leisure and the men too little-- the women too little work, the men too much?"
23768Is she able to sign it?
23768Is she-- is she-- dangerously--?
23768Is there anything I can do for you, dearie?
23768It really is a splendid scene, is n''t it, Marius?
23768It''s not very tidy, is it?
23768It?
23768Julia,he said solemnly,"did you ever consider how many kinds of murder are n''t mentioned in the statute books?"
23768May I leave to tell''Stashie?
23768Mean? 23768 No, no; I can''t-- see him--?
23768Notions?
23768Now, what was I to do about it? 23768 Now, you other little forlornity, what''s the matter with you?"
23768Of your doing a little hand- holding on the side? 23768 Oh, Marietta, how_ do_ you suppose the house will seem to Lydia after she has seen so much?
23768Oh, Mother, what a perfectly lovely couch-- sofa-- what do you call it? 23768 Oh, chattel- mortgage?"
23768Oh, in general, are n''t folks better off if they like to fight for themselves? 23768 Oh, it is, is it?"
23768Oh, that was the trouble with you, was it? 23768 Oh,_ do n''t_ they?"
23768Oh,_ honestly_? 23768 Oh,_ she''s_ coming again, is she?"
23768Ought we to give her some idea?
23768Paul? 23768 Rankin,"he asked irrelevantly,"are n''t there_ ever_ moments when you despair of the world?"
23768Really? 23768 Rimmon?"
23768Say, Mr. Burkhardt, what''s the name of that selection?
23768Say, Mrs. Hollister, are n''t you looking kind of pale this evening?
23768See here; do you know that you have a most unusual girl for a daughter?
23768She feels it-- terribly?
23768She thinks she can go up as the tail to Lydia''s kite, does she? 23768 She''s never been allowed the faintest sniff at reality or life or experience-- how can she be in love?"
23768Something in me makes it hard for me to think it important enough to give up everything else for it-- and I--"Why''_ must_''you?
23768Sure it''s nothing you ca n''t settle yourself?
23768Than_ Paul_?
23768That''s quite a contract, is n''t it?
23768The baby, you mean?
23768There, Nathaniel, what did I tell you?
23768These first hot nights do take it out of a person, do n''t they? 23768 They do fine, do n''t they?"
23768They do n''t look much like roses, do they?
23768To try what?
23768To- night? 23768 We all know what a fearful time everybody has trying to give course dinners-- why need we pretend we do n''t?"
23768Well, I can speak-- can you?
23768Well, Lydia, my dear, and how does Endbury strike you now? 23768 Well, Mr. Ogre,"said the doctor, sitting down beside him with a gasp of relief;"let a wave- worn mariner into your den, will you?"
23768Well, and has Flora Burgess been after you to get your impression of Endbury as compared with Europe? 23768 Well, and how_ do_ I look?"
23768Well, at least you know whether the young man who called on you last night is to your taste?
23768Well, he hit things off pretty close, for a foreigner, did n''t he?
23768Well, how do you like it?
23768Well, what if I have?
23768Well, what if I have?
23768Well, what if it was?
23768Well, what is it now?
23768Well, what would you have us fuss and bother about, if not over having everything nice when we entertain?
23768Well, what_ have_ you to do that''s better?
23768Well, when you''re married wo n''t you be with me all the time? 23768 Well, who''s crazier than a socialist?"
23768Well--?
23768Well?
23768What about? 23768 What am I thinking of?
23768What are you doing here at this hour of the morning?
23768What are you doing to our nice old newel- post?
23768What are you talking about, Lydia? 23768 What are you talking about?"
23768What are you talking about?
23768What are you thinking about, Walter?
23768What are you thinking about, darling?
23768What are you thinking about?
23768What are you two making faces about?
23768What business have you here, anyhow?
23768What can a man know about a baby?
23768What did you expect?
23768What did you have to do that kept you from that?
23768What did you say?
23768What did you say?
23768What did young Hollister say that makes you so troubled?
23768What do you feel?
23768What does n''t she care about?
23768What else can I do?
23768What else could I do?
23768What has Rankin done?
23768What is it, Marietta?
23768What is it?
23768What is the matter with Flora Burgess''mother?
23768What say, Lydia?
23768What the devil-- what is the matter_ now_?
23768What under the sun was he prowling about for at that hour?
23768What was the matter with me?
23768What would happen if everybody did that?
23768What you working on, Hollister?
23768What''s that?
23768What''s the matter with Lydia?
23768What''s the matter with Mary?
23768What''s the matter with him?
23768What''s the matter with recording it?
23768What''s the matter with right now?
23768What''s the matter, Lyd?
23768What''s the matter, Mary?
23768What''s the matter?
23768What''s the matter?
23768What, can I do for you?
23768What? 23768 What_ do_ you do?"
23768What_ do_ you think about?
23768Whatever do you suppose set him off so?
23768When did this happen?
23768When is Daddy coming back to us_ vis_ time?
23768When you bring children into the world, you expect to have them cost you some money, do n''t you? 23768 Where are they now?"
23768Where are you going?
23768Where do you suppose?
23768Where in God''s name have you been?
23768Where is she sleeping?
23768Where''s your mother? 23768 Which one?
23768Who was that man that jumped up so surprised to speak to Lydia?
23768Who, me?
23768Who_ is_ he?
23768Why do n''t you talk to your father, Lydia? 23768 Why do you have to have that kind of patients?"
23768Why do you live so that people have to lift thousand- pound weights before they dare so much as say good- morning to you?
23768Why do you suppose she does n''t want it announced?
23768Why not? 23768 Why not?
23768Why now especially?
23768Why should the doctor worry? 23768 Why, Auntie Madeleine keeps asking everybody all the time,''What_ can_ the doctor be thinking of?''
23768Why, Lydia, what''s the matter with you? 23768 Why, Lydia, what''s the matter with you?
23768Why, darling Lydia, what do you mean? 23768 Why, have you met my niece?"
23768Why, my dear, what is there so terrible in having the handsomest and most promising young man in Endbury devoted to you? 23768 Why, what are you talking about?
23768Why, what did I say?
23768Why, what''s the matter?
23768Why, yes, dear,said Mrs. Emery, surprised, sitting up on the sofa with an obvious effort;"did somebody say I did n''t?"
23768Will you help me back?
23768Wo n''t you honor it some more by sitting down in its veranda for a while? 23768 Would I be allowed to see her?"
23768Would n''t Marietta just scream with laughter at us?
23768Would you like one?
23768Yes, Ariadne, and it flew over the house, and then?
23768Yes, dear,said the man patiently;"where is he?"
23768You and I will have to look to our guns, during the next season, to hold our own, wo n''t we? 23768 You did n''t burst in on them while Paul was kissing her or anything, did you?"
23768You do n''t believe all that?
23768You do n''t mean there''s_ hope_?
23768You do n''t mind, do you, my speaking to you about last fall-- my saying I am so very sorry I made you all the trouble Dr. Melton tells me I did? 23768 You do n''t suppose she means to break it off later?"
23768You feel justified?
23768You have n''t met many as up- and- coming, have you now?
23768You like music, do n''t you?
23768You mean he''ll get tired of it, and take to robbing chicken- roosts again?
23768You must have to walk quite a ways to get your meals, do n''t you?
23768You remember the last scene in that inimitable tale? 23768 You think that''s the cause of Marietta''s discontent?
23768You will not go far?
23768You will stay until-- until I am able to be about, wo n''t you?
23768You wo n''t let them come back?
23768You would n''t want her sick, just so it would be easier to explain, would you?
23768You''ll always be close, to take care of me?
23768You''re at Hardville, you say? 23768 You''re sure you remember everything, Lydia?"
23768You? 23768 Your mother worse?"
23768_ Are_ you feeling any worse?
23768_ Can_ anybody do too much thinking, Paul? 23768 _ Do_ they?"
23768_ Father_? 23768 _ Have_ you everything you want?"
23768_ Is_ she?
23768... Has the time come for the 20th century to uncover before a master work?
23768A stir in the darkness, and an instant''s quiet, followed by,"Why, Favver, what makes your face all over water?"
23768After these facts had been communicated to her older daughter, Mrs. Mortimer asked,"How in the world does it happen that you''re up at this hour?"
23768Again, he said:"What crazy notion can it be about the whatever- it- was getting Paul?"
23768And as for strangling old Mrs. Burgess, what good would that do?
23768And do you know who writes that?"
23768And if it should develop into a large business( which I doubt strongly), what''s the harm?
23768And is n''t she being worth it?
23768And we''re not getting nicer-- and what''s the use of living if we do n''t do that?
23768And what did he do?
23768And what do I get from you?
23768And what has she had to make up for it?
23768And yet, how about Harry?
23768Any quiet?
23768Any rest?
23768Are n''t you afraid the sun wo n''t rise some day?
23768Are n''t you all slow- pokes-- not a soul to meet us at the train-- where''s Mother?
23768Are you feeling better?"
23768Are you scared about this second confinement?
23768Are you strong enough to keep to it?"
23768As he finished it and rose to his feet again,"What was that all about?"
23768As they stood before the waiting- room, Lydia asked suddenly:"Godfather, how can we, any of us, do any better?"
23768Because she has n''t been to college?
23768Buisine?"
23768But it''s rather a pity it did n''t come last winter, is n''t it?"
23768But you do n''t want to be treated like a little girl all your life, do you?"
23768But, even so, should n''t you think in common decency she''d have let us know what they were up to in time to prevent it?
23768CHAPTER XXXIII WHAT IS BEST FOR THE CHILDREN?
23768Ca n''t you just pick up a few threads and make a beginning?
23768Ca n''t you keep her down to moderate drinking?"
23768Did Mr. Rankin talk much?
23768Did n''t you ever know an engaged girl before?"
23768Did n''t you hear me pushing and banging things around?
23768Did n''t you promise to honor and obey?"
23768Did n''t you think we''d know that anything that''s the matter with them must be the matter with us, too?
23768Did she tell you?
23768Did you ever know Paul Hollister to give up anything he wanted?"
23768Did you ever know Paul Hollister to let anything interfere with business?"
23768Did you_ really_?"
23768Did_ you_?"
23768Do n''t I say they''re just like men?
23768Do n''t they_ have_ to?"
23768Do n''t you know that there''s a big trial on?
23768Do n''t you know the successful business man''s best advertisement?
23768Do n''t you know the suffragists will get you if you talk meek like that?
23768Do n''t you remember what Emerson says-- Melton''s always quoting it--''Most of our expense is for conformity to other men''s ideas?
23768Do n''t you remember?
23768Do you happen to know, dear, where I put that catalogue from Elberstrom and Company?
23768Do you know what we are going to do?
23768Do you lie awake and worry about what''s to come?"
23768Do you mean to say you did n''t take in anything of what she was talking about?
23768Do you mean to say you only paid twenty dollars for that dress?"
23768Do you think I have n''t realized all along that what you said of me is true-- that I have done nothing?
23768Does n''t a steam- roller make some impression on a rose?"
23768Dr. Melton and Aunt Julia are coming, are n''t they?"
23768Even if I live, shall I be wise enough to give them what I had not wisdom or strength enough to get for myself?"
23768Flora Burgess-- devoted Flora?
23768Getting the baby well was the business of the hour,_ was n''t_ it now?
23768He added, skeptically,"Could you, though, do any such thing?
23768He added,"Where are you going, Daughter?"
23768He answered her angrily,"Which do you suppose?
23768He looked away and mastered himself again to quiet friendliness,"You know that,_ do n''t you_, Lydia?
23768He started,"What''s that?"
23768He waved the platter toward the uproar in the next rooms:"A boiler factory ai n''t in it with woman, lovely woman, is it?"
23768He''s put a little braid, just the least little bit, along--""What did Paul say?"
23768Her hand at her throat,"Well?"
23768Hollister?"
23768Hollister?"
23768How can I talk business with you when you have such crazy, impractical ideas?
23768How dare I let you try if you are not sure?
23768How did you feel when the fly- wheel broke?"
23768How do you happen to be up so early?
23768How is the little old thing, anyway?"
23768How long has she been with us?
23768How much of your time would you be willing to sacrifice to learn patiently the inner lives of two little children?
23768How much would you know of them?
23768How''d I begin this time?
23768I bet you just let yourself go, and worried yourself into a fever, did n''t you?"
23768I could n''t be afraid of Paul-- why should I be?
23768I must do something-- but what?
23768I must get some color into your cheeks, Melton says-- how''s this for a way?"
23768I never see you-- never, never, do you realize that?
23768I talk, and I talk, but do you ever see me doing anything different from the worst fools of us all?"
23768I tell you, Lydia, the servant problem is getting to be something perfectly terrible-- it''s--"Lydia broke in to say,"Why do n''t you buy new ones?"
23768I''d go on bread and water afterward to give her what she wants now-- wouldn''t_ you_?
23768I''m only an inarticulate countryman, a farmer''s son, with the education the state gives everyone-- who am I, to try to lead?
23768If I die, who can give it to them?
23768If he''s not in love with her, nor she with him, what are you making all this fuss about?"
23768If there was ever a creature with a happy, successful life before her-- Besides, do n''t we all stand ready to do her fighting for her?"
23768If this had happened the year your father died, you could have killed two birds with one stone, do n''t you see?"
23768If we women were half so-- fine-- as you tell us, why have n''t we changed things?"
23768In the Lord''s name, what has Lydia to fight against?
23768Is Paul being horrid about something?
23768Is it about''Stashie?
23768Is it her own?"
23768Is n''t Dr. Melton always telling you to be careful?"
23768Is this Mr. Schmidt?
23768It''s just because I want things better for you that I''m so anxious to--""You have n''t noticed me complaining any, have you?"
23768Just see that nobody disturbs her, will you?"
23768Later,"Was there ever such a characteristic death?"
23768Lydia said to her godfather one day, suddenly,"I wonder if people can be taught how to fight?"
23768Lydia slid helplessly into the naïve question,"Well, did his father drown?"
23768Lydia was impressed by the pontifical sound of this, though she ventured faintly:"Well, but does progress always mean broadcloth and cut glass?"
23768Lydia, what do you think of this tie?
23768Lydia?
23768Madame, you look fatigued-- will you not sit down?"
23768More money?"
23768Mrs. Mortimer paused with uplifted needle to inquire wildly,"New_ what_?"
23768Now, what kind of a day are you going to give me?"
23768Oh, yes-- How''d I get switched off onto Briggs?
23768Oh,_ is n''t_ it fun?
23768One day she stopped Uncle Marius, hurrying past her up the stairs, and asked him:"What are you thinking of, Uncle Marius?"
23768Or must I take you back to your picnic party at once?"
23768Ought she so certainly to tell her mother?
23768People have to be on the lookout for them,--for everything, do n''t you see?"
23768Presently she brought out, as a patently absurd supposition,"You do n''t mean to say that Endbury people are wicked?"
23768Rankin, see that Lydia gets home safely, will you?"
23768Really?"
23768See?
23768She added:"Look here, Marius, are you going to sit there and moon all the afternoon?
23768She answered him reasonably,"It would n''t help Lydia any if I took it off and threw it in the fire, would it?
23768She appealed to the other players at their table:"Did you ever hear anything come out funnier?"
23768She challenged his sincerity,"Are you really, really?"
23768She flung herself on him in a wild outcry of inquiry--"Which one?
23768She protested,"What makes you so sure?"
23768She seems--""Will you let me try?"
23768She spoke now quite confidently,"But, honestly, what in the world did you do it for?"
23768Something about the plumbing?"
23768Speaking of many tastes, what are yours going to be like, I wonder?"
23768Suddenly there rang loudly in her ears the question to which she had deafened herself with such crucifying effort--"What if Ariadne should die?"
23768Suppose you found you could n''t now, after all these years, turn about and be different?
23768The bar would get along without you, would n''t it?"
23768The girl laughed, a half- sob breaking her voice as she answered whimsically,"Well, who did you expect to see?"
23768Then reverting with a momentary curiosity to the subject they had left,"Whatever does this man do that''s so queer?"
23768There is n''t anything else worth getting married for, is there?
23768They do n''t want Dunn''s sending all over creation that they''ve put chattel- mortgages on their equipment, do they?"
23768They fell into a silence, broken by Mrs. Sandworth''s asking,"Lydia, have your folks got an old mythology book?
23768This_ is_ Hardville, is n''t it?"
23768To see what''s to be done and--""What_ was_ to be done?"
23768Turning everything people say into something quite different--"Mrs. Sandworth interrupted hastily,"Susan, tell me, for mercy''s sake, what did I say?
23768Unless I shall tire you?
23768Volts, and dynamos, and induction coils?"
23768Was it a joke?"
23768Was it the Minotaur that sowed teeth and something else very odd came up that you would n''t expect?"
23768Was n''t that what you meant?"
23768Was she mistaken in feeling that it indicated an alarming increase of materialism in Paul?
23768We can take this up again to- morrow, ca n''t we?"
23768What are we old folks good for but to do our best by our children?"
23768What are you talking about?
23768What could I do?
23768What did the doctor mean by all that about Marietta?
23768What did you do with Father?"
23768What did you think of what he said?"
23768What do you come to me about it for?
23768What do you mean?
23768What do you mean?"
23768What do you mean?"
23768What do you suppose made her act so?"
23768What do you want to know?
23768What does he talk_ about_, anyhow?
23768What earthly good did it do the baby?
23768What else can it be?"
23768What else could I do?
23768What else was there for people to do but what everybody else did?
23768What else?"
23768What good would I be?
23768What had he to offer her-- compared with Paul?
23768What have they done that''s so bad?"
23768What in the world does she mean?"
23768What in the world had that man been talking about?
23768What in the world possesses you all of a sudden to object to candles?"
23768What in the world wore_ you_ out so?
23768What is it?
23768What is it?
23768What kind of crackers can we have?"
23768What makes me?
23768What makes you think I know anything about such things?"
23768What more could be done?
23768What should she do?
23768What started me off?
23768What time is it, do you suppose?
23768What was I saying?"
23768What was this Endbury life she had come back to?
23768What would happen next?
23768What would happen to this new self whose growth in her was keeping pace with her child''s?
23768What''s it about?"
23768What''s that to you?"
23768What''s the history of the morning?
23768What''s the matter with me now?"
23768What''s to hinder a man''s doing the same thing?"
23768What''s up?"
23768What_ could_ she do?
23768When I got there yesterday afternoon, she was holding Ariadne-- you knew, did n''t you?
23768When do they see their families?"
23768When shall I expect you?"
23768Where are you going to get your lingerie?
23768Where are you going to meet Paul?"
23768Where''s Mother?
23768Where''s Mother?
23768Wherever did you get that?"
23768Which knows human nature best?"
23768Which one of those has the statistics about the accidents when the men are n''t allowed one day in seven?"
23768Which one?"
23768Which one?"
23768Who has n''t?"
23768Who remembered this time?
23768Who said that, anyway?
23768Who tells me that it''s bound to stay this way?
23768Why do n''t you propose living in a tent, to save rent?"
23768Why do you look to a stranger to--""Could you do for my children what you have not done for yourself?"
23768Why in the world should he?
23768Why in the world should you think it funny for them to do this tomfool trick all winter and have nervous prostration all summer to pay for it?
23768Why in the world?"
23768Why should not Endbury go in for cosmopolitanism?
23768Why will you be so contrary?
23768Why, in Heaven''s name, should it strain every nerve to make itself as complicated as possible as fast as it can?
23768Wo n''t anything, even the best, in Endbury be a come- down for her?"
23768Would n''t it run_ you_, once you got to going?"
23768You can leave the kid with''Stashie, ca n''t you, once in a while?
23768You do n''t have to wait till I''m in a good temper, do you?
23768You do n''t mind, do you?"
23768You do n''t mind, do you?"
23768You have n''t got your ring yet, I do n''t suppose?
23768You know that all I want is for you to have the most successful life anyone can?"
23768You remember what the wife''s answer was?"
23768You telegraphed George, did n''t you?
23768You think that, do n''t you?
23768You want to do your best by your little girl, do n''t you?"
23768You''ll let me get through without interruption?"
23768You''re as hungry as you can be, are n''t you now?"
23768_ Are_ you satisfied?"
23768_ Is_ there?"
23768_ Is_ what''s good enough for us good enough for Lydia?
23768_ What is the matter?_ Marietta says the trouble with me is that I''m spoiled with having everything that I want."
23768_ Why_ does she?
23768_ Would_ you make this in shell stitch?
23768_ Would_ you-- if I hadn''t-- if we had gone on knowing each other?"
23768and"What_ do_ you suppose people are saying?"
23768breathed Mrs. Sandworth as he paused;"so that was all there was to it?"
23768but what?"
23768he whispered,"any hope at all?"
23768she reproached him again; and then helplessly,"How did we get on to Marietta, anyhow?
23768slump?"
23768that she called their little girl Ariadne--?"
23768what makes you look so queer?"
23768what?
23768what?
23768where are your keys?
23768why?
23768why?"
23768you''re not criticizing them for that, are you?