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 |
---|---|
62949 | And what wilt thou give to Tony? 62949 Is''t the cats?" |
62949 | Loretta,said the padre, in some concern,"hast anything in thy craw? |
62949 | They-- they fell fast in the night-- eh? |
62949 | Wilt have Tony, eh? 62949 An apple? 62949 And now tell me, what hast thou given Tony? |
62949 | But tell me: What would make thee forget to use thy sharp pruning shears? |
62949 | Thou hast only love, eh? |
62949 | What can the cactus give the golden poppy? |
62949 | What if Padre Anzar finds thee despoiling his plant? |
62949 | is''t the cats?" |
62949 | or seeds? |
61187 | About what, Padre? |
61187 | Are we going in? |
61187 | Are you all right, Doctor? |
61187 | Are you so certain, then, that they are not the same battle? |
61187 | But not, unless I misjudge you, an atheist? |
61187 | Conviction? 61187 Did they make war upon your people?" |
61187 | Do the stories mention these tunnels? |
61187 | Eh? |
61187 | Er-- are you at liberty to tell me anything about the explosion? |
61187 | How long will that require? |
61187 | How much have you learned so far? |
61187 | Is it definitely told of individuals who were killed? |
61187 | My work? 61187 Nevertheless, you have ideas in the field of politics? |
61187 | Spectacular? 61187 What can be learned where we stand?" |
61187 | Where is the general? |
61187 | Who shot at it? |
61187 | Will you lend me a hand, Lieutenant? |
61187 | Without melting it? |
61187 | You wonder about our emblem? 61187 _ Quien sabe?_ Perhaps the arrival of the true religion has driven away the devils." |
61187 | But how many more of the creatures( or machines) waited in the tunnels? |
61187 | Can you tell how old this plateau is?" |
61187 | Craig said stiffly,"Do you mean a spiritual battle, or an ideological one?" |
61187 | Have you noticed the air?" |
61187 | He heard his own voice asking, as if from far away,"Do... you read Hebrew?" |
61187 | His voice higher- pitched and cracked with feeling, he said,"Have you noticed-- this?" |
61187 | How is it that men returned to tell of these things if the devils pursued them with spears of fire?" |
61187 | How much were you told?" |
61187 | In any event, Padre, who knows what is possible with demons?" |
61187 | Incan, perhaps?" |
61187 | The bitterness and rage( and remorse?) |
61187 | The old doubt edged into his mind: what if he''s right and I am wrong? |
61187 | What if there_ is_ a personal God? |
61187 | What manner of devils were they?" |
61187 | Why have there been no reports in recent years?" |
61187 | Will no one say it is a lie?" |
61187 | Will you be good enough to remain here and guard the helicopter?" |
61187 | Wo n''t you seat yourself?" |
61187 | You do not believe that Evil is a real force?" |
61187 | You say the tunnels were ancient? |
61187 | _ Now?_ You are a more fortunate man than I." |
1388 | And at Santa Ysabel how long? |
1388 | And have you been in America long? |
1388 | And have you been long in America? |
1388 | And you still forgive Verdi the sins of his youth? |
1388 | And, sir-- pardon me if I do say this-- are you not wasted at Santa Ysabel del Mar? 1388 Can they sing the music I taught them for the Dixit Dominus to- night?" |
1388 | Can you do it? 1388 Did you reach Malaga from Marseilles or Gibraltar?" |
1388 | Did you see it in April, when the flowers come? |
1388 | Has the Padre any mall for Santa Barbara? |
1388 | I have not offended you? |
1388 | I wonder if you could forgive mine? |
1388 | Is not Andalusia beautiful? |
1388 | Is that something new? |
1388 | My God, are they nothing? 1388 Perhaps it is with you that Gaston Villere stopped?" |
1388 | Stay here under your care? |
1388 | The young man from New Orleans? 1388 You are connected with the mission here?" |
1388 | You have no intention of going away to- morrow, I trust? |
1388 | You knew him well, then? |
1388 | Your organist tells me,he said, impetuously,"that it is you who--""May I ask with whom I have the great pleasure of speaking?" |
1388 | And did you go, perhaps, from Avignon to Nismes by the Pont du Gard? |
1388 | And how about all the cultivated men and women away from whose quickening society the brightest of us grow numb? |
1388 | And when I make my fortune I shall be in a position to return and--""Claim the pressed flower?" |
1388 | And while the voices are singing these operas, especially the old ones, what harm is there if sometimes the priest is thinking of something else? |
1388 | Are not twenty years of mesclados enough? |
1388 | Are you never to save any souls of your own kind? |
1388 | Are you quite comfortable?" |
1388 | But are you needed to save such souls as these?" |
1388 | But will it be for long? |
1388 | Do you think that they are given to us for nothing but a trap? |
1388 | I wonder if Auber has composed anything lately? |
1388 | I wonder who is singing''Zerlina''now?" |
1388 | In what words should he tell the boy to go on industriously with his music? |
1388 | Perhaps you may have wondered how I came to be here at all?" |
1388 | Sail away on the barkentine? |
1388 | Why did not Gaston remember it all? |
1388 | for one year-- do you know what I should have done? |
42011 | A castle for the bishop? |
42011 | And he is? |
42011 | And he scruples not? |
42011 | And he will take from us our house? |
42011 | And his price? |
42011 | And it must? |
42011 | And that? |
42011 | And two calls him hither? |
42011 | And what advance has been made? |
42011 | And what if I do? |
42011 | And what sort of housekeeping do you have with Gerald? |
42011 | And will you not tell me? |
42011 | And, further, do you not recollect that his fatherliness, the Bishop, did threaten as much, when he was here, and the Archpriest resisted him? 42011 Are you aware what has been attempted while you were in God''s house? |
42011 | Are you aware what you are about? |
42011 | But what do you mean, Rogier? |
42011 | But what will a bishop avail you in such straits? |
42011 | But what, my dear master and lord, if he were to appear, and all men were to discover that there had been no miracle? |
42011 | But wherefore not? 42011 But why has he not come to me and told me so?" |
42011 | But-- but what is the occasion of this noise? 42011 But-- who can he have been?" |
42011 | Can not a man look at and kiss a pretty woman without these swine resenting it? 42011 Carol, call you this?" |
42011 | Come now, Gerald, what is thy report? 42011 Come now, man,"said the smith,"why shouldst thou take on so frantically? |
42011 | Did they attack you without provocation? |
42011 | Did you ever see a man burnt as black as a coal and live after it? |
42011 | Do you know what to say? |
42011 | Do you know who she is? |
42011 | Do you mean to declare that he is risen from his grave? |
42011 | Do you think, in the event of your getting tired of being here, among those who do not love you, that you could make room for me? |
42011 | Does he know of thy purpose? |
42011 | Dost see? 42011 For how long?" |
42011 | Hah!--have the bumpkins paid up so readily that you are here with the money? 42011 Hath it really done so?" |
42011 | He is no saint? |
42011 | How a mistake? |
42011 | How came you to me? 42011 How can I, a poor woman, resist?" |
42011 | How so? |
42011 | I have not ventured to remove it; yet what think you? 42011 In Ogofau?" |
42011 | Is he in danger? |
42011 | Let me see him-- has he your beauty or Gerald''s ugliness? |
42011 | License, my Sieur? 42011 May I sit? |
42011 | Not that he was dead? |
42011 | Pabo is not dead? |
42011 | Prithee, Sire, when thou didst go against the Welsh last year, didst thou then as well wear a bolster? |
42011 | Rogier, how comes this about? |
42011 | Shall we hang him? |
42011 | She is not now with Howel? |
42011 | That cripple? 42011 The rest-- what do you mean?" |
42011 | Then by whom? |
42011 | Then for whom? |
42011 | Then what do you require of me? |
42011 | Then would it not have been as well had you remained in Normandy or England? |
42011 | Was not Bernard pitchforked into the priesthood and episcopate in one day? 42011 Was there none with thee?" |
42011 | Well,said he, looking round,"have you settled among yourselves as to the contribution? |
42011 | What care these aliens about our rights and our liberties? 42011 What has caused this uproar?" |
42011 | What have you to say? |
42011 | What is policy? 42011 What is that?" |
42011 | What is that? |
42011 | What is the cause of this? |
42011 | What is the meaning of this? |
42011 | What is the meaning of this? |
42011 | What mean you? |
42011 | What other tokens be there? |
42011 | What says this misshapen imp? |
42011 | What service could such as you render? |
42011 | What shall be done with him? 42011 What shall we do with him?" |
42011 | What would you have done for you? |
42011 | What wouldest thou? |
42011 | What, then, shall I say? |
42011 | When were you ever known to unite? 42011 Where is it? |
42011 | Where is she? |
42011 | Whither shall I bid her go? |
42011 | Whither? |
42011 | Who are you? 42011 Who are you?" |
42011 | Who has done this? 42011 Who is to take you to task, brother?" |
42011 | Why do you keep him hidden, that we all may be widows-- and you be happy with your man? 42011 Why do you not bring him back?" |
42011 | Why not occupy Dynevor, and build there? |
42011 | Why should I go? 42011 Will the flames spare those white hairs?" |
42011 | You are a misshapen fool,he said;"dost think that Bishop Bernard would give thee such a place as this-- to foment rebellion against him?" |
42011 | You will admit that he whom ye pretended to be Pabo was some other? |
42011 | A fresh impost? |
42011 | Am I going to fight his battles and not be paid for it, and fix my price?" |
42011 | Am I to be held so cheap even by my own men that I am allowed to run the risk of being torn to pieces, or smoked out of a hole like this?" |
42011 | Am I young enough to maintain myself? |
42011 | Am not I a bishop? |
42011 | Am not I the King''s emissary? |
42011 | And shall not we follow suit?" |
42011 | And yet what would be his chances against the overwhelming power of England and Normandy? |
42011 | And-- with regard to the young man of whom I spake?" |
42011 | Are we all to be dragged to the gallows because of him? |
42011 | But was it right that they should be called on to endure such sacrifices? |
42011 | But what ails thee? |
42011 | But what to them are the merits of one of our great saints? |
42011 | But why not turn your policy to helping us to overcome them and be made strong?" |
42011 | But, we may ask, what was that cry? |
42011 | CHAPTER V THE FIRST BLOOD"What is this uproar? |
42011 | CHAPTER XIX FORGOTTEN? |
42011 | Can you make your way through?" |
42011 | Can you stand against a thousand men? |
42011 | Could he leap it? |
42011 | Could not something of the sort be done with me?" |
42011 | Could she endure such a sacrifice as that? |
42011 | Could she possibly venture so far from the light? |
42011 | Cut off his head?" |
42011 | Deprived of everything that makes life endurable, will you now deprive them of their religion?" |
42011 | Did Pabo know what was being done at Caio? |
42011 | Did not our gracious King Henry set us the example with a Welsh prince''s wench? |
42011 | Did not the wife of Pabo swear thereon?" |
42011 | Did not your British Church resist Augustine? |
42011 | Did the lightning flash from heaven to slay him?" |
42011 | Did you not hear me? |
42011 | Do they come, indeed, to thrust on us a new pastor? |
42011 | Do you ask then why I am about at night?" |
42011 | Do you call that pacifying a man when you thrash his naked body with a thorn- bush?" |
42011 | Do you not know, boy, that the enemy are on their way hither, and that when they arrive you will no further have this as your home?" |
42011 | Do? |
42011 | Does it not now oppose our See of Canterbury? |
42011 | From whom did it issue? |
42011 | Hast caught me a bluebottle? |
42011 | Hast thou seen cider made? |
42011 | Have not I a right to carry her off if it please me to grace her with my favor? |
42011 | He might, possibly enough, by feeling, find the passage by which he had entered; but how could he traverse that awful abyss? |
42011 | Him whom she loved better than any one-- with a one, soul- filling love? |
42011 | How be sure that he did not leap too precipitately and not land at all, but go down whirling into the depths? |
42011 | How could the recluse have penetrated the passages of the mine? |
42011 | How did you pass the chasm?" |
42011 | How fares it with the pacification of Wales?" |
42011 | How fares our boy, Robert?" |
42011 | How is it I am here without anyone to protect me? |
42011 | How many marks have they had to disgorge?" |
42011 | How measure his strides in the pitch darkness? |
42011 | I have but given them a little squeeze, and they have run out silver-- it is yonder, dost mark it? |
42011 | I have sent thee home-- art content?" |
42011 | I said,''Why not?'' |
42011 | I will consider-- what did I hear? |
42011 | If he were not Pabo, as the bishop insisted, why was he dealt with so harshly? |
42011 | If our head be taken, what will become of us, the members? |
42011 | In your Latin Church, are they as particular on this point?" |
42011 | Is a ragged old prophet under the law of Moses to be served better than me, a high prelate under the Gospel? |
42011 | Is every woman to become a widow? |
42011 | Is it to be buried with him? |
42011 | Is that forbidden?" |
42011 | Is the whole tribe to be dragged down, that you and your husband may live at ease and be merry?" |
42011 | Is there no second door to this trap? |
42011 | It is on Monday that he must die, and that is our thirtieth wedding- day? |
42011 | It was mooted who would tell of the relationships borne by those who were now contented couples?--so as to enable the bishop to separate them? |
42011 | Know you where you are? |
42011 | Must these hogs interfere?" |
42011 | My wife said to me,''Do not go to the meeting?'' |
42011 | Now, captain, which of us is to comfort Sheena in her widowhood?" |
42011 | Say, didst thou obtain for me the promise from the bishop?" |
42011 | Slinking away?" |
42011 | Some said,"What more can these strangers do than they have done? |
42011 | Tell me, what was that fearful cry?" |
42011 | Then aside to his chaplain:"It is seven, not four, I think?" |
42011 | Then to the boy:"Where is he hiding?" |
42011 | They will not pay?" |
42011 | Thus, all Cambria would not rise as one man, and what could one half of the nation do against the enormous power of all England? |
42011 | To threaten and scold, as once before?" |
42011 | Was it possible that he had left them outside the"Ogof"when he lighted the taper? |
42011 | We had no mountains like thy Welsh Mynyddau-- that is the silly word, was it not? |
42011 | Well, what are you here for, Nest? |
42011 | Were we in error in supposing him to be our chief? |
42011 | Were ye alone?" |
42011 | What are my men about that they do not attempt to release me?" |
42011 | What are you doing here?" |
42011 | What avails me having men- at- arms if they do not protect me? |
42011 | What be the chiefest relics here?" |
42011 | What can I do? |
42011 | What chance of rescue had he? |
42011 | What could this mean? |
42011 | What do you want? |
42011 | What further about this young man?" |
42011 | What gifts have I? |
42011 | What grounds have you for this preposterous assertion?" |
42011 | What has been done here?" |
42011 | What if he did find his way to the ledge of the well? |
42011 | What is a home to me without him?" |
42011 | What is being done?" |
42011 | What is that?" |
42011 | What is the name?" |
42011 | What one of all your threats and denunciations has come true? |
42011 | What readeth he?" |
42011 | What say you? |
42011 | What shall I do without my Madoc? |
42011 | What single one?" |
42011 | What the outrage is has been offered?" |
42011 | What was Pabo''s object? |
42011 | What was the meaning of this? |
42011 | What will Cadell say to that?" |
42011 | What would you have me do?" |
42011 | What, would she have him taken and die an ignominious death? |
42011 | Where has been his wit that he could not get free? |
42011 | Where is Morwen?" |
42011 | Where is that Cadell? |
42011 | Where is that fellow who informed you?" |
42011 | Where is this alleged Pabo?" |
42011 | Whither I have brought you? |
42011 | Whither were they bound? |
42011 | Who is to say which John begat this lad or that lass, and therefore to decide who are consanguineous, and who are not? |
42011 | Who shot it? |
42011 | Who should know him, if not I?" |
42011 | Who will support me? |
42011 | Who would see selfish profit by betrayal of their own kin? |
42011 | Why has this been done?" |
42011 | Why should he have disturbed us with his suggestions?" |
42011 | Would Rogier weary of his barbarous work? |
42011 | Would his wife think of seeking him therein? |
42011 | Would it avail to send a deputation to the bishop? |
42011 | You are sure of it?" |
42011 | You have brought your young child with you?" |
42011 | You would not rob the Church?" |
42011 | about my people-- my poor Welsh people?" |
42011 | does the rule act retrospectively?" |
42011 | he exclaimed,"what is the meaning of this? |
42011 | said the prelate, fixing his gray dark- rimmed irises on the prisoner,"you are he who give yourself out to be the Archpriest of Caio?" |
42011 | the impostor forgotten?" |
11304 | How soon will the tree fall? |
11304 | Which is the better-- a great memory or some trifling comfort?'' |
11304 | Why should I not live as long? |
11304 | ''A hermitage on Castle Island?'' |
11304 | ''And I leave yourself to imagine the groaning that was heard in the church that morning, for were n''t they all small tenants? |
11304 | ''And did n''t you go in after them?'' |
11304 | ''And if a car got through in February, why ca n''t we get through on the first of June?'' |
11304 | ''And just because I saved you, you thought you would come to save me?'' |
11304 | ''And knowing you were going down to hell?'' |
11304 | ''And she''s willing to come back?'' |
11304 | ''And where would I be picking up a living if it were n''t on a cab- rank, or you either?'' |
11304 | ''And you did n''t expect to find me?'' |
11304 | ''And you do n''t know why?'' |
11304 | ''And you still read Latin, classical Latin, easily?'' |
11304 | ''And your sisters are nuns?'' |
11304 | ''Are Bishops ever expected to have reasons?'' |
11304 | ''Are there no letters this morning?'' |
11304 | ''Are you? |
11304 | ''But does anything return?'' |
11304 | ''But has she a diploma from the Academy? |
11304 | ''But how did he treat her in the end, despite all her kindnesses? |
11304 | ''But if it were his fault?'' |
11304 | ''But if she be in no danger, of what use would the Sacrament be to her?'' |
11304 | ''But why am I writing about myself? |
11304 | ''But why did you come to me to marry you? |
11304 | ''But why should you be in doubt?'' |
11304 | ''But your work?'' |
11304 | ''Ca n''t you give a reason?'' |
11304 | ''Charges-- who is making charges?'' |
11304 | ''Come in, will you?'' |
11304 | ''Could anybody be more anti- Christian than that?'' |
11304 | ''Did O''Grady leave this paper here for me to read,''he asked himself,''or did he forget to take it away with him? |
11304 | ''Did n''t you say that it is n''t drink that destroys a man''s faith, but woman? |
11304 | ''Do n''t you believe in these things?'' |
11304 | ''Do you still think you were sent for a purpose?'' |
11304 | ''Does anyone know exactly what he believes? |
11304 | ''Have not men always believed in bird augury from the beginning of time? |
11304 | ''Have you spoken of the mistake you made in confession, Father Oliver?'' |
11304 | ''How all what came about?'' |
11304 | ''How do you do, Oliver?'' |
11304 | ''How is that?'' |
11304 | ''How is that?'' |
11304 | ''How is that?'' |
11304 | ''I have come back to my letter to ask if you would like me to go to see your baby? |
11304 | ''I wonder if Mary knows?'' |
11304 | ''Is n''t it when the nerves are on a stretch that we notice little things that do n''t concern us at all?'' |
11304 | ''Is the whole thing a fairy- tale, a piece of midsummer madness, I wonder? |
11304 | ''It would be safer, would n''t it?'' |
11304 | ''More useful?'' |
11304 | ''Must you really go after tea?'' |
11304 | ''My good man, why are you talking like that? |
11304 | ''No, I have n''t? |
11304 | ''No, why should I?'' |
11304 | ''Now what are you saying?'' |
11304 | ''Now what instinct guided its search for worms?'' |
11304 | ''Now why does he take the southern road?'' |
11304 | ''Now will you mind what you''re sayin'', and the priest listenin''to you?'' |
11304 | ''Now, Christy, which do you reckon to be the shorter road?'' |
11304 | ''Now, Moran, is n''t it strange? |
11304 | ''Now, Moran, sit down and eat a bit, wo n''t you?'' |
11304 | ''Now, is it out bathing you''re going, your reverence? |
11304 | ''Now, what are you talkin''about? |
11304 | ''Now, what will Father O''Grady answer to all this?'' |
11304 | ''Now, you''ll tell me if I''m in the way?'' |
11304 | ''Of course you''re surprised-- how could it be otherwise? |
11304 | ''Over the page the saint says:"Every man naturally desireth to know; but what doth knowledge avail without the fear of God?" |
11304 | ''Put her utterly out of my mind,''Father Oliver cried aloud;''now what does he mean by that?'' |
11304 | ''So Miss Glynn has written to you?'' |
11304 | ''So you''re going to be married, Pat?'' |
11304 | ''Soldier or shepherd, what matter now she is gone?'' |
11304 | ''Then you side with the Archbishop?'' |
11304 | ''To supper?'' |
11304 | ''Was it dying or dead you saw me?'' |
11304 | ''Was n''t it I that saw Patsy? |
11304 | ''Was no attempt,''he asked,''made to marry you to some girl with a big fortune?'' |
11304 | ''Well, Mary, what are you thinking of doing?'' |
11304 | ''Well, if you''re sure you''ve nothing to do, may I stay to supper?'' |
11304 | ''Well, well,''said Father Oliver,''you see there''s no child--''''But you''ll be waitin''a minute for the sake of the poor child, your reverence? |
11304 | ''What are you saying, Gogarty? |
11304 | ''What is it but a step? |
11304 | ''What popular opinion is there to defy? |
11304 | ''What reason could she have?'' |
11304 | ''What should I be answering?'' |
11304 | ''What time do you be making it, Gogarty?'' |
11304 | ''What would I be doin'', going into a Protestant church?'' |
11304 | ''Which way are you going? |
11304 | ''Why all this hurry?'' |
11304 | ''Why did he come here disturbing me with his beliefs,''he cried out,''poisoning my will?'' |
11304 | ''Why do you think she regretted my garden?'' |
11304 | ''Why is that?'' |
11304 | ''Why should she have selected that cottage, the only pretty one in the county? |
11304 | ''Will you leave off pushing me?'' |
11304 | ''You do n''t mean that he is so senile and superstitious as that? |
11304 | ''You do n''t mean to say that you''re thinking of leaving the convent, Mary?'' |
11304 | ''You do?'' |
11304 | ''You know the name of Mr. Poole''s book,"The Source of the Christian River"? |
11304 | ''You mean that I should put you up here and let you get drunk?'' |
11304 | ''You think so?'' |
11304 | ''You think, then,''Father O''Grady said,''that a Christian forfeits his faith if he inquires?'' |
11304 | ''You''d like to see my garden?'' |
11304 | ''You''ll enjoy the drive?'' |
11304 | ''You''ll put up your horse? |
11304 | ''You''re quite sure I''m not in the way-- I''m not interfering with any plans?'' |
11304 | ''Your reverence, will the child be always a Protestant? |
11304 | Ah, Landor''s"Hellenics"in the original Latin: how did that book come here?'' |
11304 | All Tinnick would be laughing at him, and Eliza, what would she think of him? |
11304 | All that night, all next day, and for how many days? |
11304 | Am I not right?'' |
11304 | And does it not seem to you that, after all, there was some design in what has happened? |
11304 | And if I did go to London, of what should I speak to him? |
11304 | And where would she go if she did leave, unless she lived with you?'' |
11304 | And which self did he think the worthier, his present or his dead self? |
11304 | And who could doubt that saints attained the eternal life, which is God, while still living in the temporal flesh? |
11304 | And why should he be disbelieving in that which has been prophesied for generations about the Abbot of Kilronan?'' |
11304 | Are n''t you two miles nearer to Father Moran than you are to me?'' |
11304 | As for Mary--''''You surely do n''t think she''s going to leave?'' |
11304 | Because I liked you? |
11304 | But a long field lay between his house and the school- house, and what would it avail him to see the empty room? |
11304 | But did he think of the church? |
11304 | But had I? |
11304 | But have you made inquiries? |
11304 | But is a man''s truth also woman''s truth? |
11304 | But of what use thinking of these things? |
11304 | But our Lord says that in heaven there is neither marriage nor giving in marriage, and what would heaven be to him without Nora? |
11304 | But the lake-- where was it? |
11304 | But this woman was moved merely by impulses; and what is more inexplicable than an impulse? |
11304 | But was he going to begin the story over again? |
11304 | But was he obliged to answer it? |
11304 | But was he sure if it had n''t been for Eliza that he would n''t have married Annie McGrath? |
11304 | But was she right in this? |
11304 | But was there water enough in the strait at this season of the year? |
11304 | But what connection between Nora Glynn and this dead woman? |
11304 | But what could Poole''s reason be for wishing him to leave Ireland, to go abroad? |
11304 | But what did he know about such women? |
11304 | But what was he to do? |
11304 | But what''s the matter, Gogarty? |
11304 | But where should he go? |
11304 | But where should he go? |
11304 | But who was he, he''d like to be told, that he should set himself up as Father Peter''s judge? |
11304 | But why am I writing all these things to you?'' |
11304 | But why is it extraordinary? |
11304 | But why quote when I can send you the book? |
11304 | But why should he assume that he would not rise higher? |
11304 | But why should the wind rise? |
11304 | But why was he thinking of her again? |
11304 | Christy, will you take his reverence''s horse? |
11304 | Could he fall into such miserable decadence? |
11304 | Could he have chosen a more appropriate one? |
11304 | Could one find a more beautiful name for a hermit? |
11304 | Could such obedience to rule be any man''s duty? |
11304 | Did n''t I know the Colonel''s grandfather and his grandmother? |
11304 | Did you ever read"The Imitation of Christ"? |
11304 | Did you receive that letter? |
11304 | Do n''t they only throw it at the child?'' |
11304 | Do n''t you know well enough I''d have been suspended? |
11304 | Do n''t you think we might go into the garden?'' |
11304 | Do we find life in adventure or by our own fireside? |
11304 | Do you ever turn to these books? |
11304 | Do you know anything, Father O''Grady, about this man''s writing? |
11304 | Do you like reading Latin?'' |
11304 | Do you remember an old man called Patsy Murphy? |
11304 | Do you remember saying that the loneliness of the country sometimes forced you to kneel down to pray that you might die? |
11304 | Do you remember saying that you intended to be Reverend Mother? |
11304 | Do you remember the dark gray clouds tearing across the sky, and we walking side by side, I trying to get away from you? |
11304 | Do you think that a woman can not repent? |
11304 | Do you want me to baptize the child or not?'' |
11304 | Does anyone want to be forgotten utterly? |
11304 | Does it? |
11304 | Egan?'' |
11304 | For did not the miracles of the saints prove that they were no longer subject to natural laws? |
11304 | For had n''t he begun to feel that what they needed was a really efficient priest, one who would look after their temporal interests? |
11304 | For had n''t he heard, as he came up the street, that Mrs. Rean had stolen the child from Mrs. Egan, and had had it baptized by the minister? |
11304 | Had he not felt her breath upon his cheek? |
11304 | Had he not written saying he was going, and was n''t that enough? |
11304 | Had n''t Moran said that there were times when we all wanted drink? |
11304 | Has it not often seemed strange to you that we go through life without ever being able to reveal the soul that is in us? |
11304 | Has n''t the holy water of the Church more power in it than the water they have? |
11304 | Have n''t we all heard the Archbishop say that any of his priests who appeals to Rome against him will get the worst of it?'' |
11304 | Have you forgotten how anxious I was that you should write the history of the lake and its castles? |
11304 | Have you inquired, dear Father O''Grady, what this man''s writings are, if he is a Catholic or a Protestant? |
11304 | He surely did not think it well that Father Peter had died, his friend, his benefactor, the man in whose house he was living? |
11304 | How did you guess that?'' |
11304 | How many times had he said that? |
11304 | How much do you think she''d come for?'' |
11304 | I do not say he will try to undermine your faith, but how can he do otherwise if he believe in what he writes? |
11304 | I hope you have made all these inquiries, and if you have not made them, will you make them at once and write to me and relieve my anxiety? |
11304 | I said to myself,"If this be so-- if, in return for kind thought-- Why should n''t she suffer? |
11304 | I should n''t like my daughter--''''What do you mean?'' |
11304 | I thought; and, desirous of seeing it fall, I walked on, guided by the sound, till I saw at the end of the glade-- whom do you think? |
11304 | I was just thinking--''''Of me?'' |
11304 | If Father Peter felt that Nora Glynn was not the kind of schoolmistress the parish required, should he not send her away? |
11304 | If I were sent for a purpose--''''But you do n''t believe seriously, Moran, that you were sent for a purpose?'' |
11304 | If there was a miracle that night, why should n''t there be a miracle to- night? |
11304 | If this were not so, why should your whiteness and colour and gaiety remind me always of the spring- time? |
11304 | If we are to believe at all in spiritual influences-- and who denies them?--can we minimize these? |
11304 | In what light was he to read it? |
11304 | Is it because we are ashamed, or is it that we do not know ourselves? |
11304 | Is it really true that he opposes the roofing of the abbey on account of the legend? |
11304 | Is it too much I am asking of thee, O my God, is it too much? |
11304 | Is n''t it all like a dream? |
11304 | Is there any more of it?'' |
11304 | It is not unlikely, for what do we do all through our lives but to repeat ourselves? |
11304 | It sounds a little absurd, does n''t it? |
11304 | It was certain that if Poole were in love with Nora he would do all in his power to keep a poor priest( was it thus they spoke of him?) |
11304 | It was therefore his fate to go in quest of-- what? |
11304 | Just a glass to keep me going, and I will go straight out of your parish, so that none of the disgrace will fall upon you; or-- what do you think? |
11304 | Life? |
11304 | Moran called it a miracle and it seems like one, but will it last? |
11304 | Mr. Poole''s age-- what was it? |
11304 | Nature has given you many gifts: I wonder what will become of you? |
11304 | No matter, I ca n''t stay here, so why should I trouble to discover a reason for my going? |
11304 | Now was that story going to begin again? |
11304 | Now what would the end be? |
11304 | Now you wo n''t be thinking me a fool for having come to see you this evening, Gogarty? |
11304 | Now, do you mean to say that you have found a person who will suit us?... |
11304 | Now, do you think that quite right and fair towards one''s sister?'' |
11304 | Now, how is one to stop in a convent if one''s own sister interferes in one''s confessions?'' |
11304 | Now, what reason does he give for such an extraordinary decision?'' |
11304 | Now, will you be turning the horse up the road? |
11304 | Of what use are signs and omens if the interpretation is always obscure? |
11304 | Of what use to lie in one''s bed when sleep is far and will not be beckoned? |
11304 | Once he was an ardent student in Maynooth, he had been an energetic curate; and now what was he? |
11304 | One thing matters-- do I stay or go?'' |
11304 | Or did she wish to revenge herself? |
11304 | Or was it that he had worn out a certain side of his nature in Bridget Clery''s cottage? |
11304 | Our tempers are part of ourselves? |
11304 | Pass me the tobacco, will you?'' |
11304 | Poole might wish to make a fool of him, but what was her reason for advising him to go abroad? |
11304 | Poole?'' |
11304 | Round by Kilronan or across the Bridge of Keel?'' |
11304 | Save it and let the weasel go supperless? |
11304 | Saved himself from himself,''he repeated;''can anybody be saved from himself?'' |
11304 | Seeing me, he took off his hat-- you know the tall hat he wears-- a hat given him twenty or thirty years ago by whom? |
11304 | Shall we kneel down?'' |
11304 | She might love them independent of their opposition, but how could she love them if she knew they were only born to do wrong? |
11304 | She seemed to him like a spirit, and is n''t the spring like a spirit? |
11304 | Should he not welcome change? |
11304 | So it was said; but what did he know of the souls of the priests with whom he dined, smoked pipes, and played cards? |
11304 | Sometimes the shepherd grows weary of watching, and the question comes, Has a man no duty towards himself? |
11304 | Tell me if such a sin can be forgiven?'' |
11304 | The Mayo cock or the Galway cock?'' |
11304 | The distance was much the same-- a couple of miles shorter by the southern road, no doubt, but what are a couple of miles to an old roadster? |
11304 | The end may be marriage-- with whom? |
11304 | The men''s eyes met, and Father O''Grady said, as if he wished to change the subject:''You were born at Tinnick, were you not?'' |
11304 | They merely wring the will out of us; and well we may ask, Who would care for his life if he knew he was going to lose it on the morrow? |
11304 | This will seem contradictory, for did n''t I say that I could n''t forget your cruelty in my first letter? |
11304 | Was it because he feared that if he once went away he might never come back? |
11304 | Was it in some vain, proselytizing idea that I invited you? |
11304 | Was it not a very pretty idea to cover that end of the garden with rambling roses?'' |
11304 | Was it the ugly cottage that put thoughts of her into his mind? |
11304 | Was its scarlet not finer than Lady Hindlip? |
11304 | Was n''t Patsy Donovan saying to me only yesterday that the Archbishop was a brave man to be letting any roof at all on the abbey? |
11304 | Was the letter he returned to her prompted by Mr. Poole and by a spirit of revenge? |
11304 | We never talked like this before, did we, Gogarty? |
11304 | We shall see, however, what kind of nib he uses, fine or blunt?'' |
11304 | What did she know about fishing? |
11304 | What excuse? |
11304 | What had he confessed? |
11304 | What is his reputation in the literary world?'' |
11304 | What is the spring but an impulse? |
11304 | What matter whether they bloomed a week earlier or a week later? |
11304 | What was to be done? |
11304 | What will you be doing all this time? |
11304 | What will you do then?'' |
11304 | What would be its first principle? |
11304 | When will she write again?'' |
11304 | Where should I be now if it were not for you? |
11304 | Where would I be now if it had n''t been that you kept on with me and brought me back, cured? |
11304 | Which self is the true self-- the peaceful or the choleric? |
11304 | Who amongst us does not remember the old nurse who told him stories of magic and witchcraft? |
11304 | Who can say?'' |
11304 | Who else would take an interest in this forlorn Garranard and its people, the reeds and rushes of existence? |
11304 | Who knows? |
11304 | Who was she that she should come telling him that he lacked experience? |
11304 | Who would think of asking himself if he liked beech- trees, or larches, or willows? |
11304 | Why am I telling it to you?'' |
11304 | Why did he come here?'' |
11304 | Why did she come to Garranard?'' |
11304 | Why do n''t you come to Italy? |
11304 | Why do n''t you write it and send it to me? |
11304 | Why had he never brought her here? |
11304 | Why should he not keep his mind for his own enjoyment and for the enjoyment of his friends, treating it like his pleasure grounds or park? |
11304 | Why should she go away to Berkshire to help Mr. Walter Poole with his literature without giving you longer notice? |
11304 | Why should you be in the way?'' |
11304 | Why, indeed? |
11304 | Will you have patience, and the poor child will be safe?'' |
11304 | Will your reverence listen to me?'' |
11304 | Worse still, what was he becoming? |
11304 | Would n''t any other do just as well for her foolish experiment?'' |
11304 | Would the time ever come when he could think of her without a pain in his heart? |
11304 | Yes; but what is life? |
11304 | You do forgive me?'' |
11304 | You remember Catherine, my servant? |
11304 | You remember the prayer we said, leaning over the bit of wall looking across the bog? |
11304 | You will say,"But what matter? |
11304 | You wo n''t be swimming out to Castle Island, and forgetting that you have confessions at seven?'' |
11304 | You''ll go home straight, wo n''t you?'' |
11304 | You''ll stay and have some dinner with me?'' |
11304 | You''ll stay and have some supper with me?'' |
11304 | and have not prognostications a knack of coming true? |
11304 | and he dropped on his knees crying:''Can I be forgiven if that soul be lost to God? |
11304 | and what will be your answer when your child asks:"Who made me?" |
11304 | my going in quest of the Christian river? |
11304 | not her, but-- He was following what? |
11304 | were n''t you quick enough for her?'' |
11304 | what are you coming here to talk to me in this way for? |
11304 | what matter?'' |
11304 | what use was there in going over all that again? |
30093 | And Ruth? 30093 And did you see Curtis''colour bearer? |
30093 | And not be a lawyer at all? |
30093 | And now,_ Mon Pere_, must I tell? 30093 And now? |
30093 | And then? |
30093 | And then? |
30093 | And this man, this bishop, is going to send you away somewhere, to school? |
30093 | And you heard? |
30093 | Are any men killed? |
30093 | Are you the White Horse Chaplain? |
30093 | Are you--? |
30093 | But I would n''t for anything,the woman called nervously after her,"have her think that-- And what''ll I do with this?" |
30093 | But how can he? 30093 But the people,"said Ruth,"ca n''t you get them all to join and agree to sell at a fair price? |
30093 | But what is it? |
30093 | But what''s he carrying? |
30093 | But what''s the use? |
30093 | But where''s she gone? 30093 But why could n''t she have told the truth?" |
30093 | But you''ll come home with mother to- morrow, wo n''t you? 30093 But,"he went on slowly,"if I''d agiven you a message that day you''d have taken it on for me, would n''t you?" |
30093 | But,objected Ruth, trying to draw him out,"if Jeffrey Whiting should come back before then?" |
30093 | Can that be_ truth_, at last? 30093 Did anybody see Rogers in that crowd?" |
30093 | Did he start home by this trail? |
30093 | Did he take his gun from you and start immediately? |
30093 | Did it make any difference? 30093 Did you examine it?" |
30093 | Did you hear a shot fired? |
30093 | Did you hear two shots fired? |
30093 | Did you hear two shots? |
30093 | Did you meet Jeffrey Whiting on the afternoon of August nineteenth? |
30093 | Did you need to be told that, Jeffrey? |
30093 | Did you see Jeffrey Whiting in the Village last night? |
30093 | Did you see Jeffrey Whiting''s gun? |
30093 | Did you see Rogers in the morning? |
30093 | Did you tell him that Rogers was in the hills? |
30093 | Do n''t you think so? 30093 Do we do wisely, men?" |
30093 | Do you know what an option is? |
30093 | Do you remember? 30093 Do you swear it?" |
30093 | Do you swear to try and see that she gets a chance? |
30093 | Do you think that words can go down into my soul to find the man that was once there? 30093 Does it hurt?" |
30093 | Eh? 30093 For me?" |
30093 | For you? 30093 Had it been fired off?" |
30093 | Have they actually started to build the railroad? |
30093 | Have you any rope? |
30093 | He had my letter? |
30093 | He went armed? |
30093 | How did he die? 30093 How did you know it was all right, Ruth?" |
30093 | How do you do, Mr. LaComb? 30093 How do you know that I''ll believe you?" |
30093 | How do you know? |
30093 | How does it stand now? |
30093 | How old are you? |
30093 | How? |
30093 | I went lookin''for him, to tell--"Answer, yes or no? |
30093 | If I had not seen that thing I would not have come to you, for I would have said: What good? 30093 If he had left a debt, would you pay it for him, my daughter?" |
30093 | Is it true, Lucy? |
30093 | Is n''t it enough to know that he did manage it, without bothering about how? 30093 Is that it? |
30093 | It was true, then? |
30093 | It''s the queerest thing, is n''t it, Jeff,she said finally in a thoughtful, friendly way,"how two people can fight about religion? |
30093 | It''s you, Bishop, is n''t it? |
30093 | Jeff Whiting? 30093 May I?" |
30093 | My life? |
30093 | My question is: Are you the same brave man with a soldier''s brave, great heart that you were that day? |
30093 | Oh, did you? |
30093 | Or did he go on up country? |
30093 | So young Whiting''s gone away, eh? |
30093 | Suppose it had been to my mother, say: You''da risked your life to get it on to her? |
30093 | The colt? 30093 Then God:''And is there none to cancel the debt? |
30093 | Then where_ did_ he go? 30093 They do them-- Because_ some woman lives, or once lived!_ What do_ you_ know? |
30093 | Truth? 30093 Use him? |
30093 | Was that it, Lucy? |
30093 | Was the name of Rogers mentioned by either Stocking or Whiting? |
30093 | Well, you would n''t expect me to love them? |
30093 | Well-- Why? |
30093 | What business is it of yours? |
30093 | What can we do? |
30093 | What did Cynthe tell you? |
30093 | What did he say to you? |
30093 | What did they say? 30093 What did they say?" |
30093 | What do you mean? |
30093 | What do you want? |
30093 | What else did you say? |
30093 | What good does it do? 30093 What have I been doing?" |
30093 | What is it? |
30093 | What were they saying? |
30093 | What''s it all good for? |
30093 | What''s the tarnation hurry, young lady? |
30093 | What? |
30093 | When did men ever do anything for_ words_? 30093 Where are you going?" |
30093 | Where are you going? |
30093 | Where could you get the strength for all this? 30093 Where is Brom Bones?" |
30093 | Where is she? |
30093 | Which is Rafe Gadbeau? |
30093 | Whiting''s gun had been fired? |
30093 | Why do n''t you come see, if you want to know? |
30093 | Why for you want to know him? |
30093 | Why, Jeffrey,said Ruth in surprise,"what do you know about the Church?" |
30093 | Why, what does it mean? 30093 Why, what''s the matter, girl? |
30093 | Why, where did you come from? 30093 Would the people make their way down the river,"the Bishop asked;"or did they escape back into the higher hills?" |
30093 | Would you be so kind, then, as to tell this committee,he temporised,"just why you wished to arouse this opposition to the railroad?" |
30093 | Yes? |
30093 | You don''dance? 30093 You have been at school?" |
30093 | You have some education? |
30093 | You mean you and your-- neighbour, Ruth Lansing? |
30093 | You saw him die? |
30093 | You were all alone, child? |
30093 | You were there, close? 30093 You were with Jeffrey Whiting on the afternoon when word was brought to him that suspicious men had been seen in the hills?" |
30093 | You''re with Ruth Lansing a lot, are n''t you? |
30093 | You? |
30093 | You? |
30093 | Your father, you know, he always wanted me to take care of you, did n''t he? |
30093 | ''What is it,_ mon Rafe_?'' |
30093 | ''What to do,_ mon Rafe_?'' |
30093 | A tall, dark boy, Jay Hamilton, with long, black hair?" |
30093 | A_ coward_, do you remember that word?" |
30093 | After a little he asked timidly:"What are you going to do, Ruth? |
30093 | Afterwards? |
30093 | Am I a meddling priest? |
30093 | And I have come here to ask you: Are you the same brave man with a heart that I saw on that day? |
30093 | And do you, somewhere, understand now? |
30093 | And had she blinded him with her pity? |
30093 | And if it had hurt nobody, then-- then why all this--? |
30093 | And if they did, what did they say to Him? |
30093 | And if we silence these two now forever, how shall we be ever able to find the others?" |
30093 | And since his conviction or acquittal must hinge on that single question, what room was there to hope for his acquittal? |
30093 | And what was death-- And why? |
30093 | And what was there to be feared? |
30093 | And what was wrong with her that she could not understand? |
30093 | And when shall justice conquer? |
30093 | And where does right prevail? |
30093 | And_ why?_ And still they came with that set, borrowed phrase-- the only thing they could think to say-- upon their lips. |
30093 | Are there not others? |
30093 | Are they blind?" |
30093 | Are we to understand that there is opposition in your county to the proposed grant?" |
30093 | Are you afraid to let her have what you want for yourself? |
30093 | Are you afraid?" |
30093 | Are you that same man? |
30093 | As they drove up beside the group in the yard, one of the men shouted:"Say, is there any place we can put in here? |
30093 | Because they were afraid? |
30093 | But are they true? |
30093 | But are you afraid to let her have her chance in the sun? |
30093 | But did he_ confess_--about Rogers?" |
30093 | But do they do them for the words? |
30093 | But how? |
30093 | But if the question came to her of a sudden, without warning, without time for thought? |
30093 | But shall a man lie down in hell before he is dead? |
30093 | But shall only these two be punished? |
30093 | But the Judge rapped warningly and the attorney yelled:"Yes or no?" |
30093 | But then, what man does ever let another man see what is in his heart? |
30093 | But was there not a certain ignominy in being trapped here as the dumb and senseless brute creatures were being trapped? |
30093 | But what better would she be if I lived? |
30093 | But what of her? |
30093 | But what was the use? |
30093 | But who could tell? |
30093 | But why do that in the hills? |
30093 | But why should he? |
30093 | But would it be enough? |
30093 | But, Jeffrey, you remember what you said that day in the Bishop''s house at Alden?" |
30093 | By how much? |
30093 | Can we make Bald Mountain before daylight?" |
30093 | Can you see? |
30093 | Can you tell me what time it begins?" |
30093 | Can you, will you tell them?" |
30093 | Could it be that she had brushed aside his story because she really did not believe it and could not listen to it without betraying her doubt? |
30093 | Could it be that she had over- acted it all? |
30093 | Could she pass that point before the fire came? |
30093 | Did he expect to see the light fade out, to see the face wither under the bitter revelation? |
30093 | Did it make any difference with you? |
30093 | Did n''t the poor little thing look sorry and troubled enough without fetching her down here to bring it all up to her? |
30093 | Did people who were sick, and people who said God had answered their prayers and punished their enemies for them; did they find God? |
30093 | Did the preachers find Him? |
30093 | Did the priests find Him? |
30093 | Did they find Him when they prayed? |
30093 | Did they find Him when they were in trouble? |
30093 | Did they have the same effect as if Jeffrey Whiting had obtained actual options on the property? |
30093 | Did they laugh and talk and scold each other, like people? |
30093 | Did those promises bind the people to him? |
30093 | Did you ask somebody then? |
30093 | Did you hear what he said to me, about you?" |
30093 | Did you, deep down, somewhere beneath words and beneath thoughts, did you, did you really understand-- a little? |
30093 | Did you, standing there with the facts fresh before you, conclude that Jeffrey Whiting had fired the shot which killed Rogers?" |
30093 | Do you remember that night you were in the sugar cabin? |
30093 | Do you remember?" |
30093 | Do you think men do things for words? |
30093 | Do you think that if I had not with my eyes seen that thing I would have come near you at all? |
30093 | Do you think that words can call him up? |
30093 | Do you think you can put me off with defences and puling arguments of necessity, or policy, or the sacredness of property? |
30093 | Do you understand me?" |
30093 | Does he care for the opinions or the words that are said here? |
30093 | Does it make any difference? |
30093 | Does it matter to them or to this committee that I wear the badge of a service that they do not understand? |
30093 | Does justice conquer? |
30093 | Does justice conquer? |
30093 | Does right prevail? |
30093 | Does right prevail? |
30093 | Down underneath, when you understood, which was the truth? |
30093 | Even if they did come out safe to the villages, what would they do there? |
30093 | Ever thought of such a thing? |
30093 | Find God? |
30093 | Find God? |
30093 | For what? |
30093 | Guilty? |
30093 | Had a miracle saved him from the fire? |
30093 | Had he dropped from Heaven? |
30093 | Had it hurt Jeffrey Whiting, himself? |
30093 | Had it hurt Rafe Gadbeau? |
30093 | Had it hurt the man, Samuel Rogers? |
30093 | Had some one spoken? |
30093 | Had they not lied, after all? |
30093 | Have I no right to speak God''s name to you, because we do not believe all the same things? |
30093 | Have you heard anything on the wire?" |
30093 | Have you mothers? |
30093 | Have you sweethearts? |
30093 | Have you wives? |
30093 | He looks up to God and cries:_ Seigneur Dieu_, whither go I? |
30093 | He must have meant something? |
30093 | He rapped sharply with his gavel, and when the Bishop stopped, he asked:"Is the murder of Samuel Rogers mentioned in that paper?" |
30093 | He said quickly:"You were with Rafe Gadbeau at his death?" |
30093 | He stood with his eyes fixed unseeing upon the floor, asking: Whom? |
30093 | He swept the group with a sharp, a praising eye, and asked:"Who''s the one to talk to here?" |
30093 | He_ confessed_?" |
30093 | How can we say? |
30093 | How could they always be so sure? |
30093 | How dare we say what we would have done, when we did n''t do it? |
30093 | How dare you come here to tell me the little bit of it you saw?" |
30093 | How did he know that he would ever have done so? |
30093 | How did it all come out?" |
30093 | How did men go about to find God? |
30093 | How did the Bishop himself find God? |
30093 | How do we know what''s really in our hearts? |
30093 | How had he come to be in the hills? |
30093 | How had she ever said such a thing? |
30093 | How is your fight going on? |
30093 | How much did he mean? |
30093 | How shall we find and punish those other greater ones? |
30093 | How should a bishop die? |
30093 | How was it that they could carry with them all day long that air of never being tired or fretted or worried? |
30093 | How? |
30093 | How?" |
30093 | I couldn''t--""He did n''t say nothing, except in confession?" |
30093 | I never struck you this way before, did I? |
30093 | I think I should like to--""Were you at Fort Fisher?" |
30093 | I think that''s what you want to ask me, is n''t it, Lansing?" |
30093 | If the whole world stood here accusing you would we know it any the better? |
30093 | Is it far?" |
30093 | Is that the truth, Lucy? |
30093 | Is that what you mean? |
30093 | Is there not one in all that world who loved you? |
30093 | Is there truth that lives deep down, and did you, who were made of truth, did you somehow understand all the time?" |
30093 | Keep her here and let her marry some fightin''lumber jack that''d beat her? |
30093 | Looking past the Bishop and addressing Dardis, he said:"Is this testimony pertinent?" |
30093 | M''m''selle, what you mean? |
30093 | Mother in Heaven, she prayed in agony, must I do that? |
30093 | No? |
30093 | No? |
30093 | No?" |
30093 | No?" |
30093 | Not so? |
30093 | Oh, why,_ why_ had she not brought a rifle? |
30093 | Oh,_ why_ had she not brought a rifle? |
30093 | Or did they just pray all the time? |
30093 | Or did they see wonderful, starry visions of God and Heaven that they were always talking about? |
30093 | Or had he merely ceased hoping and turned sullen and dumb? |
30093 | Or see her break her heart tryin''to make a livin''on one of these rock hills? |
30093 | Or was it a sound? |
30093 | Or was it the words? |
30093 | Please, Ruth,"he said, suddenly softening,"you wo n''t let it change you? |
30093 | Provocation? |
30093 | She could not know anything, and why did they want to pester the poor thing? |
30093 | She wondered whether he would turn and wave to her; or had he forgotten that she would surely be standing where he had left her? |
30093 | Should I have left them where they were? |
30093 | So Cynthe went on:"If you wanted to know why did n''t you come up all Winter and see? |
30093 | Some better than law school, eh?" |
30093 | Still, what did it matter? |
30093 | Suppose he had killed the man? |
30093 | The White Horse Chaplain, do you remember him, Jeffrey?" |
30093 | The attorney went on:"Did you hear a shot?" |
30093 | The road from here there, is it open, do you know?" |
30093 | The thing I did-- which men would call fine? |
30093 | The thing that had seen through him, had looked down into his heart, had measured him; was this the thing that was bigger than he? |
30093 | Then Whiting had actually been obtaining what were really options to himself, while pretending to hold the people back in their own interest? |
30093 | Then he asked suddenly,"What brought your mind to this view of the matter?" |
30093 | Then he flashed the question upon her:"What did Rafe Gadbeau say when he was dying?" |
30093 | Then he said:"You''ll never blame me, Ruth, girl, will you? |
30093 | Then he was asked:"What did you say when you came up and saw the dead man?" |
30093 | Then what would Joseph Winthrop do? |
30093 | VIII SEIGNEUR DIEU, WHITHER GO I? |
30093 | Was God to be found here on the hills, in the night, in the open? |
30093 | Was he breaking down? |
30093 | Was he going to stay there all night? |
30093 | Was it just because they were always contented and happy? |
30093 | Was it the fine thing that was really the truth, and did you, do you, know it, after all? |
30093 | Was it worth the lies? |
30093 | Was n''t all the world continually on the lookout for God, and who ever found Him? |
30093 | Was that God? |
30093 | Was that what they had meant that day there in the court, she and the Bishop? |
30093 | Was there some word, some key, some hidden portal by which men found God? |
30093 | Was this the thing bigger than he was? |
30093 | Was this what it meant? |
30093 | Well,_ whom_ had he injured? |
30093 | Well-- Why not? |
30093 | Were they going to rush at last? |
30093 | Were you, then, so wicked that none loved you who will pay the debt?'' |
30093 | What about her?" |
30093 | What about it? |
30093 | What could have happened? |
30093 | What could he do? |
30093 | What could she do? |
30093 | What could she do? |
30093 | What did she care for that wicked man who had died yelling out that he was a murderer? |
30093 | What did the Bishop mean? |
30093 | What did they bring her here for? |
30093 | What did they do in there? |
30093 | What did they have to be happy about? |
30093 | What did this coming mean? |
30093 | What do you know? |
30093 | What do you know? |
30093 | What does he think I''m likely to do?" |
30093 | What does she want?" |
30093 | What good would religion be if it did not go ahead of us in life and show us the way?" |
30093 | What had Jeffrey to fear? |
30093 | What had she seen? |
30093 | What right had this man, what right had any man to face him with it? |
30093 | What room was there in the mind of any one for doubt as to the actual facts of the killing? |
30093 | What then? |
30093 | What use to go over the record? |
30093 | What use to go over the things that he had done, the things that he had advised? |
30093 | What was I thinking? |
30093 | What was he going to say? |
30093 | What was in my heart? |
30093 | What was it all worth? |
30093 | What was it? |
30093 | What was it? |
30093 | What was that the Bishop had said when he had asked for truth that day on the railroad line? |
30093 | What was that thing written so clear in his eyes that she could read and tell him of it that day on the road from French Village? |
30093 | What was the light that shone in their faces? |
30093 | What was the use? |
30093 | What was there in there behind those doors that never banged? |
30093 | What was there in there that made the sisters all so very much alike? |
30093 | What was there to say? |
30093 | What was you calc''latin''to do with him, Miss?" |
30093 | What wonderful presence was there behind the doors of that cloistered house that seemed to come out with them and stay with them all the time? |
30093 | What would I do with her? |
30093 | What would that girl do? |
30093 | What you know?" |
30093 | What''s the matter with you?" |
30093 | What_ could_ you know? |
30093 | When they were half way down the trail Jeffrey spoke suddenly:"Say, Ruth, what''s the use trying to save these people? |
30093 | Where could he go? |
30093 | Where could he turn? |
30093 | Where is truth? |
30093 | Where was the load that had lain upon him all these weary hours? |
30093 | Where was the use to struggle against an enemy they could not see and who could not be hurt by anything they might do? |
30093 | Where was the use? |
30093 | Who can punish you? |
30093 | Who could tell? |
30093 | Who could tell? |
30093 | Who said he''d gone away?" |
30093 | Who struck? |
30093 | Who was it that said she must not speak? |
30093 | Who was to tell? |
30093 | Who would not be? |
30093 | Whom did you injure?" |
30093 | Whom had he injured? |
30093 | Whom, then? |
30093 | Why anything? |
30093 | Why could they not leave Daddy Tom to her? |
30093 | Why did I go with them when they went to set the fire? |
30093 | Why did n''t you come see?" |
30093 | Why did n''t you come up when she was nursing the dirty French babies through the black diphtheria, when their own mothers were afraid of them? |
30093 | Why did she go?" |
30093 | Why did they come? |
30093 | Why does that have to come into everything? |
30093 | Why dream? |
30093 | Why fight? |
30093 | Why had they not struck? |
30093 | Why is it?" |
30093 | Why must she? |
30093 | Why say more? |
30093 | Why should he have said this to her? |
30093 | Why should he interfere? |
30093 | Why should he not answer? |
30093 | Why should she guard a secret that was no good to him or to any one now? |
30093 | Why should she keep a secret of his? |
30093 | Why should she not? |
30093 | Why should the girl have gone away? |
30093 | Why was I with those men? |
30093 | Why work? |
30093 | Why? |
30093 | Why? |
30093 | Why? |
30093 | Why? |
30093 | Why? |
30093 | Why? |
30093 | Why? |
30093 | Why? |
30093 | Why?" |
30093 | Will you always be able to lie? |
30093 | Will you be afraid to stand in the court and tell these people, who do not matter at all? |
30093 | Will you say a prayer, Ruth?" |
30093 | Will you tell me what to say to you, Ruth?" |
30093 | Will you? |
30093 | Will you?" |
30093 | Would fifty? |
30093 | Would he come back to the world? |
30093 | Would he confess? |
30093 | Would he never come out? |
30093 | Would he not have told you to tell and clear the other man?" |
30093 | Would he speak those nine words? |
30093 | Would it not have been better to have warned some of the men that were associated with him in his fight? |
30093 | Would n''t that be all right?" |
30093 | Would one man come? |
30093 | Would ten? |
30093 | Would that girl be strong enough to deny, to deny and to keep on denying? |
30093 | Would the people stand by their promises? |
30093 | You got hurt, you?" |
30093 | You his wife? |
30093 | You wo n''t let it make any difference, with us, I mean?" |
30093 | You''ll say just what you said to the Shepherd of the North; remember?" |
30093 | _ Can_ I do that? |
30093 | _ Who_ had been hurt by his thought, his wish, to kill a man? |
30093 | _ Why?_ Who had ordered this? |
30093 | _ Why?_ Who had ordered this? |
30093 | he said, after some verbal beating about the bush;"how is she?" |
10963 | Ah, my friend, have not all young people ridiculous passions? 10963 Ah, poor grandmamma, what grand- dam''s tales You used to sing to me in praise of virtue; Everywhere have I asked:''What is this stranger?'' |
10963 | Are we causing a scandal? |
10963 | Are we populating the land with orphans? |
10963 | Are we setting a bad example? |
10963 | Are you silly? 10963 But where are the snows of yester- year?" |
10963 | But why, priest, dost thou permit thy fevered guilty imagination to wander thus? 10963 Do I direct my love? |
10963 | Do you know any means of making a woman do that which she has decided that she will not do? |
10963 | How many times does it not occur to me to blush at my tastes? 10963 Is it a chance? |
10963 | Is it meet for you to be among such vicious people? 10963 It serves me right,"he said to himself,"what business had I there? |
10963 | Oh Folly, which we call love, what dost thou make of us? 10963 Oh, the lovely little lass, how pretty she is like this..."][ Illustration]--Everything lies in that, I know it well; but what would you? |
10963 | One is compelled sometimes to say to oneself,''On what does ruin or safety depend?'' |
10963 | Perhaps he would like me better if, instead of plaits, I had curls, and if instead of the brown dress, I put on the blue? |
10963 | She''s there, say''st thou? 10963 To get up, do you dream of it?... |
10963 | Veronica, Veronica,he cried,"my posset; what are you doing then? |
10963 | Well then, in what way can we be offending God? |
10963 | Well, well, little girl, you are not getting up? |
10963 | What am I to do? |
10963 | What are we, we who say to others,''Be just, humble, chaste, pitiful? 10963 What is happening?" |
10963 | Whither am I going? |
10963 | Whither are we going? 10963 Why does the sight of this young girl agitate my heart in this way?" |
10963 | Will you have a fomentation? |
10963 | You must not cry like that, little one, you will spoil your pretty eyes; will you remain with me? 10963 [ 1] And how could it be otherwise? |
10963 | --"Pretty well, thank you,"replied Durand, in a peevish tone.--"Still warm to- day, Captain; but you had it warmer in Africa, did n''t you?" |
10963 | --A new Curé, cried Suzanne; then he has gone away not to return again? |
10963 | --Ah, cried the former, Monsieur le Curé of Althausen, I think? |
10963 | --Already? |
10963 | --Am I not a Catholic before all? |
10963 | --And did he stop? |
10963 | --And does not temperament speak in you also, Veronica? |
10963 | --And for how long has he been your lover? |
10963 | --And he obeyed you? |
10963 | --And how did he go to work to have your innocence? |
10963 | --And one likes to be at home when one has anything to say, is it not so, Monsieur le Curé? |
10963 | --And so with us, the priests''servants, who could be more cautious than we are? |
10963 | --And that is why you have a funereal expression? |
10963 | --And that little white house at the foot of the hill?... |
10963 | --And the day before yesterday? |
10963 | --And the women? |
10963 | --And then? |
10963 | --And to whom should a poor servant acknowledge her secret thoughts, if not to her Curé and her confessor? |
10963 | --And what does that mean? |
10963 | --And what has your religion in common with your Mass? |
10963 | --And what will you give me in exchange? |
10963 | --And when my conscience says nothing? |
10963 | --And who has informed you so correctly? |
10963 | --And you are going to Nancy? |
10963 | --And you believe that I shall be satisfied with this fine promise? |
10963 | --And you have heard? |
10963 | --And you have never intended to do so? |
10963 | --And you know it now? |
10963 | --Are you afraid of me then? |
10963 | --Are you going to show me a dark girl? |
10963 | --Are you in pain? |
10963 | --Are you not ashamed to listen to the tale- bearing and calumny of that horrible woman? |
10963 | --Are you not cold? |
10963 | --Are you talking seriously? |
10963 | --At what time? |
10963 | --Because my daughter has gone to Mass? |
10963 | --Began what? |
10963 | --Begin what? |
10963 | --But his vows? |
10963 | --But how shall I know if what you say is true? |
10963 | --But my father? |
10963 | --But was she really his niece? |
10963 | --But what are you frightened at, Mademoiselle? |
10963 | --But what is it then? |
10963 | --But what matters our condition on earth? |
10963 | --But what truth? |
10963 | --But why this sudden and unexpected departure? |
10963 | --But your innocence.... how did he have it? |
10963 | --Can I speak with_ Monseigneur_ the Secretary? |
10963 | --Can you not then inform Monseigneur that the Curé of Althausen desires to speak with him? |
10963 | --Come, he cried, confound it, Suzanne, are you mad? |
10963 | --Count upon me? |
10963 | --Dark? |
10963 | --Do they perform their religious duties? |
10963 | --Do you know anything about it, Veronica? |
10963 | --Do you wish to put it off to the Greek Kalends? |
10963 | --Does that surprise you? |
10963 | --Don''t you like this piece, father? |
10963 | --Fall where? |
10963 | --For ever? |
10963 | --From nobody? |
10963 | --Good heavens, I cried, my dear Captain, what has this poor man done to you? |
10963 | --Had he then any reason to complain of you? |
10963 | --Had you not enough girls then in the village without going to lay a claim on the one yonder? |
10963 | --Have you no preparations to make for departure? |
10963 | --Have you then surprised my predecessors in some act of culpable weakness? |
10963 | --Her salvation? |
10963 | --How am I to unite the respect and submission which I owe to my father with my duties as a Christian? |
10963 | --How can I distinguish innocent pleasures from those which are not so? |
10963 | --How can you bring the holy name of God into these abominable things? |
10963 | --How can you suppose that I am not happy to see you? |
10963 | --How do I know? |
10963 | --How? |
10963 | --I am, replied Suzanne; did you not reckon then on seeing me again? |
10963 | --I make you the judge of it; can I treat your daughter differently to the other ladies of the parish? |
10963 | --In truth, father, would not one say that you were talking of some ill- reputed place? |
10963 | --In what religion have you been brought up? |
10963 | --Is it not Monsieur l''Abbé Gaudinet? |
10963 | --Is it not that monk who has made such a noise? |
10963 | --Is it not? |
10963 | --Is it only that? |
10963 | --Is it possible? |
10963 | --Is it really you, Marcel, is it really you, he said, who have just played so great a game, and won the trick? |
10963 | --Is it then very serious? |
10963 | --Is she possessed of a husband? |
10963 | --Mademoiselle, dear young lady, he said with his most insinuating voice, do you lack confidence then in me? |
10963 | --May it not be that the heart is sick? |
10963 | --Monsieur le Curé of Saint Nicholas? |
10963 | --Motives... serious? |
10963 | --Must I tell you them in order to be an honest girl? |
10963 | --My calling? |
10963 | --My dear child, do you want me to tell you what you are with all your Masses? |
10963 | --My paper? |
10963 | --Nothing... absolutely nothing; but what shall I do at Nancy? |
10963 | --Of what happiness? |
10963 | --Ought not the priest''s house, said Marcel, to be open to all at any hour? |
10963 | --Proud to make me sin? |
10963 | --Really? |
10963 | --Really? |
10963 | --Several beginnings? |
10963 | --So you are playing Church airs now? |
10963 | --Suzanne, he demanded of her abruptly, did you hear anything in the night? |
10963 | --That is to say that you will receive her confession? |
10963 | --The Abbé Fortin? |
10963 | --The garden? |
10963 | --There? |
10963 | --They committed faults then?... |
10963 | --Those are words of wisdom; who is it who said so? |
10963 | --To get married? |
10963 | --To what are you pleased to allude? |
10963 | --To whom? |
10963 | --To you, Veronica, to you? |
10963 | --Was I not obliged to go to confession before? |
10963 | --Was she younger than you then? |
10963 | --Well, I ask for nothing better, she answered laughing; and addressing herself to Marcel: Will you take my band- box for me? |
10963 | --Well, Mademoiselle, said Madame Connard, what do you decide? |
10963 | --Well, father? |
10963 | --Well, how old were you when you had him? |
10963 | --Well, then be said to me,"Where are you in pain, little one?" |
10963 | --Well, what is the news? |
10963 | --Well? |
10963 | --Well? |
10963 | --Well? |
10963 | --What answer do you wish me to give you? |
10963 | --What are they? |
10963 | --What are you saying there? |
10963 | --What do you mean by duties? |
10963 | --What do you mean by honest girl? |
10963 | --What do you mean by that, Veronica? |
10963 | --What do you mean by"we?" |
10963 | --What do you mean? |
10963 | --What do you mean? |
10963 | --What do you say? |
10963 | --What do you say? |
10963 | --What do you say? |
10963 | --What do you tell me? |
10963 | --What do you want me to tell you? |
10963 | --What has happened? |
10963 | --What has he done then? |
10963 | --What hussy? |
10963 | --What is a vow when it is a question of the duty which your conscience dictates? |
10963 | --What is it? |
10963 | --What is that? |
10963 | --What is the good, since you have seen them at Vic? |
10963 | --What is the matter, papa? |
10963 | --What is there in common between the Curé of Larriques and me? |
10963 | --What nothing? |
10963 | --What shall I do? |
10963 | --What shall I see? |
10963 | --What society? |
10963 | --What stuff are you telling me now? |
10963 | --What task? |
10963 | --What then? |
10963 | --What time is it, Marianne? |
10963 | --What, Veronica? |
10963 | --What, said the worthy man astonished, you will not show your calves? |
10963 | --What, the Abbé Fortin said that? |
10963 | --What, you dare to admit that wretched fault without blushing at it? |
10963 | --What? |
10963 | --What? |
10963 | --Where are you going to stay at Nancy? |
10963 | --Where did you go this morning? |
10963 | --Where must I begin? |
10963 | --Where? |
10963 | --Where? |
10963 | --Which are those that you commit by preference? |
10963 | --Who does not know it? |
10963 | --Who is there? |
10963 | --Who is waiting for me then? |
10963 | --Who told me that? |
10963 | --Who told you that? |
10963 | --Who would ever have believed that? |
10963 | --Who? |
10963 | --Why already? |
10963 | --Why so? |
10963 | --Why so? |
10963 | --Why tell a lie? |
10963 | --Why that question? |
10963 | --Why the shame? |
10963 | --Why then this uproar and scandal? |
10963 | --Why this questioning, dearest papa? |
10963 | --Why, sir? |
10963 | --Will the Holy Virgin give me what I want to eat? |
10963 | --With what seal then am I marked? |
10963 | --Yes, said Marcel smiling; am I the first to tell you so, and do n''t you know it? |
10963 | --Yes, said Zulma blushing; have I not done right? |
10963 | --Yes? |
10963 | --Yes?.... |
10963 | --You are not coming in? |
10963 | --You are too kind, Monsieur; but I, what shall I do then for you? |
10963 | --You did not hear him? |
10963 | --You have asked somebody then? |
10963 | --You have been crying then, my child? |
10963 | --You have spoken to that Curé? |
10963 | --You know this young person then? |
10963 | --You were expecting me, Monsieur Patin? |
10963 | --You were there then? |
10963 | --You wish to please me? |
10963 | --You, he murmured in a stifled voice, you here, Mademoiselle? |
10963 | --Your priestling is young then? |
10963 | --Your wife? |
10963 | A hundred francs? |
10963 | After what has happened, are you not afraid of compromising yourself? |
10963 | Ah, Mademoiselle, how many, like he, would wish to begin their life again, if they found a courageous soul who was willing to accompany them? |
10963 | Ah, are you mad, Gaudinet, to send people in this way into my cabinet? |
10963 | All the same, perhaps you are right, there is still some fire in my room: will you come there? |
10963 | Am I then in bed with this handsome priest? |
10963 | Ambition? |
10963 | And above all, how could he discard his uncle''s entreaties, and refuse an unexpected promotion, without arousing suspicion in high quarters? |
10963 | And are they still painful? |
10963 | And besides, these flashes of fiery passion which at times betrayed him, could they serve as an accusation against him? |
10963 | And besides; chance, what is it after all but the effect of a cause which escapes us?" |
10963 | And he began to envy the happiness of this rustic; he would have wished to be for a moment this rude ignorant peasant, and who knows, for a moment? |
10963 | And how did he explain that to you? |
10963 | And how did he go to work to... seduce you? |
10963 | And how then? |
10963 | And how would any complaint from him be received at the Palace? |
10963 | And if she comes and kneels in the little box? |
10963 | And if that look is sweet and free from anger, shall he stop? |
10963 | And in whom could you better repose it? |
10963 | And the lover? |
10963 | And the weather- beaten soldier, the disciple of Voltaire, the malevolent, unmannerly father? |
10963 | And then, after what he has done, what would he dare to say? |
10963 | And they shouted to him:"Good- morning, Captain Durand, how are you to- day?" |
10963 | And till when? |
10963 | And to whom, you little wretch? |
10963 | And what did you answer him? |
10963 | And what has been the matter with you? |
10963 | And what is your duty? |
10963 | And what place is more favourable for this little display than going into and coming out of church? |
10963 | And what sort of people are they? |
10963 | And when? |
10963 | And where? |
10963 | And who is that handsome dark girl? |
10963 | And who told you that I was here? |
10963 | And you, Monsieur, what will you think of me? |
10963 | And your father, does he suspect? |
10963 | And yours? |
10963 | And, as he just uttered these words with bitterness, a soft voice answered like an echo:--The shame? |
10963 | And, besides, might he not have been summoned by a sick person? |
10963 | Are not all pleasures sins? |
10963 | Are those sentiments right or wrong? |
10963 | Are you already a grown- up girl, little rogue? |
10963 | Are you better? |
10963 | Are you jealous of him? |
10963 | Are you nominated to a better cure? |
10963 | Are you not ashamed to fall into errors which would scarcely be pardonable in a seminarist? |
10963 | Are you not ashamed to follow that calling? |
10963 | Are you not gratified at my visit? |
10963 | Are you not mistress here? |
10963 | Are you not my niece? |
10963 | Are you not of the stuff of which they make them? |
10963 | Are you not there? |
10963 | Are you satisfied? |
10963 | Are you the first- comer? |
10963 | Are you the man we need? |
10963 | Are you vexed already? |
10963 | Are you willing that we should follow one another thus in life? |
10963 | Are you willing? |
10963 | As soon as Marcel had recognized Suzanne, he did not take time to reflect, and say to himself:"What is it you are going to do, idiot?" |
10963 | As to my predecessors, were they no greater saints? |
10963 | As to that weather- beaten old soldier, why should I feel any pity on his account? |
10963 | Avail yourself of her willingness? |
10963 | Be must have been a priest, at least? |
10963 | Because she is a few years older than you? |
10963 | Besides, is it the case that God enjoins celibacy? |
10963 | But I, Marcel, I, am I a stranger? |
10963 | But Suzanne? |
10963 | But could I also, in my turn, ask something of you? |
10963 | But could you have found one more devoted, more discreet? |
10963 | But did you not make more resistance? |
10963 | But does he forget? |
10963 | But he came near directly and said:"Oh, the lovely little lass, how pretty she is like this.... You will always be good, will you not?" |
10963 | But her natural modesty made her reflect directly:"Has he looked at me because I am a stranger, or because I am pretty?" |
10963 | But is it really possible? |
10963 | But the old Captain, what was he looking for in the columns of the Service newspaper? |
10963 | But the other? |
10963 | But the others... you do not know what are the sins which you take pleasure in committing? |
10963 | But the time has gone on, the unexpected has not come, and now here I am, and I come to ask you: What do you intend to do with me? |
10963 | But was not he a respectable priest and respected by all, a minister of God, a leader of the holy flock, a pastor of men, and yet.... How then? |
10963 | But what am I saying? |
10963 | But what are the sins that you can commit at sixteen? |
10963 | But what are you driving at? |
10963 | But what had she to claim? |
10963 | But what is a man''s outward form? |
10963 | But what is the liberty that a well- behaved girl can enjoy? |
10963 | But what matters his youth to him? |
10963 | But what might not be the result of that love? |
10963 | But when you have loved one, two, three of them... afterwards, afterwards? |
10963 | But where was his pride? |
10963 | But who am I? |
10963 | But why do I speak to you of all that, am I mad? |
10963 | But you are in pain? |
10963 | But, after all, what did it matter to him? |
10963 | But, my dear child, upon whom would you count if not upon me? |
10963 | But, outside the pages of your novel, how many of them have you met in the world? |
10963 | By what chance was she still in the neighbourhood, this travelling swallow? |
10963 | By what right does she spy on you thus? |
10963 | Can I defy such a scandal? |
10963 | Can I do it? |
10963 | Can I turn her out? |
10963 | Can it be true? |
10963 | Can my daughter have anything in common with your peasants''Curé? |
10963 | Can one be offended with dreams? |
10963 | Can there be anything reasonable in the turpitude of heresy? |
10963 | Can we remain still and idle, when our Holy Father is imprisoned in a den of thieves? |
10963 | Come, come now, not so many affectations: for the lost time, how much do you want? |
10963 | Come, come, you most not hang down your head: see, lift up this pretty face and show me this little dimple; what did the Abbé Matou say to you?... |
10963 | Come, speak? |
10963 | Could I forget her if I were to meet again that burning look, which pursues me to the steps of the altar, and troubles me to the bottom of my soul?" |
10963 | Could a love facile and without risk soothe the hidden mischief and diminish the fury of a dangerous passion? |
10963 | Could a new fancy destroy the strong love which bound him and was ruining him? |
10963 | Could be abandon thus his heart which he had left behind there? |
10963 | Could he leave Suzanne in this way? |
10963 | Could it proceed for long without being known and remarked? |
10963 | Could one take offence at his not having completely stifled at thirty years the fierce passions of youth and his violent desires? |
10963 | Could this one make him forget the other? |
10963 | Did you hear anything in the night? |
10963 | Did you know that? |
10963 | Do I belong to myself? |
10963 | Do n''t do so, child, do n''t we all know what it is, my dear fellow? |
10963 | Do n''t you hear the rain outside? |
10963 | Do they call him the sweet Jesus? |
10963 | Do they perform their religious duties? |
10963 | Do you complain? |
10963 | Do you feel yourself qualified for this work? |
10963 | Do you know him? |
10963 | Do you know the sweet Jesus, Abbé Ridoux? |
10963 | Do you know what are the works of the flesh? |
10963 | Do you know who that is? |
10963 | Do you know, Monseigneur, what there was at the bottom? |
10963 | Do you live badly together? |
10963 | Do you not know then what Our Lord Jesus Christ has said about those who cause the little children to offend? |
10963 | Do you see him give ear? |
10963 | Do you suppose I am going to rummage into this gentleman''s private life and see what passes in his alcove? |
10963 | Do you take me for a simpleton? |
10963 | Do you take me then for a bad priest? |
10963 | Do you then regret? |
10963 | Do you think people are going to keep you and let you enjoy yourself for nothing? |
10963 | Do you understand the moral? |
10963 | Do you want him? |
10963 | Do you want me to enumerate the reasons? |
10963 | Do you wish me to tell you, sir? |
10963 | Does Monseigneur give notice of his visit? |
10963 | Does a man forget his youth, his glory, his dearest memories, his whole life? |
10963 | Does not every woman love instinctive pleasure? |
10963 | Does she know? |
10963 | Does that suit you, little one? |
10963 | Does their heart beat so hard because there is someone in the path? |
10963 | Duty? |
10963 | Eating? |
10963 | Eating? |
10963 | Eh, unhappy child, and your soul? |
10963 | Everything had happened so rapidly, that she had had no time to think, to reflect, to say to herself:"What does he want with me?" |
10963 | Faith? |
10963 | For it is long since you ate of the forbidden fruit, is it not, you little rogue? |
10963 | For the viper which harboured at his hearth, had its piercing glassy eye fixed unweariedly on him; and how could he crush the viper? |
10963 | Good rules, are they not, Monsieur Marcel? |
10963 | Had he felt the appetite for the unknown awakening? |
10963 | Had he not a perfect right like anybody else to take, the fresh air of evening? |
10963 | Had not Francis de Sales loved Madame de Chantal? |
10963 | Had not Fénélon loved Madame Guyon? |
10963 | Had not St. Jerome loved St. Paula? |
10963 | Had not all the saints loved? |
10963 | Has a moral torpor already seized you? |
10963 | Has he been inclined to debauchery? |
10963 | Has he still the right to call himself so? |
10963 | Has not God made wine to be drunk, flowers to be plucked, and women to be loved? |
10963 | Has not your Confessor already spoken to you about it? |
10963 | Has not your Confessor taught you that? |
10963 | Has not your presence caused all the dark clouds to fly away? |
10963 | Has one ever seen anything like? |
10963 | Has one ever seen such a thing? |
10963 | Has the little one behaved well? |
10963 | Have I gone and sought for you, have I? |
10963 | Have I hurt you without knowing it? |
10963 | Have I not observed the looks of all these village girls fixed on him with eager desire? |
10963 | Have I not spoken loudly enough my way of thinking on this subject? |
10963 | Have I said anything wrong to you? |
10963 | Have I the right to expect that from my daughter? |
10963 | Have they grown smaller too? |
10963 | Have they not told you that, told you that, told you that? |
10963 | Have you a lodging? |
10963 | Have you any business here which detains you then? |
10963 | Have you decided to go? |
10963 | Have you ever seen on the fair insipid faces of our_ young swells_ the imprint of a powerful and fertile intelligence? |
10963 | Have you forgotten it? |
10963 | Have you had a good dinner? |
10963 | Have you never read this word in a maiden''s two eyes? |
10963 | Have you not then taken your calling seriously? |
10963 | Have you not told me that you were my friend?... |
10963 | Have you really a little, Veronica? |
10963 | He called out sharply:--You are still there, Veronica? |
10963 | He followed my movements with the greatest attention;"Well, well, and that other leg?" |
10963 | He had, it is true, informed her of his departure the day before; but had not everything changed since the day before? |
10963 | He has even said that if I wished, he would find a more suitable position for me; but what position could he give me? |
10963 | He is a priest, but what does that matter? |
10963 | He is her only friend in this world, is he not? |
10963 | He reproves gently,"Why hesitate? |
10963 | He was thirsty, what signified to him the vessel? |
10963 | Her father had prevented her from coming to church, without any doubt; but why had he not seen her as before upon the roads, which they both liked? |
10963 | Her own virtue? |
10963 | His duty to himself? |
10963 | His heart? |
10963 | How can I get rid of her? |
10963 | How can I loosen myself from the gear? |
10963 | How can I show my brow all covered with shame? |
10963 | How canst thou always continue in very virtue?] |
10963 | How could he see Suzanne again, situated as he was between the jealous watching of the servant and the vigilance of the father? |
10963 | How could you be a Curé''s servant at that age? |
10963 | How did this priest''s admiration affect her? |
10963 | How far will he dare to go?" |
10963 | How had he come by this hatred, vigorous as that which Alcestis demands from virtuous souls against hypocrites and evil- doers? |
10963 | How have they received you here? |
10963 | How old are you? |
10963 | How, after what had passed the previous day, would he dream for a moment of remembering her? |
10963 | I am charged with an office; is it possible, I ask you yourself, for me to repel those who address themselves to that office? |
10963 | I am not disturbing you? |
10963 | I am tired: will you allow me to sit down? |
10963 | I blushed for shame and drew back as quickly as possible:"How can he,"I said to myself,"use Latin words to deceive poor women?" |
10963 | I escaped from his hands, and I turned round the table saying:"Ah, sweet Jesus, what is going to happen? |
10963 | I hate to be surrounded with incessant spying; what do you want to arrive at? |
10963 | I have had proofs of it; do you think I should have gone away, without that? |
10963 | I know you all well, you virtuous gentlemen, you fine priests who preach continency and morality, you are all just the same, all of you, do you hear? |
10963 | I said to myself:"Is it not one of the virgins detached from the window?" |
10963 | I suppose that with you, promotion is as it is with us? |
10963 | I told you yesterday that you were cleverer than I; you did not see then that I was joking? |
10963 | I wanted to make you understand that since you, you have erred, the others....--And what have they done? |
10963 | If I sin, it is because it gives me pleasure, is it not? |
10963 | If anyone encountered him in the night, wandering along the roads, what could they say? |
10963 | If anyone were to surprise us, the whole world would accuse us, and yet what is surer than our conscience? |
10963 | If she had put it in another place? |
10963 | If you want to pray to God, can you not pray to him at home? |
10963 | In which category do you want to be placed, my daughter? |
10963 | Is a man then lost because he has for one moment deviated from his way? |
10963 | Is a priest a man? |
10963 | Is he dead for one false step? |
10963 | Is he not her Curé? |
10963 | Is it a bad guess? |
10963 | Is it anything else? |
10963 | Is it because I have surprised your secrets? |
10963 | Is it evil? |
10963 | Is it far? |
10963 | Is it for to- day then? |
10963 | Is it long since she made her first communion? |
10963 | Is it not a fact that everybody here loves him? |
10963 | Is it not logical to befriend people whose appearance pleases you, rather than those whose face is disagreeable to you? |
10963 | Is it not my duty and business as priest? |
10963 | Is it not the act of a well- bred girl? |
10963 | Is it possible? |
10963 | Is it possible? |
10963 | Is it possible? |
10963 | Is it she? |
10963 | Is it that of reprobation which God has stamped upon my face? |
10963 | Is it then so hard? |
10963 | Is it there? |
10963 | Is it you, Gaudinet? |
10963 | Is it your conscience which is ill at ease? |
10963 | Is my dream then realised?" |
10963 | Is n''t that enough to humiliate me? |
10963 | Is not everything at your disposal? |
10963 | Is not his morality somewhat elastic, and his virtues very doubtful? |
10963 | Is not my infamy written there?... |
10963 | Is not my way all traced out? |
10963 | Is she then always pretty? |
10963 | Is that a sin too? |
10963 | Is that forbidden? |
10963 | Is the holy arch in danger because a few nails are rusty, because a few cords are rotten? |
10963 | Is there some little hindrance to your settling that? |
10963 | Is this then that liberty I so desired? |
10963 | Is your daughter acquainted with your proceeding? |
10963 | It appeals that they have said everything when they have said:"Who will give me to eat?" |
10963 | It is cold; do n''t you find it so? |
10963 | It is so in the army-- and with you? |
10963 | It is true, do you say? |
10963 | It meant a disagreement with his uncle, the hatred of this influential woman, the formidable persecution of the Bishop; but what was all that? |
10963 | Let us see what we can expect from you? |
10963 | Look at ours, Monseigneur Collard; what transcendant genius does he possess? |
10963 | Madame Connard appeared at once:--What, Mademoiselle is going away, is she not sleeping here? |
10963 | Madame Connard, he cried at the door, dear Madame Connard, will you bring up the bill, the little bill? |
10963 | Mademoiselle, what is the matter? |
10963 | Make use of this blessing which you possess? |
10963 | May we not write, give one another advice, follow one another from afar on the arduous road of life? |
10963 | Meanwhile the good ladies whispered among themselves, and said to one another with a scandalized air:"Did you see? |
10963 | Monsieur Fortin used that expression? |
10963 | Monsieur Fortin used to say to me:"Are we doing evil to our neighbours, Veronica?" |
10963 | Monsieur Tibulle takes a great interest in you then? |
10963 | Monsieur le Curé: why do we call that a sin? |
10963 | Must I fear then for all my little sheep? |
10963 | Must I put the dots on the i''s for you? |
10963 | Must I send her to you at that lady''s? |
10963 | My honour, my dignity as a man....--Ah, you are appealing to your honour now... but, sir, your duty, is not that your honour? |
10963 | My wife used to say to me:"What has this poor boy done to you that you receive him so badly? |
10963 | Nevertheless, some sincere persons may object:"What sort then is this cynical priest which you display to us? |
10963 | Nevertheless, the first impulse of self- love satisfied, what did it concern her? |
10963 | No? |
10963 | Now he has gone away, what will become of all the sinners of the Old- Town? |
10963 | Now he is old; ought he not to be appeased? |
10963 | Now, what constitutes life? |
10963 | Of which do you speak, fool? |
10963 | Oh God, God all- powerful, where am I? |
10963 | Oh vow of chastity, sentiments of modesty, manly dignity and priestly virtue, where were you, where were you? |
10963 | Oh, why are you doing that? |
10963 | Oh, why had he not dared ere this? |
10963 | One may kiss a Curé, may one not? |
10963 | One would say that she had a secret to confide to me and that she does not dare.... Could she have any suspicion? |
10963 | Others, doubtless, had found her pretty before he did; perhaps had told her so in a whisper, but was that the same thing? |
10963 | People said to me:"What is the matter with you, Mademoiselle Veronica? |
10963 | Perhaps Monsieur le Curé could eat a boiled egg?" |
10963 | Religion, dogma, mysteries, altar, priest, what is all that? |
10963 | Scandal, shame, and death perhaps, a terrible trinity, were they waiting not at his door? |
10963 | See, where are we going to begin? |
10963 | Shall I ever dare to raise my eyes after this filthy crime? |
10963 | She has caught two or three words perhaps; but what could she understand, and what have I let drop to compromise me? |
10963 | She, she, what will she think of me?... |
10963 | Should I dare to ask you to go upstairs an instant, and warm yourself at my fire? |
10963 | Should he go away? |
10963 | St. Origen was obliged to employ a grand means, you know what, my daughter? |
10963 | St. Theresa, her spiritual director, and Venillot, his cook? |
10963 | Suzanne''s room... but why should I describe the room?... |
10963 | Suzanne? |
10963 | Take a little brandy? |
10963 | Tell me, Veronica, what is your age? |
10963 | Tell me, will you? |
10963 | That Dominican who has married, and broken with the Church? |
10963 | That was a serious obstacle; but are there any serious obstacles for a man over- excited by drink? |
10963 | The door was opened at once, and an old woman with a face the colour of leather, invited her in mysteriously,"Whom shall I announce?" |
10963 | The future, do you say? |
10963 | The lawyer, the doctor....--Right- thinking? |
10963 | The other is to- day.--Do you believe in presentiments, Mademoiselle? |
10963 | The person doubtless does not suit you? |
10963 | The servant came near him:--It is you who are making me ill with your fits of anger, she said with solicitude: shall I make you a little tea? |
10963 | The servant went on:--Can it be that I, your servant, a poor ignorant village girl, should say that to you, Monsieur le Curé? |
10963 | The young girl seemed surprised, for she hesitated a little and said:--What, in the coupé? |
10963 | Then he cried:"Are you ticklish?" |
10963 | Then he used to kiss me and squeeze me to his heart, calling me his dear niece, and charging me to be good:--You will always be good? |
10963 | Then leaning over me:"Little one, little one, where are you in pain?" |
10963 | There has been then a tragedy, a drama, despair, tears? |
10963 | They laughed at me and said,''Whence hast thou come?''" |
10963 | This active adventurous life is amusing, do you see? |
10963 | This love, which plunged him into an ocean of delights, would it not plunge him also into an abyss of misfortunes? |
10963 | To make a poor servant suffer martyrdom in this way? |
10963 | Veronica, are you mad? |
10963 | Virtue? |
10963 | Virtue? |
10963 | Wait for what? |
10963 | Wait for what? |
10963 | Was anything more necessary? |
10963 | Was he dreaming? |
10963 | Was he going to call these women? |
10963 | Was he so really? |
10963 | Was it not a proof on the contrary of his victorious struggles and of his energy? |
10963 | Was it not better for me to act thus, than to let Monsieur Fortin run right and left and expose himself to all sorts of affronts, as some do? |
10963 | Was it possible? |
10963 | Was it possible? |
10963 | Was it then no longer Suzanne''s? |
10963 | Was not his crime written on his sullied brow in indelible soars? |
10963 | Was that quite true? |
10963 | Was the flower of his youth wasted away thus, in incessant, barren struggles? |
10963 | Was there a slight irony in that question? |
10963 | Was this then life? |
10963 | We have as much in it as our masters, have we not? |
10963 | We leave one another, we separate, but is that a reason why all should end? |
10963 | Well, and Suzanne? |
10963 | Well, but what are we going to do? |
10963 | Well, do you want me to tell you what I think of women who frequent churches? |
10963 | Well, how about the money I have spent on you, and on your journey? |
10963 | Well, old boy, what do you say to that? |
10963 | Were there not two kinds of love? |
10963 | What am I and what are we, and whom do we wish to deceive? |
10963 | What am I doing? |
10963 | What are then those great faults? |
10963 | What are you able to do all the blessed day? |
10963 | What are you afraid of? |
10963 | What are you afraid of? |
10963 | What avowal did this maiden of ardent feeling make to this hot- passioned man? |
10963 | What business had he in that loft? |
10963 | What can I do to prove it? |
10963 | What can these poor people of God have done to the man? |
10963 | What can they think of me then at the Post- office? |
10963 | What connection is there between their prayers and reveries, and the lively behaviour of this red- faced Abbé? |
10963 | What could he do? |
10963 | What could he say to these good people about hearts pure and chaste? |
10963 | What could he say? |
10963 | What could he venture? |
10963 | What could she expect from this Curé? |
10963 | What devil of an idea has shoved him into a cassock? |
10963 | What did I behold? |
10963 | What did he intend? |
10963 | What do they do there? |
10963 | What do you ask? |
10963 | What do you ask? |
10963 | What do you say to this proposal?" |
10963 | What do you want? |
10963 | What do you want? |
10963 | What does that Curé of Althausen want with me? |
10963 | What does that matter to me, poor unhappy creature that I am? |
10963 | What drama, what tragedy, and perhaps what ludicrous comedy, in which he, the priest, would play the odious and ridiculous character? |
10963 | What girl is perfect here below? |
10963 | What had the_ black- coats_ done to him? |
10963 | What had they done? |
10963 | What has become of those handsome lovers so tenderly entwined? |
10963 | What have I done to you? |
10963 | What have I done to you? |
10963 | What have you come for, my child? |
10963 | What have you just been doing? |
10963 | What have you seen then, wretched woman? |
10963 | What have you then to say to me? |
10963 | What is it he asked you? |
10963 | What is it then? |
10963 | What is more natural than such conduct? |
10963 | What is that open window, garnished with flowers, that room hung with rose, and at the back those white curtains which the morning sun is gilding? |
10963 | What is that? |
10963 | What is the matter? |
10963 | What is there surprising in a priest, stopping to talk to a young girl? |
10963 | What is there then to say regarding them? |
10963 | What is to be done? |
10963 | What is to be done? |
10963 | What is your calling? |
10963 | What jealous lover would dare to lift that curtain of serge behind which are murmured so many secret confidences? |
10963 | What joys has it brought him; what pleasures has he tasted? |
10963 | What man is there who has not experienced a delicious emotion on entering for the first time a young girl''s room? |
10963 | What matters, indeed, the past to him? |
10963 | What others could receive more discreetly than ourselves the trust of secret sufferings? |
10963 | What passed? |
10963 | What pretext could he raise before his superiors? |
10963 | What reason could he bring? |
10963 | What says your conscience? |
10963 | What scruples? |
10963 | What shall he do if Suzanne is there? |
10963 | What should he decide? |
10963 | What should he say? |
10963 | What sins do you commit then? |
10963 | What was he expecting then? |
10963 | What was the good? |
10963 | What were Marcel''s intentions? |
10963 | What were these stupid peasants laughing at? |
10963 | What will become of me with this creature? |
10963 | What will become of me? |
10963 | What will he believe? |
10963 | What will my father say? |
10963 | What will you? |
10963 | What would become of as if all the old remained? |
10963 | What would he do? |
10963 | What would he say to them? |
10963 | What would he say to- day to_ the young ladies_ of our modern Sodoms? |
10963 | What, can that be the maid Whose pure, fresh face attracted me but now, When I beheld her in her home; alas, And can the flower so quickly fade?"... |
10963 | What, you are married?... |
10963 | What? |
10963 | What? |
10963 | When she awakes from her short delirium, she says to herself:--What will he think of me? |
10963 | When she said:"Would Monsieur le Curé he pleased to come to breakfast? |
10963 | When slumber soft on all Around thee is outpoured; Oh Pepita, charming maid, My love, of what think''st thou? |
10963 | When we had both of us wept copiously for her, Monsieur le Curé said to me:"Now your aunt is dead, Veronica, what are you going to do?" |
10963 | When would she cease to have the ever- open eye of an inquisitive under- mistress upon her slightest gesture? |
10963 | Where are their loves? |
10963 | Where are they? |
10963 | Where are you going to sleep to- night? |
10963 | Where can she show her new dress? |
10963 | Where did you come from? |
10963 | Where have you come from? |
10963 | Where have you come from? |
10963 | Where have you spoken to him? |
10963 | Where is my virginity?" |
10963 | Where is the great artist, the great man, the hero, the saint, the martyr, who has not had to struggle with his own family? |
10963 | Where was his dignity? |
10963 | Where was she? |
10963 | Which of the two first forfeited the oath? |
10963 | Whither are we going in the ocean of social tempests, of political knaveries, of religious falsehoods? |
10963 | Who called you? |
10963 | Who can have made her suspect that you were here? |
10963 | Who can say that he is exempt from them? |
10963 | Who has called you? |
10963 | Who has made you suppose that I was not satisfied with you? |
10963 | Who has not breathed with voluptuous delight its sweet and chaste perfumes, and felt his heart soften in its fresh and fragrant atmosphere? |
10963 | Who is he? |
10963 | Who is he? |
10963 | Who is your Confessor? |
10963 | Who is_ whom it may concern_? |
10963 | Who was aware of his fault, and what was there, besides, in common between this young girl and himself? |
10963 | Who would believe in us without that? |
10963 | Who would have been capable of such efforts and sacrifices? |
10963 | Who would have believed it?" |
10963 | Who would suspect that such a little hand could hit so hard? |
10963 | Whom can one trust? |
10963 | Whom had she deceived? |
10963 | Whom had she dishonoured? |
10963 | Why are you blushing? |
10963 | Why are you vexed? |
10963 | Why delude myself with phantoms? |
10963 | Why did I not know it sooner? |
10963 | Why did you go away? |
10963 | Why do you cry so? |
10963 | Why do you repulse me? |
10963 | Why do you suppose that I know more about it than you? |
10963 | Why had he not stopped? |
10963 | Why had she not received a single warning from Marcel? |
10963 | Why not send all those peasants back to their village, and select men like Monsieur l''Abbé? |
10963 | Why place reverentially beneath a tabernacle of gold these pasteboard divinities? |
10963 | Why should I concern myself about your future? |
10963 | Why should he hesitate? |
10963 | Why should not you become one as well as another? |
10963 | Why then do you disdain her? |
10963 | Why then raise thus upon a pedestal of Parian marble these statues of clay? |
10963 | Why these tears, which break my heart? |
10963 | Why this decisive departure? |
10963 | Why this silence? |
10963 | Why, what''s the matter with you? |
10963 | Why? |
10963 | Why? |
10963 | Will he dare to look at her? |
10963 | Will he not despise me? |
10963 | Will you act like the Curé of Larriques? |
10963 | Will you let yourself be guided by me? |
10963 | Will you not make your little confession to me in your turn? |
10963 | Will you trust yourself to me? |
10963 | Would he find many of them at the present time?] |
10963 | Would not poverty come and knock at his door? |
10963 | Would one not say that the poor women are made of another paste than you, and that they ought to be harder? |
10963 | Would she not read on his troubled face the shameful secret of the drama within? |
10963 | Would the charming picture disappear? |
10963 | Would they not say...? |
10963 | Yes, I have given myself to him; but who in my place would have had the power to resist him? |
10963 | Yes, I love him; who would not love him? |
10963 | Yes, let us be cautious; in spite of this woman''s appearance of devotion, who would trust to such marks of affection? |
10963 | Yes, shall I dare to tell you so? |
10963 | You are a man, sir, and you understand me, do you not? |
10963 | You are always listening then at the doors? |
10963 | You are not offended at them, are you? |
10963 | You are not thinking then of going away? |
10963 | You are not wicked: what plague consumes you? |
10963 | You ask me that: what must I then do to convince you? |
10963 | You believed perhaps that I was going to lodge you and keep you for your pretty face? |
10963 | You dare hardly lift your eyes, and you say to yourself:"Which one shall I love in this legion of seraphims? |
10963 | You do n''t understand me, you say? |
10963 | You do not answer? |
10963 | You have been caught, my son; and caught by whom? |
10963 | You have been talking to her then? |
10963 | You have envied them; who would not envy them? |
10963 | You have finished your coffee? |
10963 | You have seen my father? |
10963 | You have then some great sins on your conscience? |
10963 | You hear, Monsieur le Curé? |
10963 | You here at such an hour and in the rain? |
10963 | You here? |
10963 | You know Gaudinet? |
10963 | You know, as well as I, to what dangers young priests are exposed; shall I be safe from those dangers by going away? |
10963 | You must certainly have gone to sleep in your village? |
10963 | You promise?" |
10963 | You remember, we were both of us at our window? |
10963 | You understand me? |
10963 | You want to make a complaint do you? |
10963 | You want to take me away on her account, but are there not young persons everywhere? |
10963 | You were not gone to bed then? |
10963 | You will always be so? |
10963 | You will give me your patronage, will you not? |
10963 | You wish to come to the town? |
10963 | Young, intelligent, learned, what was there to stop him? |
10963 | [ 1] What will stop them? |
10963 | [ Illustration] Doubtless she was saying to herself:"Is it really possible? |
10963 | a robbery? |
10963 | already? |
10963 | and as tongues would wag, her father perhaps might hear of it, and what explanation could she give? |
10963 | and where do you want to go to? |
10963 | and who besides? |
10963 | and who is your lover? |
10963 | are you ticklish there?" |
10963 | at your age? |
10963 | but where, but when can I see her?..." |
10963 | can it be? |
10963 | continued the old President passing his trembling hand over the young girl''s waist: have not these breasts grown a little thin? |
10963 | could some misfortune have happened to my father?" |
10963 | cried Marcel: but at what age did you begin? |
10963 | do you believe it? |
10963 | everything said already? |
10963 | for in fact... what devil...?" |
10963 | for one of Molière''s uncles?... |
10963 | he said to himself, whither am I going? |
10963 | in the cabinet? |
10963 | is he not a man? |
10963 | is that your thought? |
10963 | it was not the Abbé Fortin then? |
10963 | no, no, dear child; to the friend, to the friend, is it not? |
10963 | not even from a sister? |
10963 | of your weakness? |
10963 | said Durand; and turning towards me, Shall I receive him? |
10963 | said Marcel, hurt, must not Mademoiselle follow her religion? |
10963 | said Marcel, you wish...? |
10963 | said the old Curé, giving his nephew a paternal embrace; how are you, my poor boy? |
10963 | she said to herself,"what is he doing there?" |
10963 | she, a little school- girl, was she distracting from his prayers, at the very foot of the altar, a minister of the altar? |
10963 | tell me, what do you want to arrive at? |
10963 | these ecclesiastics? |
10963 | to dance on the tight- rope? |
10963 | to feign with myself that I have them not? |
10963 | to find some covering for them beneath which I conceal them, in order to play a part a little less foolish in my own conscience?" |
10963 | to hide them from myself? |
10963 | was the madman then beginning to cast his heart thus on the roads, and could he feel smitten by this creature whom he had scarcely met? |
10963 | what can I do? |
10963 | what do you say? |
10963 | what do you say? |
10963 | what do you want? |
10963 | what has passed then? |
10963 | what is it? |
10963 | what would she say? |
10963 | what? |
10963 | when would she be free? |
10963 | where am I going? |
10963 | where is all this going to bring me? |
10963 | where is that? |
10963 | where is virtue? |
10963 | who is knocking at the door? |
10963 | why not always? |
10963 | will you continue to be my niece?" |
10963 | work out her salvation? |
10963 | you are going away? |
10963 | you are not tired out already? |
10963 | you are pleased to wish to forget, are you? |
10963 | you frighten me....--It is your fault, Veronica; why do you put me into such passion? |
10963 | you speak in such a manner to me? |
10963 | you think me pretty? |
10963 | you think then that I am quite old? |
10963 | you, Veronica? |
10963 | you, the pious Veronica, you say such things? |