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 |
---|---|
61529 | But, Men of the late Supervisory Committee, and the thousands whom you represented, how have you kept yours? |
61529 | When is this to begin? |
3114 | What can we do, what ought we to do, for his own good and for our peace and national welfare? |
3114 | Why attempt it? |
3114 | Why attempt to civilize the race within our doors, while there are so many distant and alien races to whom we ought to turn our civilizing attention? |
3114 | Why not let things drift as they are? |
61199 | Buddy, do you know what you can do with your sandgems and your windstones? |
61199 | Damn you, did you know I was a jet pilot a long time ago? 61199 Well, why the hell do n''t you stay there? |
61199 | Why all the hilarity, spaceboy? 61199 And how could anyone have known? |
61199 | Did you know I was going to be one of the space pioneers? |
61199 | Feeling proud of yourself?" |
61199 | Why do n''t all of you stay off Earth? |
34028 | GROSE, HOWARD B.,_ Aliens or Americans?_ Forward Mission Study Courses. |
34028 | How can these qualities be produced in a race just emerged from slavery? |
34028 | Nearly every question of social pathology may be resolved to this, Why does he not work? |
34028 | Now what is the case in regard to these diseases? |
34028 | Now, my friends, in the face of all these disadvantages, do you not think we are doing well to stay here as long as we do?" |
34028 | Then why should he work? |
34028 | What is the nature of this problem, and what are the forces available for its solution? |
34028 | What shall be the nature of this education? |
34028 | Why does he work? |
34028 | [ 140] Grose,"Aliens or Americans?" |
34028 | and, Do our social institutions offer free opportunity and high incentive to the youth of ability? |
17875 | --"What for this child?" |
17875 | --"What for this woman?" |
17875 | And now, Reader, what would you have done? |
17875 | B., and D. S., and S. T.? |
17875 | For what crime? |
17875 | If this is not cowardice as well as villainy-- and both of them double- refined-- then, I ask, what is cowardice, or what is villainy? |
17875 | Is it true or not, that a colored man has all the rights of a white man? |
17875 | Is this a question still mooted among Abolitionists? |
17875 | Is this freedom? |
17875 | Such was the nature of the demand-- would it not have been base to have yielded? |
17875 | The parties immediately concerned were satisfied-- why should others demur? |
17875 | What true heart will be, if there be any virtue in expedients?" |
17875 | What was he to do? |
17875 | What was to be done? |
17875 | Who can not do that? |
17875 | Whoever sought to marry yet, and did the deed unblessed or uncursed of public praise or wrath? |
17875 | Why should she not move on? |
31254 | Am I an American or am I a Negro? |
31254 | Can I be both? |
31254 | Does my black blood place upon me any more obligation to assert my nationality than German, or Irish or Italian blood would? |
31254 | How should we meet discriminations on railways and in hotels? |
31254 | If I strive as a Negro, am I not perpetuating the very cleft that threatens and separates Black and White America? |
31254 | Is it good policy? |
31254 | Is it rational? |
31254 | Is it the physical differences of blood, color and cranial measurements? |
31254 | Is not my only possible practical aim the subduction of all that is Negro in me to the American? |
31254 | Is this right? |
31254 | Or is it my duty to cease to be a Negro as soon as possible and be an American? |
31254 | The question is, then: How shall this message be delivered; how shall these various ideals be realized? |
31254 | The question now is: What is the real distinction between these nations? |
31254 | What shall be its function in the future? |
31254 | What should be our attitude toward separate schools? |
31254 | What, then, is a race? |
5685 | Am I an American or am I a Negro? |
5685 | Can I be both? |
5685 | Does my black blood place upon me any more obligation to assert my nationality than German, or Irish or Italian blood would? |
5685 | How should we meet discriminations on railways and in hotels? |
5685 | If I strive as a Negro, am I not perpetuating the very cleft that threatens and separates Black and White America? |
5685 | Is it good policy? |
5685 | Is it rational? |
5685 | Is it the physical differences of blood, color and cranial measurements? |
5685 | Is not my only possible practical aim the subduction of all that is Negro in me to the American? |
5685 | Is this right? |
5685 | Or is it my duty to cease to be a Negro as soon as possible and be an American? |
5685 | The question is, then: How shall this message be delivered; how shall these various ideals be realized? |
5685 | The question now is: What is the real distinction between these nations? |
5685 | What shall be its function in the future? |
5685 | What should be our attitude toward separate schools? |
5685 | What, then, is a race? |
31301 | Had they not,he asks,"their game to preserve; their borough interests to strengthen, dinners to eat and give?... |
31301 | And after all, who are the poor? |
31301 | Are we not shortsightedly preparing for calamities far more destructive, and more enduring than the political murders of the last thirty years? |
31301 | But do we believe that it is so? |
31301 | But, after all, why should we consider which path we should follow, that of resistance, or that of submission, before we know where we are going? |
31301 | Can we regret it? |
31301 | Do we applaud the superior strength or cunning of Cain, or pretend that the discovery of gun- powder strengthened the arm of the_ good_? |
31301 | Do we go about the streets giving prizes to octogenarians, or put down to wickedness the early death of a child? |
31301 | Is there anything in the English or American past, to justify us in believing that they will part more willingly with wealth than with power? |
31301 | Is thrift taxed, which seems able to bear, or prodigality, which spares nothing? |
31301 | It is our duty to deal with this thought in its nakedness, and each of us answer for himself, this question: Shall I kneel down? |
31301 | Somebody has been saying to us; Just let us own blocks of southern railroad stock and who will bid us ride on a Jim Crow car? |
31301 | Upon whose shoulders falls the lash of scorn and punishment? |
31301 | What hunter can_ aim_ his gun at a bird which rises from beneath his feet? |
31301 | What is that survival, which we must fight for; what is this conquest, which gilds ignoble stooping? |
31301 | What, then, does the history of the American people teach us? |
31301 | Who could it have been, who offered us this advice? |
31301 | Why then, should we otherwise regard long life in a whole people? |
31301 | Will he not rather fire at a bird which is coming or going? |
31301 | Will they continue their devastating progress over the earth, never resting until they have extinguished every other race? |
32142 | ''Smatter, Sharkie? 32142 A lot of honest men went down in those riots, did n''t they? |
32142 | And you come back here? |
32142 | Can I have my papers now? |
32142 | Do you want to see him, or not? |
32142 | Drink? |
32142 | Freedom to starve? 32142 Have you filled out an application?" |
32142 | Here, I can let you have as much as you need-- couple hundred? |
32142 | How long you been on the Rings? |
32142 | Now, then, what are you after? |
32142 | Robert Stover? |
32142 | Sure, there''s a law, but who''s going to enforce it? |
32142 | We do n''t hire Sharkies, law or no law, get that? 32142 Well?" |
32142 | Whassa- matter, Sharkie, ya deaf? |
32142 | What do you think you''re going to do now? |
32142 | What were you doing in the Rings, Sharkie? |
32142 | What''s happened, Dave? 32142 What''s the trouble, Tam? |
32142 | Where do you mean? |
32142 | Where have you_ been_, Tam? 32142 Why did n''t you holler sooner? |
32142 | Why would n''t he listen? 32142 Yes?" |
32142 | _ Why is that the way things are?_ What have I done? 32142 _ Why is that the way things are?_ What have I done? |
32142 | And he wore that chain he had built up, and he had to drag it, and drag it, from one eternity to the next-- his name was Marley, remember?" |
32142 | Criminal assault-- it has an ugly sound, does n''t it, Dave? |
32142 | Freedom to crawl on my hands and knees for a little bit of food? |
32142 | Good Lord, man, you''d have no freedom, no life--""What freedom do I have now?" |
32142 | How can you let yourself down?" |
32142 | How you could n''t stand cigarettes? |
32142 | I''m on these exclusively these days-- remember how you tried to get me to smoke them, back at the University? |
32142 | That''s the way things are--""But_ why_?" |
32142 | We talked, Dave, do n''t you remember how we talked? |
32142 | What do you expect me to do?" |
32142 | Where do you think you are?" |
32142 | Why could n''t he have gone to Mercury? |
32142 | Whyncha drink y''r beer''n get t''hell out o''here?" |
32142 | Wonder what happened to the old goat?" |
60020 | Adjaha, you black scoundrel, why do n''t you die? |
60020 | And you live here? |
60020 | Are you going home now? |
60020 | Dammit, Quette, how many times have I told you they are not your people? 60020 Dammit,"he complained,"why did n''t they take me to the base hospital?" |
60020 | Do n''t you know I''m moving on Tullahoma in the morning? |
60020 | From where? |
60020 | Gard, are n''t there other worlds than this one...? |
60020 | Have I dreamed that we met before? |
60020 | If it were Piquette alone I had to consider, do n''t you think I''d have advocated equality for the black race? |
60020 | Is this man some relative of yours? 60020 Piquette, what on earth is this folly?" |
60020 | Piquette? |
60020 | Quette, have you hired a voodoo man to hex me? |
60020 | Quette, what are you doing out here? |
60020 | Tell me, General, how long had Piquette been your mistress before the Memphis Conference? |
60020 | Then how is it that we actually have war and defeat? |
60020 | Which of your secretaries is a quadroon? |
60020 | Why could n''t she wait until this push is over? |
60020 | Will you have breakfast with me? |
60020 | Will you want me for anything else? |
60020 | You damn black coon,he said without rancor,"you know you''re costing me a night''s sleep?" |
60020 | You remember that you relived your participation in the governors''conference in Memphis? |
60020 | You''re a visitor to town, are n''t you? 60020 But why had that particular name come to mind? 60020 Ca n''t you see that, Gard? 60020 Had the Union forces been repulsed by some miracle? 60020 Have n''t you been listening to that damn radio? |
60020 | He recognized that he was in the house in Winchester, in the room where he had spent last night... or was it last night? |
60020 | Here or in Chattanooga?" |
60020 | How can you say that? |
60020 | Is n''t that right, Gard?" |
60020 | My God, has the world gone mad? |
60020 | Surely Piquette would not have led him into a trap set by Northern spies? |
60020 | Through the haze over his mind intruded a premonition that bit more deeply than the physical pain: Never to know Piquette? |
60020 | Was it the memory of a dream? |
60020 | What does his being here have to do with this crazy talk of ending the war?" |
60020 | Where did you spend the night? |
60020 | Where was Lucy? |
60020 | Would you be happy if we were never to know each other?" |
60020 | Your name is Piquette, is n''t it? |
7101 | And ai n''t you had nothing but that kind of rubbage to eat? |
7101 | And so you ai n''t had no meat nor bread to eat all this time? 7101 Have you got hairy arms and a hairy breast, Jim?" |
7101 | How you gwyne to git''m? 7101 Is that what you live on?" |
7101 | Well, are you rich? |
7101 | Well, what did come of it, Jim? |
7101 | Well, you must be most starved, ai n''t you? |
7101 | What did you do with the ten cents, Jim? |
7101 | What did you speculate in, Jim? |
7101 | What kind of stock? |
7101 | What''s de use er makin''up de camp fire to cook strawbries en sich truck? 7101 What''s de use to ax dat question? |
7101 | What, all that time? |
7101 | Why did n''t you roust me out? |
7101 | Why, Jim? |
7101 | Why, how long you been on the island, Jim? |
7101 | And what do you reckon they said? |
7101 | And what do you think? |
7101 | And, besides, he said them little birds had said it was going to rain, and did I want the things to get wet? |
7101 | But you got a gun, hain''t you? |
7101 | But you wouldn''tell on me ef I uz to tell you, would you, Huck?" |
7101 | By and by Jim says:"But looky here, Huck, who wuz it dat''uz killed in dat shanty ef it warn''t you?" |
7101 | Did you hear''em shooting the cannon?" |
7101 | Did you speculate any more?" |
7101 | Do n''t you see I has?" |
7101 | He says:"What you doin''with this gun?" |
7101 | How could a body do it in de night? |
7101 | How long you ben on de islan''?" |
7101 | Next time you roust me out, you hear?" |
7101 | Then I says:"How do you come to be here, Jim, and how''d you get here?" |
7101 | Then he studied it over and said, could n''t I put on some of them old things and dress up like a girl? |
7101 | Thinks I, what is the country a- coming to? |
7101 | W''y, what has you lived on? |
7101 | Want to keep it off?" |
7101 | Well, WASN''T he mad? |
7101 | What you want to know when good luck''s a- comin''for? |
7101 | What you''bout?" |
7101 | Why did n''t you get mud- turkles?" |
7101 | You ca n''t slip up on um en grab um; en how''s a body gwyne to hit um wid a rock? |
7101 | You know that one- laigged nigger dat b''longs to old Misto Bradish? |
7100 | But how can we do it if we do n''t know what it is? |
7100 | How you going to get them? |
7100 | Must we always kill the people? |
7100 | No, sir,I says;"is there some for me?" |
7100 | Now,says Ben Rogers,"what''s the line of business of this Gang?" |
7100 | Oh, that''s all very fine to SAY, Tom Sawyer, but how in the nation are these fellows going to be ransomed if we do n''t know how to do it to them? 7100 Ransomed? |
7100 | The widow, hey?--and who told the widow she could put in her shovel about a thing that ai n''t none of her business? |
7100 | Well, hain''t he got a father? |
7100 | Well,I says,"s''pose we got some genies to help US-- can''t we lick the other crowd then?" |
7100 | Who makes them tear around so? |
7100 | And looky here-- you drop that school, you hear? |
7100 | Did you come for your interest?" |
7100 | Do n''t I tell you it''s in the books? |
7100 | Do n''t you reckon that the people that made the books knows what''s the correct thing to do? |
7100 | Do you reckon YOU can learn''em anything? |
7100 | Do you want to go to doing different from what''s in the books, and get things all muddled up?" |
7100 | He says:"Why, what can you mean, my boy?" |
7100 | He set there a- mumbling and a- growling a minute, and then he says:"AIN''T you a sweet- scented dandy, though? |
7100 | He took up a little blue and yaller picture of some cows and a boy, and says:"What''s this?" |
7100 | Hey?--how''s that?" |
7100 | How can they get loose when there''s a guard over them, ready to shoot them down if they move a peg?" |
7100 | How do THEY get them?" |
7100 | I ai n''t the man to stand it-- you hear? |
7100 | I said, why could n''t we see them, then? |
7100 | I says to myself, if a body can get anything they pray for, why do n''t Deacon Winn get back the money he lost on pork? |
7100 | Is something the matter?" |
7100 | Kill the women? |
7100 | Now, what do you reckon it is?" |
7100 | Pretty soon Jim says:"Say, who is you? |
7100 | Say, do we kill the women, too?" |
7100 | Say, how much you got in your pocket? |
7100 | Then Ben Rogers says:"Here''s Huck Finn, he hain''t got no family; what you going to do''bout him?" |
7100 | Then he says:"Who dah?" |
7100 | Whar is you? |
7100 | What I wanted to know was, what he was going to do, and was he going to stay? |
7100 | What you know''bout witches?" |
7100 | What''s that?" |
7100 | Who told you you might meddle with such hifalut''n foolishness, hey?--who told you you could?" |
7100 | Why ca n''t Miss Watson fat up? |
7100 | Why ca n''t a body take a club and ransom them as soon as they get here?" |
7100 | Why ca n''t the widow get back her silver snuffbox that was stole? |
7100 | Why could n''t you said that before? |
7100 | You lemme catch you fooling around that school again, you hear? |
7100 | You think you''re a good deal of a big- bug, DON''T you?" |
7100 | You think you''re better''n your father, now, do n''t you, because he ca n''t? |
7100 | You''ll take it--won''t you?" |
7100 | and I as high as a tree and as big as a church? |
7104 | Did anybody send''em word? |
7104 | Do I know you? 7104 Funeral to- morrow, likely?" |
7104 | Hamlet''s which? |
7104 | Is dat so? |
7104 | Was Peter Wilks well off? |
7104 | What''s onkores, Bilgewater? |
7104 | When did you say he died? |
7104 | Wher''you bound for, young man? |
7104 | Why do n''t it, Huck? |
7104 | Why do you reckon Harvey do n''t come? 7104 YOU talk like an Englishman, DON''T you? |
7104 | Ai n''t that sensible?" |
7104 | And what kind o''uncles would it be that''d rob-- yes, ROB-- sech poor sweet lambs as these''at he loved so at sech a time? |
7104 | Ask him to show up? |
7104 | By and by, when they was asleep and snoring, Jim says:"Do n''t it s''prise you de way dem kings carries on, Huck?" |
7104 | He says:"If gentlemen kin afford to pay a dollar a mile apiece to be took on and put off in a yawl, a steamboat kin afford to carry''em, ca n''t it?" |
7104 | He see me, and rode up and says:"Whar''d you come f''m, boy? |
7104 | How does he go at it--give notice?--give the country a show? |
7104 | How old is the others?" |
7104 | Is Mary Jane the oldest? |
7104 | Is that ALL?" |
7104 | It make me mad; en I says agin, mighty loud, I says:"''Doan''you hear me? |
7104 | Now, WOULDN''T he? |
7104 | S''pose he contracted to do a thing, and you paid him, and did n''t set down there and see that he done it-- what did he do? |
7104 | S''pose he opened his mouth-- what then? |
7104 | S''pose people left money laying around where he was-- what did he do? |
7104 | Says the king:"Dern him, I wonder what he done with that four hundred and fifteen dollars?" |
7104 | The king he smiled eager, and shoved out his flapper, and says:"Is it my poor brother''s dear good friend and physician? |
7104 | The windows and dooryards was full; and every minute somebody would say, over a fence:"Is it THEM?" |
7104 | Then he says:"How are you on the deef and dumb, Bilgewater?" |
7104 | Then he says:"What did you want to walk all the way up to the steamboat for?" |
7104 | Twenty people sings out:"What, is it over? |
7104 | Well, then, what kind o''brothers would it be that''d stand in his way at sech a time? |
7104 | Well, what did he do? |
7104 | What was the use to tell Jim these warn''t real kings and dukes? |
7104 | Wher''does he live?" |
7104 | Why do n''t your juries hang murderers? |
7104 | Why, Billy, it beats the Nonesuch, DON''T it?" |
7104 | Will you?" |
7104 | You AIN''T him, are you?" |
7104 | You going to Orleans, you say?" |
7104 | You prepared to die?" |
7104 | and Abner Shackleford says:"Why, Robinson, hain''t you heard the news? |
7104 | they give a glance at one another, and nodded their heads, as much as to say,"What d''I tell you?" |
31055 | Lord, and what shall this man do? |
31055 | Are we fighting for democracy for all the people, or are we fighting for democracy for the white man only? |
31055 | Are you going to make all of the North a land of widows and orphans?'' |
31055 | Can the blind lead the blind? |
31055 | Could we cook with proper utensils? |
31055 | Could we dress as we do now? |
31055 | Could we eat with knives and forks? |
31055 | Does he do the thing that he sets out to do, and does he do it well?" |
31055 | He received letters and telegrams by the thousands saying:''My God, General, are you going to kill all of our husbands, all of our sons, our brothers? |
31055 | How shall we thank them for what they have been to us? |
31055 | How should the whole treat the sick? |
31055 | In other words, how can the school better fit the student to take his place in the social and economic life of today? |
31055 | Is it any wonder then that we are having such poor crops? |
31055 | Is it to consist of the Negro knowing his place and staying in it, or is it to consist of the Negro knowing the truth and being free? |
31055 | Lord, what shall this black man do? |
31055 | Men in all parts of the country are becoming alarmed over the situation and are asking,"whither are we drifting?" |
31055 | Mr. Baker says:"One of the questions I asked of Negroes whom I met both North and South was this:"''What is your chief cause of complaint?'' |
31055 | Now how changed are these conditions? |
31055 | Now what are the opportunities offered him in the North? |
31055 | Now, how should the strong treat the weak? |
31055 | Now, what can be expected of any people in such a condition? |
31055 | Our records will show that we have been faithful over a few things, may we not retain the faith and trust of friends? |
31055 | See the late Dr. Booker T. Washington''s article,"Is the Negro Having a Fair Chance?" |
31055 | Suppose today the white man of this country should say that the Negro must use only the things which he could make, what would be his condition? |
31055 | That point is simply this: Does he''make good''in results? |
31055 | Then why do you say, here is the ignorant Negro, therefore let us give him less educational opportunities than we give the white man? |
31055 | They could have given much work to these destitute people; but what have they done? |
31055 | WHERE LIES THE NEGRO''S OPPORTUNITY? |
31055 | WHERE LIES THE NEGRO''S OPPORTUNITY? |
31055 | What else can they do but go away in search of work? |
31055 | What is the answer of the white man? |
31055 | What of its loyalty to Tuskegee, our Alma Mater? |
31055 | What shall he do? |
31055 | What shall this man do? |
31055 | When the world is made safe for democracy, will the entire country be made safe for it? |
31055 | Which shall it be? |
31055 | Who can enumerate the offences which have been committed against the church? |
31055 | Why should we send our raw material to the North to be manufactured? |
31055 | Will it be possible for a Negro travelling from Alabama to California or Massachusetts, to find a place to sleep at night? |
31055 | Will lynchings and burnings at the stake cease? |
31055 | Will my father, mother, sister and brother be allowed to share in this democracy? |
31055 | Will the Negro be given any work that he is capable of doing and not be denied it on account of his color? |
31055 | Will the white man who makes the laws allow these laws to take their course? |
31055 | Will they allow us or give us a fair trial before their courts, which have only white men as jurors? |
31055 | Will they cease taxing us without representation? |
31055 | Will they give us an equal part of the money spent for education? |
31055 | Would a strong man say, here is a weak man with a heavy burden, therefore, I will put more upon him? |
31055 | Would a well man say, here is a sick man, therefore, I shall give him less medical treatment? |
31055 | this that is glorious in his apparel, traveling in the greatness of His strength?'' |
49315 | Are your friends then no object? |
49315 | Aye, as long as her childhood lasts, but she is now nearly fifteen; and who can you marry her to, with the education you have given her? 49315 But surely it is no fault of her''s? |
49315 | But will she not remain with me? |
49315 | Is this your good faith? |
49315 | Is this your vaunted sincerity? 49315 Nay, do you deny that you have a secret sorrow? |
49315 | What doth the man know who hath not suffered? |
49315 | What had I done that I should have been brought to this land of exile? 49315 What, Madam, can I have to reveal to you? |
49315 | --"But why neglect your talents?" |
49315 | All hearts have not the same wants; and does not real misfortune consist in the heart''s being deprived of its desires? |
49315 | And when I thought that I was only envying the_ picture_ of his bliss, did my impious wishes aspire to the object itself? |
49315 | And why might I not have the same feelings for Charles, my friend from infancy, and the protector of my youth? |
49315 | Besides, as she has not remained in the station she was first intended for, may not her mind rise superior to the restraints of her present one?" |
49315 | But is happiness always the result of the development of our faculties? |
49315 | But who can judge the motives of another? |
49315 | Can it be believed? |
49315 | Does that prevent sympathy?" |
49315 | Ever and for ever alone? |
49315 | God should be the aim of man, but has your''s been? |
49315 | Have you ever considered in what that duty consisted? |
49315 | Her friends are all happy, then let Ourika be so, and die as the leaves fall in autumn? |
49315 | How comes it that you make not a better use of the ample resources of your mind?" |
49315 | I nourish a criminal passion? |
49315 | Is not humanity alone the cause of the sublimest devotion of every kind? |
49315 | Is she forbidden to think of him? |
49315 | Might I not love him more than my own life, and yet with innocence? |
49315 | She is a charming girl; her mind is nearly formed; she possesses wit, infinite natural grace, and very superior talents; but what is to become of her? |
49315 | Tell me, merciful heaven, what have I done to deserve such happiness?" |
49315 | Thou knowest, O Lord, that I envied not his happiness, but why gavest thou life to poor Ourika? |
49315 | To live alone? |
49315 | What cause had I given to be suspected of so hopeless a passion? |
49315 | What do you intend to do with her?" |
49315 | What had she revealed to me? |
49315 | What horrid interpretation had she put upon my grief? |
49315 | What will satisfy her, now that she has passed her life with you in the intimacy of your society?" |
49315 | Who will ever marry a negro girl? |
49315 | Who would have sympathised with my feelings? |
49315 | Who? |
49315 | Why was Ourika condemned to live? |
49315 | Will a man whom she would choose ever choose her?" |
49315 | and are even her tears become a crime? |
49315 | cried he,"Had I ever any thing to say in former times? |
49315 | for his goodness, for his having been the protecting angel of my life? |
49315 | for what? |
49315 | must I own my folly?" |
20587 | Would it be possible,the new defense chief asked his manpower assistant,"to introduce into these units a reasonable number of negro personnel? |
20587 | [ 6- 36] Here then was the dilemma: Was not the Army a social institution as well as a fighting organization? 20587 At one of the Fahy Committee hearings, for instance, an exasperated Charles Fahy asked Omar Bradley,General, are you running an Army or a dance? |
20587 | But how were these changes being accepted among the rank and file? |
20587 | But what about the black serviceman himself? |
20587 | But who knew what soldiers''attitudes were? |
20587 | Can it be that the whole policy of segregation, especially in large units like the 92nd and 93rd Division, ADVERSELY AFFECTS MORALE AND EFFICIENCY? |
20587 | Could traditional organizational and social patterns in the military services be changed during a war without disrupting combat readiness? |
20587 | Did businesses not have the right to choose their customers? |
20587 | Did local authorities not have the right to enforce the law in their communities? |
20587 | Have they used Negro manpower efficiently?... |
20587 | He could point out that black soldiers must be included in the new program, but how was he to fit them in? |
20587 | He has written several studies for military publications including"Armed Forces Integration-- Forced or Free?" |
20587 | How could it, the Army asked, endanger the morale and efficiency of its fighting forces by integrating these( p. 356) men? |
20587 | How could the Army claim that it was operating efficiently when a shortage existed and potentially capable persons were being ignored? |
20587 | How did the serviceman view his condition, how did he convey his desire for redress, and what was his reaction to social change? |
20587 | How did they train and use their black troops? |
20587 | How then could it refuse to conform with the local statutes and customs of some northern states without appearing inconsistent? |
20587 | How would modifications of policy come-- through external pressure or internal reform? |
20587 | How, one critic asked, could the services set up standards against which a commander''s performance might be fairly judged? |
20587 | How, then, could the conflicting advice be channeled into construction of an acceptable postwar racial policy? |
20587 | If not, he asked,"what do you recommend be done about it? |
20587 | If you have employed Negro platoons in the same company with white platoons, what is your opinion of the practicability of this arrangement?" |
20587 | In fact, would black units ever get overseas? |
20587 | Reversing the coin, what could the Army do with the highly qualified black soldier? |
20587 | Should the Navy, he wanted to know, withdraw these Negroes? |
20587 | There had been some race prejudice among servicemen, but, the veteran asked,"What has caused this anti- Negro talk among those who stayed at home? |
20587 | Throughout the war the whites were segregated from the Negroes( why not say it this way for a change?) |
20587 | Was segregation, a practice in conflict with the democratic aims of the country, also a wasteful use of manpower? |
20587 | What do you say?" |
20587 | What irritations, frictions, and disorders arising from racial conflicts had hampered their operations? |
20587 | What were their( p. 132) recommendations on how best to use black troops after the war? |
20587 | Which would you shut, those bases that do n''t have race problems or those that do?" |
20587 | Why not try to determine, for example, how far public opinion and pressure would permit the Army to go in developing policies for black troops? |
20587 | Why not, he suggested, make some scientific inquiries? |
20587 | Why not, he suggested, settle for the old black, white, yellow, red, and brown designations? |
20587 | Why should the Army, these traditionalists might ask, abandon its black units, some with histories stretching back almost a century? |
20587 | Why then should the old patterns be modified; why exchange comfort for possible chaos? |
20587 | Will any of those left be allowed to fight? |
20587 | Would the Army train and use Negroes in units together with whites? |
20587 | Would the Army use Negroes in combat units? |
20587 | Yet the pollsters found much less opposition to integration when they put their questions on a personal basis--"How do_ you_ feel about...?" |
4068 | And if so, what has the Negro to care-- if let alone and not wantonly thwarted in his aspirations? |
4068 | And what, as a consequence of this fact, has the world ever heard in disparagement of Grenada throughout this long series of years? |
4068 | And wherefore? |
4068 | Are the Negroes under the French flag not intensely French? |
4068 | Are the Negroes under the Spanish flag not intensely Spanish? |
4068 | Are we to understand him as suggesting that voting by black electors would be synonymous with electing black representatives? |
4068 | Being thus circumstanced, thought we, what rational elements of mutual hatred should now continue to exist in the bosoms of the two races? |
4068 | But in the British Crown-- or rather"Anglo- West Indian"--governed Colonies, has it ever been, can it ever be, thus ordered? |
4068 | But is Mr. Froude serious in invoking the ostracizing of innocent, loyal, and meritorious British subjects on account of their mere colour? |
4068 | But what shall we say of the suggestion contained in the very next sentence, which we have italicized? |
4068 | But where, in the name of Heaven, where are these sortis de la cuisse de Jupiter, Mr. Froude? |
4068 | But, after all, what does our author mean by the words"a government by the blacks?" |
4068 | But, to speak the truth, is not this solicitude of our cynical defamer on our behalf, after all, a useless waste of emotion on his part? |
4068 | Can the urgency of such responsibility ever cease but with the capacity, on our own or on our brother''s part, to do or be done by respectively? |
4068 | Does Mr. Froude''s scorn of the Negroes''skin extend, inconsistently on his part, to their intelligence and feelings also? |
4068 | Granted, however, for the sake of argument, that black voters should preponderate at any election, what then? |
4068 | Has he effectually gained the ear of our masters in Downing Street regarding the inefficiency and wastefulness of Governor Irving''s pet department? |
4068 | Has he so securely bound the fickle divinity to his service as to be certain of its agency in the realization of his forecasts? |
4068 | He further asks on the same subject:--"And if the governor is to be one of their own race and colour, how long could such a connection endure?" |
4068 | Now then, applying these facts to the political history of Trinidad, with which we are more particularly concerned at present, what do we find? |
4068 | Now, is it in ignorance, or through disingenuousness, that Mr. Froude has penned this argument regarding exceptions? |
4068 | Our critic, in the plenitude of his familiarity with such matters, confidently asks:--[ 214]"Who is now made wretched by the fear of hell?" |
4068 | Referring to his hypothetical confederation with its black officeholders, our author scornfully asks:--"And how long would this endure?" |
4068 | To be( very improbably) a Croesus or( still more improbably) a Bonaparte, and to perish at the conventional age, and of vulgar disease, like both? |
4068 | Was it suffocation of the babes by means of sulphur fumes, the use of beetle- paste, or exposure on the banks of the Caribbean rivers? |
4068 | Wealth and Power? |
4068 | What are we Negroes of the present day to be grateful for to the US, personified by Mr. Froude and the Colonial[ 116] Office exportations? |
4068 | Wherefore are they so? |
4068 | Why, then, should the vote of the Negro be so especially a bugbear? |
4068 | Will these men remain for ever too poor, too isolated from one another for grand racial combinations? |
4068 | With what result? |
4068 | what can tempt mortals to incur this weight of infamy? |
37408 | But, using China as our steed, should our first goal be the land? 37408 Does this mean,"he asks,"that Europe, our''enlightened guide,''has already reached the summit of its evolution? |
37408 | What is the result, then, of the migration of 1,000,000 persons of lower level into a country where the average is of a higher level? 37408 Whence, in the Europe of to- day, could come the principle of an_ entente_, and on what could it be based? |
37408 | Why has Italy found''defenseless''Tripoli such a hornet''s nest? |
37408 | [ 5]What does the European War mean to us Orientals?" |
37408 | Above all: will the browns tend to impinge on white race- areas as the yellows show signs of doing? |
37408 | And what would that strain be? |
37408 | And who can blame him? |
37408 | Bearing all the above facts in mind, can we believe the Indian capable of drawing mongrel- ruled America from its slough of despond? |
37408 | But such improvement as there is involves time, expense, and trouble; and, when it is done, has anything been gained? |
37408 | But there are other warrior races-- England, Germany-- would they look on and let us slice and eat our fill? |
37408 | But what England''s sons of the seven seas wanted to know was: when is''this Orientalizing''of the British marine to stop?... |
37408 | But what basis for this value is there except lack of effective opposition? |
37408 | But what war- losses could compare with the losses inflicted by the living death of Bolshevism? |
37408 | But, after all, was it not primarily due to the profound disturbance caused by drastic environmental change? |
37408 | Can any one suppose that, in such a condition of political society, the habitual temper of mind in Europe would not be profoundly changed? |
37408 | Can he set it on the path of orderly progress? |
37408 | Does not the new idealism teach us that we are links in a vital chain, charged with high duties both to the dead and the unborn? |
37408 | Finally, is the South American half- caste absolutely incapable of organization and culture? |
37408 | For example, is the formation of a national consciousness possible with such disparate elements? |
37408 | For what is"vital instinct"but the imperious urge of superior heredity? |
37408 | Further, our saddle and bridle are as yet mere makeshifts: would steed and trappings stand the strain of war? |
37408 | Has it already exhausted its vital force by two or three centuries of hyper- exertion? |
37408 | How shall we appraise the colored peril of arms? |
37408 | India? |
37408 | Is it not likely that his ancestral aptitudes have atrophied or decayed? |
37408 | Is it not the part of wisdom to quit these outposts before they collapse into the swirling waters? |
37408 | Is the world as a whole the gainer? |
37408 | Meanwhile, how are the huge urban masses to live, unfitted and unable as they are to draw their sustenance from their native soil? |
37408 | Now what do these two world- sundered cases mean? |
37408 | Now what must be the inevitable result of all this? |
37408 | Now why is all this? |
37408 | Now, is not readaptation precisely the problem with which civilized man has been increasingly confronted for the past hundred years? |
37408 | Now, what will be the attitude of these augmenting black masses toward white political dominion? |
37408 | Or shall it come through cataclysmic revolution? |
37408 | Or the Pacific, the sea that must be our very own, even as the Atlantic is now England''s? |
37408 | Well, what of it? |
37408 | What are the examples of history to those gigantic commercial houses, uneasy for their New Year''s balances, which are our modern nations? |
37408 | What are the things we_ must_ do promptly if we would avert the worst? |
37408 | What if we become crowded without their ceasing to be so? |
37408 | What other field offers such tempting possibilities for Mongolian race- expansion? |
37408 | Where, then, should the congested colored world tend to pour its accumulating human surplus, inexorably condemned to emigrate or starve? |
37408 | Why should it, since centuries of experience had taught the exact contrary? |
37408 | Why should not a similar development occur in Asia? |
37408 | Why should not the Japanese stretch out their hands toward that country, now that the people are looking to the Japanese? |
37408 | Would such heterogeneous democracies be able to resist the invasion of superior races? |
37408 | Would the Chinese continue to man John Bull''s ships?... |
37408 | Would they? |
37408 | Yet how can it be otherwise? |
37408 | [ 15] Adachi Kinnosuke,"Does Japanese Trade Endanger the Peace of Asia?" |
37408 | [ 165] J. Liddell Kelly,"What Is the Matter with the Asiatic?" |
37408 | [ 35] Theodore Morison,"Can Islam Be Reformed?" |
37408 | [ 7] J. Liddell Kelly,"What is the Matter with the Asiatic?" |
14299 | But how is it that the natives, being so vastly superior in numbers to the Boers, do not rise and annihilate them? 14299 How do you know that you were a slave? |
14299 | Is a country that is so governed justly to be called a''Republic?'' 14299 Is not this the fast that I have chosen? |
14299 | What new forces and inspiration do we need,Lord Rosebery asks, for the great task our nation has before it? |
14299 | ''But what about the missionaries?'' |
14299 | ''Is it a thing that a man can eat? |
14299 | ''Now, my dear,''said the little wife,''I wonder who deserves to be hanged now? |
14299 | ''Then may I ask, did you not fight for these people? |
14299 | ''Who speaks about a boundary line?'' |
14299 | ''You astonish me,''I answered;''what about the Convention recently signed at Pretoria( 1881)? |
14299 | Am I, are you, friends, learning righteousness? |
14299 | Anarchy and lawlessness, or good government which tends to peace and prosperity? |
14299 | Are we learning righteousness? |
14299 | Are you prepared to grant it? |
14299 | As an old Abolitionist, who has been engaged for thirty years in a war against slavery in another form, may I be allowed to cite a parallel? |
14299 | But why did they dislike British Government? |
14299 | But_ what_ Peace? |
14299 | Can we suppose that these stations can be maintained if we suffer the road to fall within the limits of the Transvaal? |
14299 | Dear Sir Bartle, you know the material we have; it is good, but who is to guide? |
14299 | Did it not belong to our fathers and forefathers before us, long before the Boers came here? |
14299 | Did the country, then, belong to the Boers? |
14299 | Did this influential editor represent a large number of English people? |
14299 | Does he not know fear, feel pain, affection, hate, and gratitude? |
14299 | Have you not heard of the treaties which we have been able to make with the natives and with the Portuguese?'' |
14299 | He could never keep his temper on that subject, My host abruptly demanded,''But do n''t you think that Frere should have been hanged?'' |
14299 | How could there, under these circumstances, be confidence any longer? |
14299 | How far has South Africa been governed on these principles? |
14299 | How is she best to pursue it? |
14299 | I said,''these countries do not belong to the Transvaal;''to which they replied,''Do you know what our intentions are? |
14299 | I will ask you to consider what would have been the best advice that we could have given at that time to the Government at Washington? |
14299 | If both pray, must He refuse one? |
14299 | If the Queen wishes to give them their land, why does she not give them back the Cape?" |
14299 | In regard to the assertion that"England coveted the gold of the Transvaal,"what is here meant by"England?" |
14299 | In the same way, I ask, has a native no feelings or affections? |
14299 | Is it possible that Boer theologians, who quote Scripture with so much readiness, have never read the following? |
14299 | Is it true, Mr. Mackenzie, that those blacks were kind to our people who fled to them from the Transvaal, and that they there protected them?'' |
14299 | Is n''t it what everybody is saying here? |
14299 | Is not honesty one of the cardinal virtues which we should expect to find amongst small nations, if nowhere else? |
14299 | Is therefore God for one nation and not for another? |
14299 | Is this true?'' |
14299 | It is the Peace of God which we pray for? |
14299 | Let the Government adopt, with mathematical rigour if you like, an opposition to annexation, and what does it effect? |
14299 | May He not be for one, and for the other too? |
14299 | My friends have sometimes asked me, what then is the ground of my hope for the future of our country and all over whom our Queen reigns? |
14299 | No appeal should be permitted, for may it not lead to a quashing of the conviction? |
14299 | Now what are the articles to which the Boer Government here objects, and has continued to object? |
14299 | Of them might be aptly quoted the speech Shakespeare puts into Shylock''s mouth:''Hath not a Jew eyes? |
14299 | Shall we place legal restrictions on marriage, or on the birth of children, or prescribe that no family shall exceed a certain number? |
14299 | Summary justice(?) |
14299 | Their lives have been disciplined under native rule, and now that the white man is breaking up that rule, what is he going to give as a substitute? |
14299 | There was a hum of approval, with a sharp enquiry from Montsioa,--did he really mean to go himself? |
14299 | They appealed to our Government, and we did nothing; there came again and again despairing appeals to England, and how were they met? |
14299 | To loose the bands of wickedness, To undo the heavy burdens, To let the oppressed go free, And that ye break every yoke?" |
14299 | Was Dr. Dale ready to run the risk of a fresh war in South Africa? |
14299 | Was his policy to be changed, and how? |
14299 | We have not heard that you are sick; then why have you to leave us? |
14299 | Were they in their own minds out of South Africa, and resolved never to return? |
14299 | What about the speeches still more recently made in this country in support of it?'' |
14299 | What are our Sons to do? |
14299 | What are the facts? |
14299 | What can the chief of a small State of 250,000 inhabitants do with such a large amount of Secret funds? |
14299 | What changes does it involve? |
14299 | What has the Boer done to lift these people? |
14299 | What have they done? |
14299 | What new forces and inspiration will it need? |
14299 | What shall I say if you do not return?" |
14299 | Where are our cattle?'' |
14299 | Who shall chastise them? |
14299 | Why is this? |
14299 | Why should we do so when the Boers do n''t?'' |
14299 | Will Britain flinch or falter in her world- wide task? |
14299 | With what result? |
14299 | does he not suffer when his parents are shot, or his children stolen, or when he is driven a wanderer from his home? |
14299 | hath not a Jew hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions?'' |
14299 | the Peace on Earth, which He alone can bring about? |
14299 | what is your response to the words that you have heard?" |
14299 | yes, certainty, why not?'' |
12101 | An annual report of what? |
12101 | Are they admitted as citizens? |
12101 | Are we men? |
12101 | But,continued Nott,"the solemn question here arises-- in what condition will this momentous change place us? |
12101 | How forswear? |
12101 | I have plowed, and planted, and gathered into barns, and no man could head me-- and a''n''t I a woman? 12101 Just what is the light in which we are to regard the slaves?" |
12101 | What can a man do to help such a suffering mass of humanity? |
12101 | What of the darker world that watches? 12101 What, Peggy,"asked Price,"were you going to set the town on fire?" |
12101 | What, is it about Mr. Hogg''s goods? |
12101 | ( Boston?) |
12101 | After a while the slave raised the important question: Had not his residence outside of a slave state made him a free man? |
12101 | And what was the Negro Problem? |
12101 | And which is the world to choose, Christ or Mammon? |
12101 | Approaching the cabin of a free Negro they asked,"Is this Southampton County?" |
12101 | Are they admitted as property? |
12101 | Asked in court by Gray if he still believed in the providential nature of his mission, he asked,"Was not Christ crucified?" |
12101 | But whar did Christ come from?" |
12101 | But, sir, where did the Greeks and the Romans and the Jews get it? |
12101 | Could a bishop hold a slave? |
12101 | Could any one use a young woman who wanted to work for her board? |
12101 | Could our worst enemies or the worst enemies of republics, wish us a severer judgment?" |
12101 | Could the Church really countenance slavery? |
12101 | Dey talks''bout dis ting in de head-- what dis dey call it?" |
12101 | Do we not owe it to civilized man to stand in the breach and stay the uplifted arm?... |
12101 | Have we any other master but Jesus Christ alone? |
12101 | How could one know that wakeful and sagacious enemies without would not discover the vulnerable point and use it for the country''s overthrow? |
12101 | How many families of your town would take in a Negro man or woman, teach them, bear with them, and seek to make them Christians? |
12101 | How many merchants would take Adolph, if I wanted to make him a clerk; or mechanics, if I wanted to teach him a trade? |
12101 | How shall we measure such a life? |
12101 | I am aware that many object to the severity of my language; but is there not cause for severity? |
12101 | I could work as much and eat as much as a man, when I could get it, and bear de lash as well-- and a''n''t I a woman? |
12101 | If I wanted to put Jane and Rosa to school, how many schools are there in the Northern states that would take them in?... |
12101 | If my cup wo n''t hold but a pint and yourn holds a quart, would n''t ye be mean not to let me have my little half- measure full?" |
12101 | In any case the answer to the first question at once suggested another, What shall we do with the Negro? |
12101 | In the first place, what is he worth, and especially what is he worth in honest Southern opinion? |
12101 | In the same month George W. Cable answered affirmatively and with emphasis the question,"Does the Negro pay for his education?" |
12101 | In this life was it also possible for the children of Africa to have a permanent and an honorable place? |
12101 | Is He not their master as well as ours? |
12101 | Is it finally to be an agency for the upbuilding of the nation, or simply one of the forces that retard? |
12101 | Is she to abide by the principles that guided her in 1776, or simply seize her share of the booty? |
12101 | Is there not land enough in America, or''corn enough in Egypt''? |
12101 | It was said after the Civil War that he would not work except under compulsion; just how had he come to be regarded in the industry of the New South? |
12101 | Maughan''s The Republic of Liberia, London( 1920? |
12101 | Or when saw we thee sick, or in prison, and came unto thee? |
12101 | Query: Was it genuine statesmanship that permitted these people to feel that they must leave the South? |
12101 | Raising her voice she repeated,"Whar did Christ come from? |
12101 | Said St. Clair to Ophelia:"If we emancipate, are you willing to educate? |
12101 | Shall we permit that blow to fall? |
12101 | So did the king of Egypt doubt the very existence of God, saying,''Who is the Lord, that I should let Israel go?'' |
12101 | Somerset objected to this and in so doing raised the important legal question, Did a slave by being brought to England become free? |
12101 | The question then arises: Just what is the relation that he is finally to sustain to other workingmen? |
12101 | This is a duty: the whites do not trade with you; why should you give them your patronage? |
12101 | Was he not made by the Creator to sit in the shade, and make the blacks work without remuneration for their services, to support him and his family? |
12101 | What is its real promise in American life? |
12101 | What right, then, have we to obey and call any man master but Himself? |
12101 | What the Negro in the last analysis wonders is: Who was right, Livingstone or Rhodes? |
12101 | What though before us lies the open grave? |
12101 | What will my children say if I deprive them of so much estate? |
12101 | What''s dat got to do with women''s rights or niggers''rights? |
12101 | What, then, is this dark world thinking? |
12101 | When despairing African fugitives do the same thing-- it is-- what_ is_ it?" |
12101 | When saw we thee a stranger, and took thee in? |
12101 | Who can weigh love and hope and service, and the joy of answered prayer? |
12101 | Who could believe that such a tremendous physical force would remain forever spell- bound and quiescent? |
12101 | Why should they send us into a far country to die? |
12101 | Will you despair, seeing Truth, and Justice, and Mercy, and God, and Christ, and the Holy Ghost, are on your side? |
12101 | Would King accordingly enter into conference with the English officials with reference to disposing of any Negroes who might be sent? |
12101 | _ But is there no civil law to protect me_? |
12101 | he asked;"then why are they not admitted on an equality with white citizens? |
12101 | my brothers, are we men?... |
12101 | or naked, and clothed thee? |
12101 | or thirsty, and gave thee drink? |
12101 | then why is not other property admitted into the computation?" |
7107 | And JIM? |
7107 | Blame it, ca n''t you TRY? 7107 But looky here, Tom, what do we want to WARN anybody for that something''s up? |
7107 | But my lan'', Mars Sid, how''s I gwyne to make''m a witch pie? 7107 Geewhillikins,"I says,"but what does the rest of it mean?" |
7107 | HANNEL''m, Mars Sid? 7107 HIM?" |
7107 | Keep what, Mars Tom? |
7107 | Oh, DO shet up!--s''pose the rats took the SHEET? 7107 Then what on earth did YOU want to set him free for, seeing he was already free?" |
7107 | Well, anyway,I says,"what''s SOME of it? |
7107 | Well, then, what possessed you to go down there this time of night? |
7107 | Well, then, what we going to do, Tom? |
7107 | Well-- WHAT? |
7107 | What DOES the child mean? |
7107 | What letter? |
7107 | What letters? |
7107 | What three? |
7107 | What whole thing? |
7107 | What you been doing down there? |
7107 | What''s them? |
7107 | Where''s Jim? |
7107 | Who is your folks? |
7107 | Why, what else is gone, Sally? |
7107 | Why, where ever did you go? |
7107 | Will you do it, honey?--will you? 7107 With WHO? |
7107 | Yes, DEY will, I reck''n, Mars Tom, but what kine er time is JIM havin''? 7107 You do n''t KNOW? |
7107 | You numskull, did n''t you see me COUNT''m? |
7107 | You would n''t look like a servant- girl THEN, would you? |
7107 | ''n''who dug that- air HOLE? |
7107 | And after a minute, he says:"How''d you say he got shot?" |
7107 | And by and by the old man says:"Did I give you the letter?" |
7107 | And you wo n''t go? |
7107 | But Tom thought of something, and says:"You got any spiders in here, Jim?" |
7107 | Ca n''t you think of no way?" |
7107 | Could you raise a flower here, do you reckon?" |
7107 | Did you tell Aunty?" |
7107 | Hain''t you got no principle at all?" |
7107 | Has n''t he got away?" |
7107 | He''d LET me shove his head in my mouf-- fer a favor, hain''t it? |
7107 | His eyes just blazed; and he says:"No!--is that so? |
7107 | How''d it get there?" |
7107 | How''s that? |
7107 | I says to myself, spos''n he ca n''t fix that leg just in three shakes of a sheep''s tail, as the saying is? |
7107 | I says:"Why, Jim?" |
7107 | I was going to say yes; but she chipped in and says:"About what, Sid?" |
7107 | Is dat like Mars Tom Sawyer? |
7107 | S''e, what do YOU think of it, Sister Hotchkiss, s''e? |
7107 | Sh- she, Sister Hotchkiss, sh- she--""But how in the nation''d they ever GIT that grindstone IN there, ANYWAY? |
7107 | Snake take''n bite Jim''s chin off, den WHAH is de glory? |
7107 | THINK of it, s''I? |
7107 | Think o''that bed- leg sawed off that a way, s''e? |
7107 | Think o''what, Brer Phelps, s''I? |
7107 | Tom looks at me very grave, and says:"Tom, did n''t you just tell me he was all right? |
7107 | WELL, den, is JIM gywne to say it? |
7107 | WHERE''S it gone, Lize?" |
7107 | What HAS become of that boy?" |
7107 | What IS you a- talkin''''bout? |
7107 | What are we going to do?--lay around there till he lets the cat out of the bag? |
7107 | What makes them come here just at this runaway nigger''s breakfast- time? |
7107 | What you going to do about the servant- girl?" |
7107 | What you reckon I better do? |
7107 | What''s a bar sinister?" |
7107 | What''s a fess?" |
7107 | Where could you keep it?" |
7107 | Where you been all this time, you rascal?" |
7107 | Where''s the raft?" |
7107 | Who''d you reckon?" |
7107 | Who''s Jim''s mother?" |
7107 | Why, Huck, s''pose it IS considerble trouble?--what you going to do?--how you going to get around it? |
7107 | Why, that ai n''t TOM, it''s Sid; Tom''s-- Tom''s-- why, where is Tom? |
7107 | Would he say dat? |
7107 | You got any rats around here?" |
7107 | You got anything to play music on?" |
7107 | says Aunt Sally;"IS he changed so? |
7107 | says Aunt Sally;"the runaway nigger? |
7107 | spos''n it takes him three or four days? |
38830 | Again,said the editor,"are you well acquainted with the moods of your people?" |
38830 | Ai n''t the doctah tole yer yit? |
38830 | Am I yours,_ Forever or Never_? 38830 But how is the waiting, struggling, hoping Dorlan concerned in all of this?" |
38830 | But why am I fleeing? 38830 Can you sleep on such a night?" |
38830 | Did they say the chariot had come? |
38830 | Do yer see dis tin box? |
38830 | Do you believe in strangers? |
38830 | Do you think that--here a pause--"I shall meet-- Eulalie again?" |
38830 | Do you wish to send a return message? |
38830 | Dorlan, have you a memory? |
38830 | Good place to fish, ai n''t it? |
38830 | Have Mr. and Mrs. Dalton any children-- a daughter? |
38830 | Have the Negroes acquired sufficient self- confidence to feel justified in pitting their judgment against that of the Republican party? 38830 Hezzy, dear, what on earth troubles you?" |
38830 | How do you know that it contains news pleasing to me? |
38830 | How do your ancestors trouble you, Hezzy? |
38830 | How so? |
38830 | If I do these things,he resumed in sober tone,"will you be my wife?" |
38830 | In what manner, Mr. Warthell, do you hope to affect the result in the pending campaign? |
38830 | Is that your game? |
38830 | Is the family honor that low also? 38830 Lemuel, my dear, what on earth are you allowing to trouble you?" |
38830 | Lemuel, will you people of the South ever be rid of this eternal nightmare? |
38830 | May I be allowed to address this gathering? |
38830 | May I have a private interview with you? |
38830 | Morlene, are you in love with any one? |
38830 | My dear sir,said Morlene, rising, the picture of excitement,"Are you a Democrat?" |
38830 | Now, dear Morlene, tell me by what process, human or divine, I could be made in any measure worthy of you? 38830 O DEATH, WHERE IS THY STING?" |
38830 | O DEATH, WHERE IS THY STING? |
38830 | Sir,spoke out Congressman Bloodworth,"You deny my and the Republican party''s authority over you, in spite of what we have done for you?" |
38830 | Told me what, my dear? |
38830 | Whar is you frum? |
38830 | What possible relation does my not being in love bear to any request that you might make? |
38830 | When am I expected to go to Africa? |
38830 | When did you ever hear of a woman consenting to wait a moment to obtain a secret? 38830 Who calls me a fool?" |
38830 | Who lives in that beautiful cottage painted white, with that wonderful assortment of prettily arranged flowers in the front yard? |
38830 | Will you please leave me? |
38830 | Are they of sincere convictions, consistent lives, indisputable integrity? |
38830 | Aunt Catherine asked in broken tones:"Marse Lemuel, will yer''mit me ter say er word?" |
38830 | Before he could suppress his anger enough to trust himself to speak, Beulah cried out from the door:"Do n''t that beat you? |
38830 | But is it mere physical beauty that has so suddenly thrown itself across the pathway of my mind so that it will not move on? |
38830 | But we know, do we not, dear reader? |
38830 | Can the recent beneficiary be so soon transformed into a dictator? |
38830 | Can we thus bear open disgrace? |
38830 | Do you object?" |
38830 | Drawing a little closer, the Negro boy touched Lemuel on the shoulder, and with a smile said,"Good place to fish, ai n''t it?" |
38830 | Give the dear girl a chance, will you?" |
38830 | Has commercialism really throttled altruism? |
38830 | Has nothing met me more than that lovely form, the head of a queen, angel face, eyes that thrill? |
38830 | Has the era of the recognition of the inherent rights of men come to a close? |
38830 | Have you any relatives living?" |
38830 | How long wilst thou withhold thy presence from this beautiful, but blighted Southland?" |
38830 | I was n''t though, anybody can see, for what would this old Democratic paper be kicking about if what I did was n''t against it?" |
38830 | In a still lower whisper she said:"I wondah whut debbilmint our young marster''s got in his he''d ter sen''fur us?" |
38830 | Is character becoming of greater or less importance? |
38830 | Is it all gone, dat three uv you wo n''t fight ur''nigger,''ez you call him?" |
38830 | Is there anything connected with your life that causes you to think that death would be a personal gain to you as well as a gain to your country? |
38830 | Looking at the nurse, she said,"Chile, does yer know anyt''ing''bout Jesus? |
38830 | Looking earnestly into Dorlan''s face, he enquired,"Was it your desire and expectation that this article should be published?" |
38830 | May I, poor worm of the dust, be allowed to call you my own?" |
38830 | One day Dorlan discovered by consulting his memorandum that about the usual time between those business(?) |
38830 | One of the drunken lot said,"Boys, what say you? |
38830 | Pausing, and looking directly into Harry''s eyes, he asked,"Are you a Republican?" |
38830 | Pray, tell me, why am I so rudely tossed about upon the bosom of life''s heaving ocean?" |
38830 | See? |
38830 | See? |
38830 | See? |
38830 | Seemingly satisfied with the result of her inspection she drew nearer and said:"Leddy, please, miss, is dis de Linktum horsepittul?" |
38830 | Sitting up in her bed, she said to the nurse,"Leddy, ken you fin''a pair ub specks fitten''fur one ob my age?" |
38830 | Tell me how you have fared?" |
38830 | Thinking that your article would be published, knowing your people, have you exercised foresight enough to have your life insured? |
38830 | W''en hez Aunt Catherine broke er plate afo''dis? |
38830 | WHO WINS? |
38830 | WHO WINS? |
38830 | Warthell?" |
38830 | What shall we do with Beulah Dalton?" |
38830 | Where, sir, are your churches, your school rooms, all of your influences that are supposed to produce worthy beings?" |
38830 | Why am I placed in such a trying situation? |
38830 | Why did you let him come?" |
38830 | Why do you ask?" |
38830 | Will you be my wife?" |
38830 | Will you grant unto me the one remaining assurance? |
38830 | Will you kindly point out to a white man standing on this platform what_ he_ may consistently do for the Negro?" |
38830 | Will you or will you not, continue working through me and for the Republican party?" |
38830 | Will you seal our most holy compact with a kiss?" |
38830 | he exclaimed,"Has a reaction against that idealism which has hitherto been its chief glory really set in in the Anglo- Saxon race? |
38830 | justice, justice, whither art thou fled? |
38830 | said he,"Why did I not think of that myself? |
7103 | Any men on it? |
7103 | Bilgewater, kin I trust you? |
7103 | Brought you down from whar? 7103 But you can guess, ca n''t you? |
7103 | Cairo? 7103 Dern your skin, ai n''t the company good enough for you?" |
7103 | Do n''t anybody know? |
7103 | Do you belong on it? |
7103 | Drot your pore broken heart,says the baldhead;"what are you heaving your pore broken heart at US f''r? |
7103 | Has anybody been killed this year, Buck? |
7103 | Has there been many killed, Buck? |
7103 | Has this one been going on long, Buck? |
7103 | Him? 7103 How I gwyne to ketch her en I out in de woods? |
7103 | How''m I going to guess,says I,"when I never heard tell of it before?" |
7103 | I do n''t know where he was,says I;"where was he?" |
7103 | Laws, how do I know? 7103 No?" |
7103 | Now, George Jackson, do you know the Shepherdsons? |
7103 | Oh, you did, did you? 7103 Old man,"said the young one,"I reckon we might double- team it together; what do you think?" |
7103 | WHICH candle? |
7103 | Well, if you knowed where he was, what did you ask me for? |
7103 | Well, then, what did you want to kill him for? |
7103 | Well, who done the shooting? 7103 What are you prowling around here this time of night for-- hey?" |
7103 | What did he do to you? |
7103 | What do you want? |
7103 | What got you into trouble? |
7103 | What town is it, mister? |
7103 | What was the trouble about, Buck?--land? |
7103 | What''re you alassin''about? |
7103 | What''s a feud? |
7103 | Who''s me? |
7103 | Why did n''t you tell my Jack to fetch me here sooner, Jim? |
7103 | Why, blame it, it''s a riddle, do n''t you see? 7103 Why, how did you get hold of the raft again, Jim-- did you catch her?" |
7103 | Why, where was you raised? 7103 Yes, it IS good enough for me; it''s as good as I deserve; for who fetched me so low when I was so high? |
7103 | You mean to say our old raft warn''t smashed all to flinders? |
7103 | All through dinner Jim stood around and waited on him, and says,"Will yo''Grace have some o''dis or some o''dat?" |
7103 | And did the sad hearts thicken, And did the mourners cry? |
7103 | Are you all ready? |
7103 | Come slow; push the door open yourself-- just enough to squeeze in, d''you hear?" |
7103 | Conscience says to me,"What had poor Miss Watson done to you that you could see her nigger go off right under your eyes and never say one single word? |
7103 | Do n''t you know what a feud is?" |
7103 | Do you like to comb up Sundays, and all that kind of foolishness? |
7103 | Do you own a dog? |
7103 | Do you reckon you can learn me?" |
7103 | Do you want to spread it all over?" |
7103 | Down by the wood- pile I comes across my Jack, and says:"What''s it all about?" |
7103 | Every little while he jumps up and says:"Dah she is?" |
7103 | George Jackson, is there anybody with you?" |
7103 | Have you ever trod the boards, Royalty?" |
7103 | He says:"Ai n''t they no Shepherdsons around?" |
7103 | How does that strike you?" |
7103 | I ben a- buyin''pots en pans en vittles, as I got a chanst, en a- patchin''up de raf''nights when--""WHAT raft, Jim?" |
7103 | I ranged up and says:"Mister, is that town Cairo?" |
7103 | Is dey out o''sight yit? |
7103 | Is your man white or black?" |
7103 | It ai n''t my fault I warn''t born a duke, it ai n''t your fault you warn''t born a king-- so what''s the use to worry? |
7103 | One of them says:"What''s that yonder?" |
7103 | Say, boy, what''s the matter with your father?" |
7103 | Say, how long are you going to stay here? |
7103 | Says he:"Do n''t you know, Mars Jawge?" |
7103 | So I laid there about an hour trying to think, and when Buck waked up I says:"Can you spell, Buck?" |
7103 | So the question was, what to do? |
7103 | Soon as I could get Buck down by the corn- cribs under the trees by ourselves, I says:"Did you want to kill him, Buck?" |
7103 | That''s the whole yarn-- what''s yourn? |
7103 | The man sung out:"Snatch that light away, Betsy, you old fool-- ain''t you got any sense? |
7103 | Then I thought a minute, and says to myself, hold on; s''pose you''d a done right and give Jim up, would you felt better than what you do now? |
7103 | Then the duke says:"You are what?" |
7103 | Thinks I, what does it mean? |
7103 | Was it a Grangerford or a Shepherdson?" |
7103 | We both knowed well enough it was some more work of the rattlesnake- skin; so what was the use to talk about it? |
7103 | Whar was you brought down from?" |
7103 | What IS the matter with your pap? |
7103 | What did that poor old woman do to you that you could treat her so mean? |
7103 | What did you say your name was?" |
7103 | What do you mean?" |
7103 | What is he up to, anyway? |
7103 | What''s your lay?" |
7103 | What''s your line-- mainly?" |
7103 | When Jim called me to take the watch at four in the morning, he says:"Huck, does you reck''n we gwyne to run acrost any mo''kings on dis trip?" |
7103 | Who''s there?" |
7103 | Why did n''t you come out and say so? |
7103 | Why did n''t you step into the road, my boy?" |
7103 | is dat you, honey? |
7103 | it wo n''t do to fool with small- pox, do n''t you see?" |
7103 | would a runaway nigger run SOUTH?" |
7103 | you ca n''t mean it?" |
7106 | Ai n''t them old crippled picks and things in there good enough to dig a nigger out with? |
7106 | But it''s SOMEBODY''S plates, ai n''t it? |
7106 | DO with it? 7106 Did n''t I SAY I was going to help steal the nigger?" |
7106 | Did you ever see us before? |
7106 | For what? |
7106 | How can he blow? 7106 How long will it take, Tom?" |
7106 | How''d you get your breakfast so early on the boat? |
7106 | I do n''t reckon he does; but what put that into your head? |
7106 | Not a word? |
7106 | SOLD him? |
7106 | To dig the foundations out from under that cabin with? |
7106 | Tools for what? |
7106 | Tools? |
7106 | WORK? 7106 Well, spos''n it is? |
7106 | Well, then, what''ll we make him the ink out of? |
7106 | Well, then, what''s the sense in wasting the plates? |
7106 | Well, then,I says,"how''ll it do to saw him out, the way I done before I was murdered that time?" |
7106 | Well, then,I says,"if we do n''t want the picks and shovels, what do we want?" |
7106 | What PUT it dar? 7106 What did you think the vittles was for?" |
7106 | What do we WANT of a saw? 7106 What do we want of a saw?" |
7106 | What do we want of a shirt, Tom? |
7106 | What in the nation can he DO with it? |
7106 | What made you think I''d like it? |
7106 | What''s THAT got to do with it? 7106 Whereabouts?" |
7106 | Who do you reckon''t is? |
7106 | Who''d you give the baggage to? |
7106 | Why? |
7106 | You wo n''t, wo n''t you? 7106 You''re s''rp-- Why, what do you reckon I am? |
7106 | And I DID start to tell him; but he shut me up, and says:"Do n''t you reckon I know what I''m about? |
7106 | And s''pose he steps in here any minute, and sings out my name before I can throw him a wink to keep quiet? |
7106 | And turns to me, perfectly ca''m, and says,"Did YOU hear anybody sing out?" |
7106 | And what would you want to saw his leg off for, anyway?" |
7106 | And you would n''t leave them any? |
7106 | But at supper, at night, one of the little boys says:"Pa, may n''t Tom and Sid and me go to the show?" |
7106 | Didn''he jis''dis minute sing out like he knowed you?" |
7106 | Do n''t I generly know what I''m about?" |
7106 | Does you want to go en look at''i m?" |
7106 | Going to feed the dogs?" |
7106 | Hain''t he run off?" |
7106 | Hain''t we got to saw the leg of Jim''s bed off, so as to get the chain loose?" |
7106 | He can hide it in his bed, ca n''t he?" |
7106 | Honest injun, you ai n''t a ghost?" |
7106 | I hunched Tom, and whispers:"You going, right here in the daybreak? |
7106 | I says:"What do we want of a moat when we''re going to snake him out from under the cabin?" |
7106 | I wonder who''tis? |
7106 | I''ve a good notion to take and-- Say, what do you mean by kissing me?" |
7106 | It was all she could do to hold in; and her eyes snapped, and her fingers worked like she wanted to scratch him; and she says:"Who''s''everybody''? |
7106 | Just keep a tight tongue in your head and move right along, and then you wo n''t get into trouble with US, d''ye hear?" |
7106 | Look yonder!--up the road!--ain''t that somebody coming?" |
7106 | Looky here, warn''t you ever murdered AT ALL?" |
7106 | Looky here-- do you think YOU''D venture to blow on us? |
7106 | Mrs. Phelps she jumps for him, and says:"Has he come?" |
7106 | Now I want to ask you-- if you got any reasonableness in you at all-- what kind of a show would THAT give him to be a hero? |
7106 | Pretty soon Tom says:"Ready?" |
7106 | S''pose he DON''T do nothing with it? |
7106 | Say, gimme a chaw tobacker, wo n''t ye?" |
7106 | She was smiling all over so she could hardly stand-- and says:"It''s YOU, at last!--AIN''T it?" |
7106 | So Tom says:"What''s the vittles for? |
7106 | So Tom turns to the nigger, which was looking wild and distressed, and says, kind of severe:"What do you reckon''s the matter with you, anyway? |
7106 | So she run on:"Lize, hurry up and get him a hot breakfast right away-- or did you get your breakfast on the boat?" |
7106 | So, then, what you want to come back and ha''nt ME for?" |
7106 | The next minute he whirls on me and says:"Do you reckon that nigger would blow on us? |
7106 | The old gentleman stared, and says:"Why, who''s that?" |
7106 | Then I says to myself, s''pose Tom Sawyer comes down on that boat? |
7106 | Then he did n''t look so joyful, and says:"What was your idea for asking ME?" |
7106 | Then he says, kind of glad and eager,"Where''s the raft?--got her in a good place?" |
7106 | Then he turns to Jim, and looks him over like he never see him before, and says:"Did you sing out?" |
7106 | Tom he looked at the nigger, steady and kind of wondering, and says:"Does WHO know us?" |
7106 | WHAT did he sing out?" |
7106 | WHEN did he sing out? |
7106 | WHO sung out? |
7106 | Was you looking for him?" |
7106 | We ai n''t a- going to GNAW him out, are we?" |
7106 | What kep''you?--boat get aground?" |
7106 | What made you think somebody sung out?" |
7106 | What''s the good of a plan that ai n''t no more trouble than that? |
7106 | When we was at dinner, did n''t you see a nigger man go in there with some vittles?" |
7106 | Where''d YOU come from?" |
7106 | Where''d she get aground?" |
7106 | Where''s that ten cents? |
7106 | Where?" |
7106 | Who IS it?" |
7106 | Who ever heard of a state prisoner escaping by a hickry- bark ladder? |
7106 | Who ever heard of getting a prisoner loose in such an old- maidy way as that? |
7106 | Who nailed him?" |
7106 | Who''s THEY?" |
7106 | Whoever would a thought it was in that mare to do it? |
7106 | Why ca n''t you stick to the main point?" |
7106 | Why would n''t they? |
7106 | Why, hain''t you ever read any books at all?--Baron Trenck, nor Casanova, nor Benvenuto Chelleeny, nor Henri IV., nor none of them heroes? |
7106 | Will you?" |
7106 | Would n''t that plan work?" |
7106 | You do n''t reckon it''s going to take thirty- seven years to dig out through a DIRT foundation, do you?" |
7106 | You''ll say it''s dirty, low- down business; but what if it is? |
7106 | ai n''t it there in his bed, for a clew, after he''s gone? |
7106 | ain''dat Misto Tom?" |
7106 | and do n''t you reckon they''ll want clews? |
7106 | anybody hurt?" |
7106 | do he know you genlmen?" |
7106 | she says,"what in the warld can have become of him?" |
7102 | AIN''dat gay? 7102 And ai n''t it natural and right for a cat and a cow to talk different from US?" |
7102 | Could n''t they see better if they was to wait till daytime? |
7102 | Dad fetch it, how is I gwyne to dream all dat in ten minutes? |
7102 | Does a cat talk like a cow, or a cow talk like a cat? |
7102 | Drinkin''? 7102 Get?" |
7102 | Gone away? 7102 Goodness gracious, is dat you, Huck? |
7102 | Goshen, child? 7102 HOW? |
7102 | How does I talk wild? |
7102 | I is, is I? 7102 If fifteen cows is browsing on a hillside, how many of them eats with their heads pointed the same direction?" |
7102 | Is a cat a man, Huck? |
7102 | It''s natural and right for''em to talk different from each other, ai n''t it? |
7102 | Looky here, Jim; does a cat talk like we do? |
7102 | No-- is that so? |
7102 | No; is dat so? |
7102 | Oh, that''s the way of it? |
7102 | Oh, well, that''s all interpreted well enough as far as it goes, Jim,I says;"but what does THESE things stand for?" |
7102 | Roun''de which? |
7102 | Say, wo n''t he suspicion what we''re up to? |
7102 | They''re-- they''re-- are you the watchman of the boat? |
7102 | Well, den, why could n''t he SAY it? |
7102 | Well, does a cow? |
7102 | Well, then, a horse? |
7102 | Well, then, what makes you talk so wild? |
7102 | Well, then, why ai n''t it natural and right for a FRENCHMAN to talk different from us? 7102 Well, we can wait the two hours anyway and see, ca n''t we?" |
7102 | Wh-- what, mum? |
7102 | What fog? |
7102 | What wreck? |
7102 | What''s de harem? |
7102 | What''s the matter with you, Jim? 7102 What''s your real name? |
7102 | What, you do n''t mean the Walter Scott? |
7102 | Where''bouts do you live? 7102 Which side of a tree does the moss grow on?" |
7102 | Who? 7102 Why, Huck, doan''de French people talk de same way we does?" |
7102 | Why, are they after him yet? |
7102 | Why, pap and mam and sis and Miss Hooker; and if you''d take your ferryboat and go up there--"Up where? 7102 You hain''t seen no towhead? |
7102 | --wouldn''t he spread himself, nor nothing? |
7102 | Ai n''t I right?" |
7102 | Ai n''t that so?" |
7102 | And THEN what did you all do?" |
7102 | And could n''t the nigger see better, too? |
7102 | And what FOR? |
7102 | And would n''t he throw style into it? |
7102 | Bekase why: would a wise man want to live in de mids''er sich a blim- blammin''all de time? |
7102 | But Bill says:"Hold on--''d you go through him?" |
7102 | But he''ll be pooty lonesome-- dey ain''no kings here, is dey, Huck?" |
7102 | But how you goin''to manage it this time?" |
7102 | But now she says:"Honey, I thought you said it was Sarah when you first come in?" |
7102 | But other times they just lazy around; or go hawking-- just hawking and sp-- Sh!--d''you hear a noise?" |
7102 | But s''pose she DON''T break up and wash off?" |
7102 | But when he did get the thing straightened around he looked at me steady without ever smiling, and says:"What do dey stan''for? |
7102 | Dad blame it, why doan''he TALK like a man? |
7102 | Did n''t you?" |
7102 | Do n''t anybody live there? |
7102 | Do n''t you know about the harem? |
7102 | Do you know him?" |
7102 | Do you reckon Tom Sawyer would ever go by this thing? |
7102 | Does three hundred dollars lay around every day for people to pick up? |
7102 | Does you know''bout dat chile dat he''uz gwyne to chop in two?" |
7102 | En did n''t I bust up agin a lot er dem islands en have a turrible time en mos''git drownded? |
7102 | En what dey got to do, Huck?" |
7102 | En what use is a half a chile? |
7102 | En you ain''dead-- you ain''drownded-- you''s back agin? |
7102 | HAIN''T you ben gone away?" |
7102 | Has I ben a- drinkin''? |
7102 | Has I had a chance to be a- drinkin''?" |
7102 | Has everybody quit thinking the nigger done it?" |
7102 | He stirred up in a kind of a startlish way; but when he see it was only me he took a good gap and stretch, and then he says:"Hello, what''s up? |
7102 | How do dat come?" |
7102 | How much do a king git?" |
7102 | I says to myself, there ai n''t no telling but I might come to be a murderer myself yet, and then how would I like it? |
7102 | I says:"Who done it? |
7102 | I''m for killin''him-- and did n''t he kill old Hatfield jist the same way-- and do n''t he deserve it?" |
7102 | In this neighborhood?'' |
7102 | Is I ME, or who IS I? |
7102 | Is I heah, or whah IS I? |
7102 | Is a Frenchman a man?" |
7102 | Is a cow a man?--er is a cow a cat?" |
7102 | Is it Bill, or Tom, or Bob?--or what is it?" |
7102 | Is your husband going over there to- night?" |
7102 | It''s only saying, do you know how to talk French?" |
7102 | Looky here, did n''t de line pull loose en de raf''go a- hummin''down de river, en leave you en de canoe behine in de fog?" |
7102 | Me? |
7102 | Now ain''dat so, boss-- ain''t it so? |
7102 | Now if you''ll go and--""By Jackson, I''d LIKE to, and, blame it, I do n''t know but I will; but who in the dingnation''s a- going''to PAY for it? |
7102 | Pretty soon she says""What did you say your name was, honey?" |
7102 | RAF''? |
7102 | S''pose a man was to come to you and say Polly- voo- franzy-- what would you think?" |
7102 | Says I--"I broke in and says:"They''re in an awful peck of trouble, and--""WHO is?" |
7102 | See? |
7102 | She looked me all over with her little shiny eyes, and says:"What might your name be?" |
7102 | So she put me up a snack, and says:"Say, when a cow''s laying down, which end of her gets up first? |
7102 | Then she took off the hank and looked me straight in the face, and very pleasant, and says:"Come, now, what''s your real name?" |
7102 | Warn''dat de beatenes''notion in de worl''? |
7102 | Well, then, I said, why could n''t she tell her husband to fetch a dog? |
7102 | Well, you answer me dis: Did n''t you tote out de line in de canoe fer to make fas''to de tow- head?" |
7102 | What does I do? |
7102 | What he gwyne to do?" |
7102 | What tow- head? |
7102 | What''s the matter with''em?" |
7102 | What''s the trouble?" |
7102 | What''s your real name, now?" |
7102 | Where are they?" |
7102 | Where would I go to?" |
7102 | Which end gets up first?" |
7102 | Who told you this was Goshen?" |
7102 | Why did n''t you stir me up?" |
7102 | Why, hain''t you been talking about my coming back, and all that stuff, as if I''d been gone away?" |
7102 | Why, how in the nation did they ever git into such a scrape?" |
7102 | Why, what in the nation do you mean? |
7102 | You been a- drinking?" |
7102 | You take a man dat''s got on''y one or two chillen; is dat man gwyne to be waseful o''chillen? |
7102 | is HE her uncle? |
7102 | what are they doin''THERE, for gracious sakes?" |
37890 | Do you know what is a fanatic? |
37890 | How in the world did he excuse it? |
37890 | Were you fools enough to believe that? |
37890 | Am I a freeman? |
37890 | And how have the root- and- branch abolitionists mended matters? |
37890 | And is not the same dumbness of Curtis, Von Holst, and McMaster, writing after the war, due to the survival in the north of the old constraint? |
37890 | And when you are seriously intent on saying something, is it necessary to hunt for words?" |
37890 | And yet ought we not to admire the inventive genius of the statesman who of all proposed the remedy that promised the best? |
37890 | But some one says, how could the southerners as Americans, the especial champions of liberty, stultify themselves by slaveholding? |
37890 | Cadet Davis saw it first, and calmly asked of the doughty instructor,''What shall I do, sir? |
37890 | Did not the spirit of Napoleon looking on regret that he had not given the pesky Mamelukes like punishment? |
37890 | Do you not perceive that this free- labor farmer can produce far more cheaply than the slave farmer? |
37890 | Had there been another event, who can be sure that the south would not have committed misdeeds of vengeance against citizens of the north? |
37890 | How could Sherman have ever crossed the devastated tract from Dalton to Atlanta had he been without the railroad behind him? |
37890 | How could even Webster talk these facts out of existence? |
37890 | How many would have done it? |
37890 | How to do this properly brought up the question, What is money? |
37890 | How was it to be done?... |
37890 | I was aroused by the whisper of a neighbor,"Can any one else in the world do such a beautiful thing on the spur of the moment?" |
37890 | If half negro blood can do so well, why is it that pure negro blood does not do far better? |
37890 | If you deny justification to them, how can we keep decorum in accepting it ourselves? |
37890 | In all of these slaves, while I knew them, there never was a separation of a family except by death or the voluntary act of parties to a marriage? |
37890 | Is it indeed chimerical to demand of the great republic that it do its very highest duty? |
37890 | Is it not most praiseworthy to save even one? |
37890 | Is my State a free State? |
37890 | Is she ready?" |
37890 | Is that what he means by keeping open the door of hope and opportunity? |
37890 | Let it be inquired,"If''Uncle Tom''s Cabin''and Mrs. Stowe''s Key truly represent, why did not more of the blacks escape into the free States? |
37890 | My brother who wore the blue, ought he not to have so felt? |
37890 | Ought not attention to facts incontrovertibly cardinal to rule here as everywhere else? |
37890 | Ought there not to be a real labor party in the south instead of what we now see? |
37890 | Refuse them, and what, then? |
37890 | Suppose we do not give him his State, or suppose it will be long years before we give it to him, what do you say we are to do for him? |
37890 | That of slavery, or that produced by the conditions which his professed friends put in place of slavery? |
37890 | The comparison with which it closed had been, I believe, used before; but what of that? |
37890 | The man gave time and place, and added tauntingly,"What do you say to that?" |
37890 | The other interrupted him, and sustained his charge by producing the_ Globe_; and he expressively exclaimed,"What do you think of that vote?" |
37890 | The stench, filth, and discomfort of their nights and the hardship of their days, who can describe? |
37890 | They did not condemn the traitor; think you they abhorred the treason? |
37890 | They will exclaim, What can this author say that has not been said in the vast library of books already written upon the civil war? |
37890 | This is first in order:"How can the union be saved? |
37890 | Thus June 20, 1860, Green asks him where is the amendment? |
37890 | To what is due the great accomplishment of Dumas, Douglass, and Booker Washington-- to their negro blood or to their white blood? |
37890 | We may now properly inquire, What of the past does the south retain, and in what will consist her future progress? |
37890 | Well, what is it? |
37890 | What does he mean is the crime? |
37890 | What have I to do but follow my uniform line of policy, and give them the same rules as everybody else? |
37890 | What is Webster''s highest and best fame? |
37890 | What is higher humanity than to grieve with those who grieve? |
37890 | What is it that makes a sheep, or cow, or coin, or piece of paper, money? |
37890 | What, then, am I to do? |
37890 | Which of the two was the better for him? |
37890 | Which of the two was the more humane and christian punitive system for the negro? |
37890 | Who are the laborers that are both to spur and lead us forward in this great course? |
37890 | Who can predict what would have been the future of mongrelism thus beginning? |
37890 | Who can say that there is not among the professor''s American ancestors one of half white blood? |
37890 | Who ever hears of him afterwards? |
37890 | Who were they? |
37890 | Who would now be arousing people north and south in behalf of the race? |
37890 | Why ignore what is so plain and so important? |
37890 | Why is it that there is this blessed insurgence against corporation misrule there, and hardly a trace of it here? |
37890 | Why should he want the floor? |
37890 | Why should we play into its hands? |
37890 | Will he snub them because a negro has more sacred right than a white? |
37890 | Would Hayti have arranged for some of its young men to be trained in farming at Tuskegee? |
37890 | Would it not be far better for the anti- monopoly cause in the north? |
37890 | Would it not be far better for us of the section? |
37890 | Would not this be just as equal? |
37890 | You have thus had forced upon you the greatest and the gravest question that can ever come under your consideration,--How can the union be preserved?" |
37890 | You will have succeeded when you can rightly appreciate this outburst:"Will you collect money when it is acknowledged that it is not wanted? |
37890 | _ Nominees of National Conventions._"What are the fruits of your national conventions?... |
37890 | and where could nine millions of blacks be found-- or even half a million-- as far above the African level of to- day as ours? |
37890 | and why did they not revolt in large bodies during the war in the many communities whence all the able- bodied whites had gone to the front far away?" |
37890 | has it been before a committee? |
37890 | has the house disagreed to it? |
37890 | more especially do I ask, would negroes educated at Tuskegee be now teaching the missionaries how to christianize the Africans of Togoland? |
37890 | when was it adopted? |
7105 | But I reckon we ought to tell Uncle Harvey she''s gone out a while, anyway, so he wo n''t be uneasy about her? |
7105 | But I thought YOU lived in Sheffield? |
7105 | But what time o''day? |
7105 | Come, ai n''t that what you saw? |
7105 | Do n''t mind what I said-- please don''t-- you WON''T, now, WILL you? |
7105 | Do n''t they give''em holidays, the way we do, Christmas and New Year''s week, and Fourth of July? |
7105 | HOW''D you come? |
7105 | His''n? 7105 How does he get it, then?" |
7105 | How''s it a new kind? |
7105 | I do n''t know; leastways, I kinder forget; but I thinks it''s--"Sakes alive, I hope it ai n''t HANNER? |
7105 | I thought he lived in London? |
7105 | Is it KETCHING? 7105 Looky here,"I says;"did you ever see any Congress- water?" |
7105 | None of it at all? |
7105 | Nor church? |
7105 | They do n''t, do n''t they? 7105 WHOSE pew?" |
7105 | Was you in there yisterday er last night? |
7105 | Well, did you have to go to Congress to get it? |
7105 | Well, then, how''d you come to be up at the Pint in the MORNIN''--in a canoe? |
7105 | Well, then, how''s he going to take the sea baths if it ai n''t on the sea? |
7105 | Well, then, what are they FOR? |
7105 | Well, then, what does the rest of''em do? |
7105 | Well, what DID you say, then? |
7105 | Well, what in the nation do they call it the MUMPS for? |
7105 | Well, who said it was? |
7105 | Well, why would n''t you? |
7105 | What did you reckon I wanted you to go at all for, Miss Mary? |
7105 | What is it you wo n''t believe, Joe? |
7105 | What is it, duke? |
7105 | What other things? |
7105 | What!--to preach before a king? 7105 Where do you set?" |
7105 | Where is it, then? |
7105 | Which one? |
7105 | Who? 7105 Why, what do they want with more?" |
7105 | Why, who''s got it? |
7105 | Why? |
7105 | --so as to get them to let Miss Mary Jane go aboard? |
7105 | And ai n''t that a big enough majority in any town?" |
7105 | And do you reckon they''d be mean enough to go off and leave you to go all that journey by yourselves? |
7105 | And leave my sisters with them?" |
7105 | And not sell out the rest o''the property? |
7105 | And they call it the MUMPS?" |
7105 | And when the king got done this husky up and says:"Say, looky here; if you are Harvey Wilks, when''d you come to this town?" |
7105 | And you ca n''t get away with that tooth without fetching the whole harrow along, can you? |
7105 | But answer me only jest this one more-- now DON''T git mad; did n''t you have it in your mind to hook the money and hide it?" |
7105 | Ca n''t you SEE that THEY''D go and tell? |
7105 | Did you inquire around for HIM when you got loose? |
7105 | Do n''t you know nothing?" |
7105 | Do n''t you reckon I know who hid that money in that coffin?" |
7105 | Do they treat''em better''n we treat our niggers?" |
7105 | Do you reckon that''ll do?" |
7105 | Hain''t we got all the fools in town on our side? |
7105 | Hain''t your uncles obleegd to get along home to England as fast as they can? |
7105 | How fur is it?" |
7105 | How is servants treated in England? |
7105 | How would you like to be treated so?" |
7105 | How''d they act?" |
7105 | I live up there, do n''t I? |
7105 | I reckon he can stand a little thing like that, ca n''t he?" |
7105 | I says to myself, shall I go to that doctor, private, and blow on these frauds? |
7105 | If the profits has turned out to be none, lackin''considable, and none to carry, is it my fault any more''n it''s yourn?" |
7105 | If they have, wo n''t the complices get away with that bag of gold Peter Wilks left? |
7105 | If you do n''t hitch on to one tooth, you''re bound to on another, ai n''t you? |
7105 | Is a HARROW catching-- in the dark? |
7105 | Is it ketching?" |
7105 | Is she took bad?" |
7105 | Is there anybody here that helped to lay out my br-- helped to lay out the late Peter Wilks for burying?" |
7105 | Long as you''re in this town do n''t you forgit THAT-- you hear?" |
7105 | NOW what do you say-- hey?" |
7105 | Next, she says:"Do you go to church, too?" |
7105 | S''pose she dug him up and did n''t find nothing, what would she think of me? |
7105 | Say, where IS that song-- that draft?" |
7105 | Says I, kind of timid- like:"Is something gone wrong?" |
7105 | Shall I go, private, and tell Mary Jane? |
7105 | She says:"Did you ever see the king?" |
7105 | She says:"Honest injun, now, hain''t you been telling me a lot of lies?" |
7105 | So when I says he goes to our church, she says:"What-- regular?" |
7105 | So, says I, s''pose somebody has hogged that bag on the sly?--now how do I know whether to write to Mary Jane or not? |
7105 | The doctor he up and says:"Would you know the boy again if you was to see him, Hines?" |
7105 | The duke bristles up now, and says:"Oh, let UP on this cussed nonsense; do you take me for a blame''fool? |
7105 | The duke says, pretty brisk:"When it comes to that, maybe you''ll let me ask, what was YOU referring to?" |
7105 | The duke says:"Have you seen anybody else go in there?" |
7105 | The king kind of ruffles up, and says:"Looky here, Bilgewater, what''r you referrin''to?" |
7105 | The king says:"Was you in my room night before last?" |
7105 | The king says:"Why?" |
7105 | Then I says:"Blame it, do you suppose there ai n''t but one preacher to a church?" |
7105 | Then I says:"Miss Mary Jane, is there any place out of town a little ways where you could go and stay three or four days?" |
7105 | Then the doctor whirls on me and says:"Are YOU English, too?" |
7105 | Then the duke says:"What, all of them?" |
7105 | Then the old man turns towards the king, and says:"Perhaps this gentleman can tell me what was tattooed on his breast?" |
7105 | They sets down then, and the king says:"Well, what is it? |
7105 | Tired of our company, hey?" |
7105 | Very well, then; is a PREACHER going to deceive a steamboat clerk? |
7105 | Was there any such mark on Peter Wilks''breast?" |
7105 | Well, did he? |
7105 | Well, we got to save HIM, hain''t we? |
7105 | Well, what do you think? |
7105 | What WILL he do, then? |
7105 | What did they do? |
7105 | What did you RECKON he wanted with it?" |
7105 | What do we k''yer for HIM? |
7105 | What does HE want with a pew?" |
7105 | What was it?" |
7105 | What''s the matter with her?" |
7105 | When I struck Susan and the hare- lip, I says:"What''s the name of them people over on t''other side of the river that you all goes to see sometimes?" |
7105 | When was that?" |
7105 | Where WOULD he live?" |
7105 | Where WOULD it be?" |
7105 | Where did you hide it?" |
7105 | Why?" |
7105 | William Fourth? |
7105 | Would YOU a done any different? |
7105 | Would ther''be any sense in that? |
7105 | Your uncle Harvey''s a preacher, ai n''t he? |
7105 | and"Where, for the land''s sake, DID you get these amaz''n pickles?" |
7105 | is he going to deceive a SHIP CLERK? |
42257 | Any of your family ever own a nigger? |
42257 | But do n''t those people ever get out warrants against you? |
42257 | Did you ever expect to own a nigger? |
42257 | Did you know I was in the barracks last night? |
42257 | How do you expect to get started on a new farm? |
42257 | Is that pile of furniture and household goods yours too? |
42257 | Is that true, Jim? 42257 Joyce, did you ever own a nigger?" |
42257 | Joyce,said a Northern officer to a Poor White in Kentucky forty years ago,"what do you think this war is about?" |
42257 | Suppose he summons you before a magistrate? |
42257 | That is n''t your wagon, I suppose, that good painted wagon? |
42257 | Which did the people that did own niggers like best, you or the nigger? |
42257 | And if they were not to be trained in a way that would make the cotton fields cleaner and more productive, how should our upbuilding go on? |
42257 | And then what happened? |
42257 | And, finally, what is to be argued from the men of power whom the negro race has displayed-- a few in slavery days, and many in these later times? |
42257 | Are the lower Whites and the still lower Negroes moving upward, however slowly? |
42257 | Are there positive remedies for a state of things admittedly alarming? |
42257 | Are these names more heraldic than those of John Winthrop and John Endicott and Thomas Dudley? |
42257 | Are you so afraid lest peering from this high Pisgah, between Philistine and Amalekite, we sight the Promised Land?" |
42257 | As one such put it:"I follow up a hand and tell him to do what he ought? |
42257 | But how is it provable that the Negro might not intend to return and carry out his contract? |
42257 | But if he met me he''d say,''Hullo, Joyce, is that you?''" |
42257 | But jis ez I thought I had um bested, what you reckon happened? |
42257 | But may not"substantially white men"have an uplifting influence such as indubitably white men had in earlier times? |
42257 | But what are the other five hundred thousand? |
42257 | But''tother night when me and de old''oman''uz drivin''back fum church, long erbout 12 o''clock, en er full moon, what you reckon I seen, boss? |
42257 | CHAPTER II THE SOUTHLAND In what do the Southern States differ as to extent and climate from other parts of the United States? |
42257 | CHAPTER XI IS THE NEGRO RISING? |
42257 | Can he conceive a standard and adhere to it? |
42257 | Can he fix his mind on a distant good and for its sake give up present indulgences? |
42257 | Can he restrain the primal impulses of human nature? |
42257 | Can the two races come to an understanding which will mean peace in our time? |
42257 | Could blind race hostility go farther than in the Atlanta Riots of 1907, for which not one murderer has ever been subjected to any punishment? |
42257 | Could fatuity reach a sublimer height than the idea that the white man will stand idly by and see this performance? |
42257 | Could not that process be carried still farther? |
42257 | Could the desired result of keeping Whites and Negroes from too confining a contact be reached by a less drastic method? |
42257 | Could the two races divide the land into districts? |
42257 | Do you know who I like best in those poems? |
42257 | Does the principle, as in the North, apply to all the elements of population? |
42257 | Does the white man necessarily fear and dislike the Negro? |
42257 | Else how could the negroes-- even a small percentage of them-- ever be touched by any training at all? |
42257 | First of all, can the Southern race question be solved by any action of the North? |
42257 | First of all, what does the Southland include? |
42257 | From the federal government, as has been shown above, no effective legislation can be expected; but may not something be done by special state action? |
42257 | Has the Negro as a race an inferior intellectual quality, a disability to respond to opportunities? |
42257 | Has the Negro character? |
42257 | Have you licked the Yankees at last?" |
42257 | How could such an adjustment be expected now? |
42257 | How does education affect the race question? |
42257 | How does it come about that these mobs, composed invariably of white men and none others, can not be put down by the white authorities? |
42257 | How does this feeling strike the Negro? |
42257 | How far does the desire for uplift extend, and how far is it effective? |
42257 | How is the Negro to attain social equality so long as the white man refuses to invite him or to be invited with him? |
42257 | How many have actually sat over the fire of a one- room negro cabin? |
42257 | How many white people in the city of Atlanta, for instance, have actually been inside the house of a prosperous, educated Negro? |
42257 | How shall houses be built, drays be driven and dirt shoveled, if there are no Negroes? |
42257 | How''s the old massa, and how''s the young massa, and how''s the old missus, and how''s the young missus?'' |
42257 | If lynching under any circumstances is for the good of the community, why not legalize it? |
42257 | If the Negroes can not be replaced, is it not possible to segregate them into districts of their own? |
42257 | If the negro trades have disappeared, how does it come about that in Montgomery, Ala., there are practically no other laborers of that type? |
42257 | In the case of a Negro who whipped his child to death, the natural inquiry was,"What did they do with him?" |
42257 | In the chapter on"Is the Negro Rising?" |
42257 | Is he perfectly fitted for any service? |
42257 | Is he to be included in the general indictment of inferiority? |
42257 | Is it founded on an innate race repulsion? |
42257 | Is it prejudice against a low race, or a black race? |
42257 | Is not this the crux of the whole matter? |
42257 | Is the Negro powerful enough to force his standards and share his disabilities with the superior white man? |
42257 | Is the North to be"licked again"indefinitely? |
42257 | Is the education of the Negro as clearly necessary as that of the White? |
42257 | Is there any likelihood of a private propaganda in behalf of the Negro like that of the abolitionists? |
42257 | Is this running sore to be nursed and treated and anodyned and salved and held forever to our breasts?" |
42257 | Is this the life you grudge us, O knightly America? |
42257 | Is this the life you long to change into the dull red hideousness of Georgia? |
42257 | No matter if it be low, has it the capacity of rising? |
42257 | Now where are they?" |
42257 | Oh, my friends, which will you choose?" |
42257 | Shall it be Northerners? |
42257 | Shall the thriftless part of the Southern community remain at its present low average standard of productivity? |
42257 | Should the same method apply to the training of the two races? |
42257 | Still more, if they try to arise, will the Whites permit them? |
42257 | That achievement was a vast advance above the savagery of the native African; and why should the capacity for improvement stop there? |
42257 | That you can not offer the incitement of free labor without including the possibility of the laborer preferring to be idle? |
42257 | The essential question with regard to the Negro is simply: Is the race in America moving downward or upward? |
42257 | Then what is to be done with the hundreds of thousands of landowners, tenants, croppers, and wage hands, who depend on advances from the Whites? |
42257 | Unless their woes at home are shams, Why do n''t they go, the Afro- Ams? |
42257 | What are its needs? |
42257 | What are the sources of this wealth? |
42257 | What does the South as a whole think on this question of education? |
42257 | What else does it mean when the Southern port in one year ships more wheat than the Northern? |
42257 | What has been the progress of the Negro in that direction; what is the likelihood of further advance? |
42257 | What has it so far done? |
42257 | What is a bale? |
42257 | What is it prepared to do? |
42257 | What is seven months''residence by a visitor, a fly on the wheel, against seventy years''residence by men who are a part of the problem? |
42257 | What is social equality if not a mutual feeling in a community that each member is welcome to the social intercourse of the other? |
42257 | What is the character of their teachers? |
42257 | What is the present condition of the Poor White? |
42257 | What is the reason for this discrepancy between the resources and the output of the South? |
42257 | What is there in these thirty millions which sets them apart? |
42257 | What is to be done with a bondman who refuses to touch a hoe, except to whip him, and to keep on whipping him till he yields? |
42257 | What kind of pupils are they? |
42257 | What kind of school buildings are provided for them? |
42257 | What makes these differences? |
42257 | What of that? |
42257 | What somebody else? |
42257 | What will he do when put to the test? |
42257 | What, therefore, did earthly poverty matter? |
42257 | When Reed suggests that the Negro be allowed to take over some state and carry it on as a negro community, the instant question is, which state? |
42257 | When will people learn the good old Puritan lesson that the power to do well involves the power to refuse well doing? |
42257 | Whence came the hundreds of thousands of mulattoes in slavery days? |
42257 | Where is he to buy his goods? |
42257 | Which of these two classes speaks for the South? |
42257 | Who educates the Irish, German, Italian, Jewish, Greek, and Syrian children of those cities? |
42257 | Why is it that there is a flourishing Southern Club in New York, and smaller ones in other cities, yet no Northern club anywhere in the South? |
42257 | Why should the belief of the African''s incapacity be so widely disseminated? |
42257 | Why should they not be content?... |
42257 | Will the mass, the voters, the possessors of the physical force of the community, accept their decisions? |
42257 | You want to know when all that trouble happened''bout the title? |
42257 | or where have they ruled for these twenty years? |
37115 | But what does this prove? 37115 Whence does this arise?" |
37115 | [ 78] And why does not misery spur on other nations placed under similar circumstances? 37115 Admitting that we are more enlightened upon some subjects, in how many other respects are we inferior to our more remote ancestors? 37115 And has Christianity, then, no civilizing influence? 37115 And if he were led to adopt that opinion, how would he attempt to account for the striking diversities in their aspect and manner of existence? |
37115 | Are not these perfect resemblances? |
37115 | Are not these sentiments very monarchical for a democrat; very religious for an atheist? |
37115 | Are political institutions to be the test? |
37115 | Are the most intellectual, the best informed men generally the best Christians? |
37115 | Are the negroes, then, more closely allied to our race than the Sclavonic nations? |
37115 | Are the results of these ideas and facts such as are conformable to the instincts, the tendencies, of the masses? |
37115 | Are we, then, so infinitely more civilized than France? |
37115 | At what time of the world''s history then have we-- the_ civilized_ nations-- passed through this stage of semi- civilization? |
37115 | But are these mental faculties, which every individual of our species possesses, susceptible of indefinite development? |
37115 | But are we warranted thence to conclude that the nation to which this individual belongs, is susceptible of adopting our civilization? |
37115 | But does not the free population of Rome afford a perfect analogue to a modern body politic? |
37115 | But has the human mind really expanded since the days of Pythagoras and Plato? |
37115 | But how shall we distinguish the latter? |
37115 | But is the Bible really explicit on this point? |
37115 | But so soon as these men have sufficiently mastered the first elements of knowledge, to what use do they, for the most part, apply them? |
37115 | But what becomes of the population of the rest of the world, who are not included in this classification? |
37115 | But what interest had they in the success of the great king? |
37115 | But whom did this civilization embrace? |
37115 | But why are they lost? |
37115 | But why revert to the past, and to distant scenes? |
37115 | But, as these nations have few points of resemblance, the question suggests itself: Do not, then, all civilizations tend to the same results? |
37115 | But, asks Mr. Gobineau, what is degeneracy? |
37115 | By what contrivance did the engineers of that people hoist those enormous masses to a dizzy height? |
37115 | Can we not admire the Almighty as well in the variety as in a fancied uniformity of His works? |
37115 | Could the name of Cyrus, the remembrance of the storming of Sardis, the siege of Babylon, the conquest of Egypt, fire them with enthusiasm? |
37115 | Did prejudice operate four thousand years ago exactly as it does now? |
37115 | Do we find this homogeneity in European nations? |
37115 | Do we recognize here a people in a state of moral and social advancement?" |
37115 | Does it exist only in the minds of the visionary, or is it a mere bugbear of the timorous? |
37115 | Has human nature changed, or has it even modified its failings? |
37115 | Has the thinker of the nineteenth century faculties and perceptions which they had not? |
37115 | Have all men the same capacity for intellectual progress? |
37115 | Have we not daily proofs around us that the heroic virtues of by- gone ages still live in ours? |
37115 | Have we one virtue more or one vice less than former generations? |
37115 | How can a religion be true which makes adherence to such an order a fundamental article of its creed? |
37115 | How can it be proved that any existing forms primordially were distinct? |
37115 | How many European countries can pretend to this? |
37115 | How many discoveries which we owe to mere accident, or which are the fruits of painful efforts, were the lost possessions of remote ages? |
37115 | How many more are not yet restored? |
37115 | How then shall we judge of the degree of intellect necessary to be a follower of Jesus? |
37115 | How were they transported the vast distance from the quarries where they were hewn? |
37115 | How were those blocks of stone, thirty- five feet long and eighteen thick, raised one upon another? |
37115 | How, then, can an animal be taken as an analogue for man? |
37115 | How, then, shall we define this term? |
37115 | If this were the case, why was it necessary, until the last expiring throb of Paganism, to preserve its temples and pay the hierophants? |
37115 | In South America, where Spain ruled with unrestrained power for centuries, what effect has it produced? |
37115 | In other words, can cultivation raise all the different races to the same intellectual standard? |
37115 | In this miserable corner of the world, what were the Jews? |
37115 | Is not this a very high prerogative allotted to that branch of the human family? |
37115 | Is not this like the reasoning in the child''s story- book: Why is Jack a bad boy? |
37115 | Is the diffusion of knowledge by popular education to be the test? |
37115 | Is the perfection to which the arts are carried, the test of civilization? |
37115 | Is this civilization? |
37115 | It is owing to a natural law of death which seems to govern societies as well as individuals; but, does this law operate alike in all cases? |
37115 | Many affect to deride the idea of"manifest destiny"that possesses us Anglo- Americans, but who in the main doubts it? |
37115 | Now is this the case? |
37115 | Now, I ask, in what does the difference consist? |
37115 | On the contrary, does not most of the talent of England spring up from plebeian ranks? |
37115 | Or, are the useful arts to carry the prize? |
37115 | Quod si causam ad coeli solique naturam referas, non homines albi in illis regionibus renascentes non nigrescunt? |
37115 | That too great an extension of territory is the cause of weakness? |
37115 | The great empires that overshadowed the world, where are they? |
37115 | The youthful beauty of Canton would be handsome(?) |
37115 | Then the question,"Which is the best government?" |
37115 | This is, in a measure, true of nations of the same race, but is it true with regard to different races? |
37115 | To forge still firmer their own fetters? |
37115 | To whom pertains the glory of Grecian history? |
37115 | We possess pure and exalted principles, I admit, but are they carried into practice? |
37115 | What agriculturist could be made to believe that, with the same care, all plants would thrive equally well in all soils? |
37115 | What are the material wants of the Hindoo? |
37115 | What audience could now endure, or what police permit, the plays of Congreve and of Otway? |
37115 | What was this famous Canaan? |
37115 | What, then, can we call a Christian civilization? |
37115 | Whence this result? |
37115 | Whence, then, this gathering storm? |
37115 | Where are the brutal fox- hunting country squires of former centuries? |
37115 | Where are the results? |
37115 | Where is there such a nation? |
37115 | Who piled these monstrous masses, which modern art could scarcely move? |
37115 | Who would dare to assert that Rome owed her universal empire to her geographical position? |
37115 | Why does he disobey his parents? |
37115 | Why has this been so? |
37115 | Would not any naturalist consider as distinct species any animals of the same genus so distinguished? |
37115 | Would this add one new faculty to the human mind, or ennoble human nature by the eradication of one bad passion? |
37115 | Yet, who would decide which had the superior intellect? |
37115 | and are no limits imposed to the perfectibility of our species? |
37115 | asks M. De Tocqueville;"have we really more sensibility than our forefathers?" |
37115 | is it uniform like the result it brings about, and do all civilizations perish from the same pre- existing cause? |
37115 | the good old customs, when hospitality consisted in drinking one''s guest underneath the table? |
11057 | An''de chillen? |
11057 | An''you would n''lack ter go up dere an''''joy all dese privileges? |
11057 | And as much whiskey and tobacco as was good for you, Grandison? |
11057 | And how did you know about them? |
11057 | And now, ladies and gentlemen, friends and companions, I ask you, what should he have done? |
11057 | And your book-- your treatise that is to make you famous? |
11057 | And your profession? |
11057 | Are you guilty or not guilty? |
11057 | Are you sure there was no mark on the things that were found upon you? |
11057 | Could you love me, Charity, if I did something heroic? |
11057 | Dey wo n''t try ter steal me, will dey, marster? |
11057 | Did it not occur to you that what you took for brazen impudence might have been but the evidence of conscious innocence? |
11057 | Did n''t he come out this way, Jack? |
11057 | Did yer hear the news? |
11057 | Did you go to the orphan asylum? |
11057 | Did you have your marriage registered after the surrender? |
11057 | Did you learn the name of the steamboat? |
11057 | Did you tell my people in Virginia? |
11057 | Do de gemman lib in dis house? |
11057 | Do n''t you remember Cicely-- Cicely whom you sold, with her child, to the speculator on his way to Alabama? |
11057 | Do you really expect to find your husband? 11057 Do you remember what kind of hair he had?" |
11057 | Does you know anything erbout hosses? |
11057 | Does you read writin'', Johnnie? |
11057 | Free to do what? |
11057 | Gentlemen of the jury, have you agreed upon a verdict? |
11057 | Grandison,said Dick, raising his voice above the roar of the cataract,"do you know where you are now?" |
11057 | Have n''t I always treated you right? |
11057 | Have n''t you always got all you wanted to eat? |
11057 | He did n''t come? |
11057 | Heah''s de fish; heah''s de house; heah I is; but whar''s de ole''oman, an''whar''s de fu''niture? 11057 How do you feel about the case, Colonel?" |
11057 | How have you lived all these years? |
11057 | How is I gwine ter git ovuh dat fence, chile? |
11057 | How you feelin'', suh? |
11057 | How''s he gittin''on? |
11057 | How''s this for a way out? |
11057 | I wonder what''s the matter? |
11057 | In the mean time he had met and loved and married my mother? |
11057 | Is I er- dreamin'', er does I see w''at I''pears ter see? |
11057 | Is Mis''Davis home? |
11057 | Is breakfus''done ready? |
11057 | Is dey any er dem dadblasted abolitioners roun''heah, Mars Dick? |
11057 | Is dey playin''in de woods? |
11057 | Is dis yere whar Mistuh Ryduh lib, suh? |
11057 | Is the sheriff at home? |
11057 | Is you feelin''bettah now? |
11057 | Is you goin''uptown? |
11057 | Is you gwine ter chu''ch ter- night? |
11057 | Is you hearn f''m Sam lately? |
11057 | Jack,he asked,"what kind of a looking man was the fellow you gave the note to at the depot?" |
11057 | Kin I see Miss Ma''y? |
11057 | Kin yer tell me w''at went wid Mis''Davis? |
11057 | Lemme tote yo''bundle fer yer, Miss Ma''y? |
11057 | Life? |
11057 | May I see it? |
11057 | Mistah Wright, ef a man''s wife got money, whose money is dat befo''de law-- his''n er her''n? |
11057 | My father? |
11057 | My mother was a Virginia belle, was she not? |
11057 | My mother-- was she beautiful? |
11057 | No, what wuz it? |
11057 | Oh, Dick,she had said with shuddering alarm,"what have you done? |
11057 | Ole''oman,he asked, after the edge of his appetite had been taken off,"how would you lack ter live at de Norf?" |
11057 | Please, ma''am, will you tell me whether a man name''Ben Davis useter live in dis neighborhood? |
11057 | S''pos''n'', den, jes''fer de argyment, me an''my ole''oman sh''d fall out en wanter separate, how could I git a defoce? |
11057 | So Milly ai n''t my lawful wife, den? |
11057 | Tell me, child,said the other woman, with restrained eagerness,"what were the things found upon you when you were taken from the river?" |
11057 | The gentleman did n''t come? |
11057 | The jedge talks well, do n''t he? |
11057 | Then, finally, I put the question to him,''Shall you acknowledge her?'' 11057 True,"said the prisoner,"you saved my life, but for how long? |
11057 | W''at do dis mean? |
11057 | W''at you want? |
11057 | Was there any one else with him? |
11057 | Wat yer want, chile? |
11057 | Well, what do you mean to do? |
11057 | Well, what is it? |
11057 | Whar''s de chillen? |
11057 | What are you doing here? |
11057 | What color is he? |
11057 | What color was he-- that''s what I want to know-- and what kind of hair did he have? |
11057 | What did my father do then, when he had sold out in Virginia? |
11057 | What do you want, Sam? |
11057 | What for? 11057 What is he, granny,"asked the girl anxiously,"a w''ite man, or not?" |
11057 | What kind of a life? 11057 What of my mother''s people?" |
11057 | What shall I do with that man? |
11057 | What was her maiden name? |
11057 | What went wid de proputty? |
11057 | What''s de reason I ca n''t hab a hoss an''buggy an''a whip like Kunnel Tho''nton''s, ef I pay fer''em? |
11057 | What''s his street an''number? |
11057 | What''s the matter with Grandison? |
11057 | What''s the matter? |
11057 | What''s the trouble? |
11057 | When you were in slavery? |
11057 | Where are you going, father? |
11057 | Where are you going, uncle? |
11057 | Where is he from? |
11057 | Whereabouts do you want to go? |
11057 | Which way? 11057 Who are you?" |
11057 | Who gwine ter take me up dere? |
11057 | Who was my father? |
11057 | Who were my father and my mother, and who am I? |
11057 | Whom do you think it safe to take? |
11057 | Whose house is dis? |
11057 | Why did you dance with him? |
11057 | Why do n''t you defend yourself? |
11057 | Why do n''t you take a trip North? |
11057 | Why, dear mammy,said the young woman musingly,"did you not find me, and restore me to my people?" |
11057 | Will yer ax''i m ter step ter de do''a minute, Sis''Nance? |
11057 | Will you take the answer you can get to- night? |
11057 | Wo n''t you have some dinner first? |
11057 | Would you lack ter look''roun''de town a little? |
11057 | ( 1889) The Future American( 1900) The Disfranchisement of the Negro( 1903) What is a White Man? |
11057 | ***** And Cicely? |
11057 | APPENDIX Three essays on the Color Line: What is a White Man? |
11057 | Alice must wrap up her throat-- by the way, Alice, how_ is_ your throat?" |
11057 | An''how hev ye be''n, Misther Payterson, sence I see ye lahst?" |
11057 | And my mother?" |
11057 | And now, is the situation remediless? |
11057 | Are you never going to love me?" |
11057 | As he walked along, he was talking to himself:----"I wonder what dey''ll do w''en I git back? |
11057 | At length the sheriff spoke:----"Is this your gratitude to me for saving your life at the risk of my own? |
11057 | At this moment, however, a fearful thought struck him; suppose the old woman had taken legal advice and married again during his absence? |
11057 | But how in the world did Jack get the thing balled up? |
11057 | But is it needful to stoop so low, and if so, where lies the ultimate responsibility for this abasement? |
11057 | But w''at''s de matter wid yer, Nancy? |
11057 | But what did I learn? |
11057 | But what did you do with him?" |
11057 | But what''s a man''s feelin''s ag''in''the proof?" |
11057 | But, by the way, uncle Wellington, when were you married?" |
11057 | Could I do less than he? |
11057 | Could he subject his wife and daughter to the rude shock of such a disappointment? |
11057 | Could he, in the face of his well- known principles, his lifelong rule of conduct, take this negro into his home and introduce him to his friends? |
11057 | Did n''t Tom tell yer I''d be heah in twenty minutes?" |
11057 | Did you give me your name, or even your protection? |
11057 | Did you want to see me?" |
11057 | Do I know the lady?" |
11057 | Do you not see the letters-- M.S.?" |
11057 | Do you want to take the bread out of a poor man''s mouth? |
11057 | Does you know anybody w''at needs a good cook, suh? |
11057 | Had he been mistaken? |
11057 | Had she found a gold ring? |
11057 | Have you and aunt Milly been having trouble?" |
11057 | Have you anything to say why sentence should not be passed upon you?" |
11057 | Have you met any of them?" |
11057 | How can I ever repay you?" |
11057 | How dis man know''bout all dis yer foolis''ness?" |
11057 | I was"----"You were the colored nurse?--my''mammy,''they would have called you in my old Virginia home?" |
11057 | I wonder ef de chillun''ll be too proud ter reco''nize deir daddy come back f''um de penetenchy? |
11057 | I wonder how Nancy''s s''ported the fambly all dese years? |
11057 | I''d-- I''d-- would I be''lowed ter hit''em, suh?" |
11057 | If not so, where lies the remedy? |
11057 | In the stolidity with which he received this sentence for a crime which he had not committed, spoke who knows what trait of inherited savagery? |
11057 | Is n''t there some more likely explanation?" |
11057 | Is sump''n''skeered yer?" |
11057 | Is we gwine back home''fo''long, Mars Dick?" |
11057 | Is you gwine ter sleep all de mawnin''? |
11057 | It''s hardly good form to mention one''s ancestors nowadays, and what''s the use of them at all if one ca n''t boast of them?" |
11057 | Might not the witness''s indignation have been a manifestation of conscious innocence? |
11057 | My friends, what would the man do? |
11057 | Now, what is the effect of this wholesale disfranchisement of colored men, upon their citizenship? |
11057 | Or shall steps be taken in the name of liberty to rescue a fellow- man from bondage? |
11057 | Primus,"she called,"w''at wuz Ben Davis, w''at useter own dis yer house, sent ter de penitenchy fer?" |
11057 | Really, come to think of it, why should I care whether you do anything or not?" |
11057 | S''pose you be''n doin''well as usual?" |
11057 | Seriously, Clara dear, what shall it be? |
11057 | Shall this be tolerated? |
11057 | Tell me, child, what ails you? |
11057 | Was it a bright- colored silk dress? |
11057 | Was it a soft, curly plume for her hat? |
11057 | Was it merely a pastoral call? |
11057 | Whar wuz he?" |
11057 | What are a lot of musty, mouldy old grandfathers, compared with life and love and happiness? |
11057 | What can I do for you?" |
11057 | What did I ever do dat he should use me like he did?" |
11057 | What do they need with education? |
11057 | What do you want me to do, sweetheart? |
11057 | What father''s duty have you ever performed for me? |
11057 | What is a white man? |
11057 | What was the meaning of it? |
11057 | What was the occasion of his presence this evening? |
11057 | What would he do, or rather what ought he to do, in such a crisis of a lifetime? |
11057 | When are you going to give it up?" |
11057 | Where kin yer git dem whips?" |
11057 | Who''s coming?" |
11057 | Why, elder,"he said to the preacher, who had started from his seat with surprise,"w''at''s yo''hurry? |
11057 | Will you love me if I run a negro off to Canada?" |
11057 | Will you promise to give no alarm and make no attempt to capture me until morning, if I do not shoot?" |
11057 | Wo n''t you stay an''hab some supper wid us?" |
11057 | Would you like to go with me?" |
11057 | Yes or no?" |
11057 | _ What other race would have submitted so quietly to disfranchisement?_ These facts stamp his[ the Negro''s] inferiority to the white race." |
11057 | asked the hackman,"and what is his business?" |
11057 | he gasped,"you would not murder your own father?" |
11057 | or had aunt Milly taken legal advice and married the elder? |
11057 | or rather, when shall it be? |
11057 | or was he courting? |
34847 | ''But he is entitled to it, is n''t he?'' 34847 Anti- kink?" |
34847 | Are you going to open the door? |
34847 | But,I said,"do you know that you will be better off when you get to Indianapolis?" |
34847 | Ca n''t I do something to help? |
34847 | Did it work? |
34847 | Did you call him that? |
34847 | Do you know what I do with such cases? |
34847 | Do you see that man? |
34847 | Do you talk much about these things among yourselves? |
34847 | Does anybody know this Negro? |
34847 | Does it work? |
34847 | Horace,he demanded,"did you kill my old dad?" |
34847 | How did you know it? |
34847 | How did you make out? |
34847 | How do you do it? |
34847 | How is that? |
34847 | How would you like to be classed with''freight, express and packages''? |
34847 | I wonder if you can decide:''Where does the colour line really-- end?'' |
34847 | I would like to ask, Mr. President, what is before the Senate? |
34847 | In Washington,I said;"you''ve heard of the President of the United States?" |
34847 | Is that so? |
34847 | Is this all true? |
34847 | We have been disarmed: how shall we protect our lives and property? 34847 What are you doing out here this time of night?" |
34847 | What do you do that for? |
34847 | What do you do with them? |
34847 | What do you mean by protection? |
34847 | What good will it do? 34847 What have you got?" |
34847 | What shall I tell them for you? |
34847 | What shall we do about it? |
34847 | What shall we do? |
34847 | What''s the charge? |
34847 | What''s the trouble here? |
34847 | What''s this? |
34847 | What''s your name? |
34847 | Where are you going? |
34847 | Where''s the money? |
34847 | Where''s your home? |
34847 | Where, in fact,said the_ Age- Herald_,"does such business lead to? |
34847 | Who cares,one of them asked,"about a few worthless Negroes?" |
34847 | Why Washington? |
34847 | Why do n''t you get married? |
34847 | Why do they come? |
34847 | Why hotels for coloured men? |
34847 | Why not in your church in the afternoon? |
34847 | Why should I? |
34847 | You have n''t seen any straight- haired Negroes, have you? |
34847 | ''Well, then, what next?'' |
34847 | ''Well, what next?'' |
34847 | ''Well, you will get$ 2.50 or$ 3 a week, but after a while that will not be enough; what then?'' |
34847 | : How is the white man going to control the government? |
34847 | A carpenter must be asked, not"What colour are you?" |
34847 | A"nigger"had been hanged: what of it? |
34847 | And Tillman and the Negro farmhand?" |
34847 | And is there a higher test of usefulness? |
34847 | And this leads to the question: Have we freedom of opinion in the South? |
34847 | And though excluded in large measure from the polls, does he not in reality cast his mighty vote for Presidents, Congressmen, Governors? |
34847 | And what do Negroes find when they reach the promised land? |
34847 | And why do they come if their difficulties are so great? |
34847 | And why vote? |
34847 | And why? |
34847 | And"the nigger deserved hanging,"and"why should good white blood be shed for nigger brutes?" |
34847 | Are they better or worse off in the North than in the South? |
34847 | As an able coloured man said to me:"What shall we do? |
34847 | But can we stop mob- law unless we go to the heart of the matter and stop lynching for rape? |
34847 | But what of Glenn afterward? |
34847 | But what of the large Negro population of Statesboro during all this excitement? |
34847 | But when they finally went to him, he said:"What do we want of a hotel? |
34847 | But who is to blame? |
34847 | Clark Howell, its editor, responded with an editorial entitled"Shall We Blaze the Trail?" |
34847 | Did he not cause a civil war, the results of which still curse the country? |
34847 | Do the masses of Negroes now coming North realise their ambitions? |
34847 | Do you think that you could resist the same wrath that caused God to slay the Philistines and the Russians to throw bombs? |
34847 | Does democracy really include Negroes as well as white men? |
34847 | Does he, or can he, survive? |
34847 | Does it include Rockefeller and the Slavonian street- sweeper? |
34847 | Does it include Russian Jews, Italians, Japanese? |
34847 | Does not every Southern Caucasian"to the manor born"bear witness to this version? |
34847 | For their benefit? |
34847 | Has this anything to do with Negro crimes against white women? |
34847 | Here is one comprehensive reply of a labour leader:"What''s the use? |
34847 | How about the industrial relationships? |
34847 | How did the riot affect them? |
34847 | How does it all work out for good or for evil, for landlord and for tenant? |
34847 | How does the landlord-- and a lord he is in a very true sense-- manage his great estate? |
34847 | How is it in the North where intermarriage is not forbidden by law? |
34847 | How shall he, who is supreme in the South as in the North, treat the Negro? |
34847 | I do n''t know how many Negroes replied to my question:"What is the chief cause of friction down here?" |
34847 | I question him somewhat as follows:''Well, my boy, you want to go to work, do you? |
34847 | If I had been caught what would my life have been worth? |
34847 | If the kind of life I have lived is n''t the kind you want, shall I leave and go North? |
34847 | If the white man sets an example of non- obedience to law, of non- enforcement of law, and of unequal justice, what can be expected of the Negro? |
34847 | In other words, is the amalgamation of the races still going on and to what extent? |
34847 | In this are we not speaking the truth? |
34847 | Is Boston a more favourable location for him than Atlanta or New Orleans? |
34847 | Is he treated better or worse? |
34847 | Is it in this black African or in this white American with the drop of dark blood?" |
34847 | Is it not possible that the manner of the elimination of the Negro from politics is wrong? |
34847 | Is it true that the North will not let the Negro work? |
34847 | Is it true that there is no chance for them in industry? |
34847 | Is that all so?" |
34847 | It is entitled"Is the Negro a Beast?" |
34847 | It was enough to live on as well as they had ever lived: why, then, work more than two days a week? |
34847 | One day they asked him:"What do they talk about when they''re eating?" |
34847 | One day, after the riot, a subscriber called Mr. Logan on the telephone and said:"Do you help Negroes in your society?" |
34847 | Several times I have heard police judges in the South ask concerning a man brought before them:"Is this man coloured or white?" |
34847 | Shall the Negro vote? |
34847 | Should anyone ask"Has not Booker Washington''s school been of benefit to the Negro?" |
34847 | Speak out? |
34847 | TROUBLES OF COUNTRY FOLK But are n''t there two sides to every question? |
34847 | The correspondent writes: The question is,"Will the coloured people support this enterprise with their patronage?" |
34847 | The white men asked the Negroes,"What shall we do to relieve the irritation?" |
34847 | The woman would have identified me-- and what could I have said? |
34847 | Then why do n''t we do it? |
34847 | They argued for some minutes, but finally the judge said to the prisoner:"Who do you want to work for, George?" |
34847 | They looked puzzled, and finally one old fellow scratched his head and said:"Whah you say dis yere man libes?" |
34847 | Think about it yourself: What shall we do? |
34847 | Vote, shall the Negro? |
34847 | We should make criminals of ourselves, should n''t we? |
34847 | What am I?" |
34847 | What are the requirements under which we may live and be protected? |
34847 | What are you going to do?'' |
34847 | What do you mean by sitting down with a white woman?" |
34847 | What does democracy include? |
34847 | What does he know about it? |
34847 | What else is the meaning of Tammany Hall and the boss and machine system in other cities? |
34847 | What good would it do? |
34847 | What happened? |
34847 | What happened? |
34847 | What has been the result? |
34847 | What is being done about it? |
34847 | What is easier or cruder to use as a weapon for crushing a rival than the instinctive dislike of man for man? |
34847 | What is the Negro spirit? |
34847 | What is this race? |
34847 | What is to become of that large class of which I am a part, that class which is neither white nor black and yet both? |
34847 | What of that? |
34847 | What shall we do?" |
34847 | What was the effect, then, of a rapid advance in wages? |
34847 | What was the result? |
34847 | What will he do with him? |
34847 | What would happen if they ordered the troops to fire on their neighbours? |
34847 | What, then, will happen? |
34847 | When I came away the poor lonesome fellow followed me half- way up the hill, asking:"Now, what would you do?" |
34847 | When the South got on its feet again after Reconstruction and took account of itself, what did it find? |
34847 | When the jury left the box Mr. Hopkins turned to Glenn and said:"Well, Joe, what do you think of the case?" |
34847 | When the question came to him:"What shall the Negro do about discrimination?" |
34847 | When, in the past, had the law taken its proper course in Clark County? |
34847 | Where does_ he_ come in? |
34847 | Which is worse? |
34847 | Why expect it? |
34847 | Why had they been arrested? |
34847 | Why is this so? |
34847 | Why not throw off the yoke and get in the fight? |
34847 | Why should he fear to murder? |
34847 | Why should we pay two dollars a year and go to the bother of satisfying the personal ambition of some man we are not interested in?" |
34847 | Why the certainty expressed by Republican politicians of the nomination of Taft? |
34847 | Why? |
34847 | Why? |
34847 | Will he see, as Booker T. Washington says, that if he keeps the Negro in the gutter he must stay there with him? |
34847 | Will the white man''s sense of justice and virtue be robust enough to cause him to withhold the hand of unlimited power? |
34847 | Will you kindly publish the following without attaching my signature or divulging it in any way? |
34847 | With every Negro, then, an essential question is:"How shall I meet this attempt to put me off by myself?" |
34847 | _ Efforts to Punish the Mob_ What happened after that? |
34847 | _ Results of the Riot_ And after the riot in Brownsville, what? |
34847 | _ What Are the Remedies for the Evil Conditions?_ So much for conditions; what of remedies? |
34847 | _ What Are the Remedies for the Evil Conditions?_ So much for conditions; what of remedies? |
34847 | _ What Is the Black Belt?_[ Illustration: THE BLACK BELT In the region shaded more than half of the inhabitants are Negroes.] |
34847 | _ What Is the Race Problem?_ Essentially, then, what is the race problem? |
34847 | _ What Is the Race Problem?_ Essentially, then, what is the race problem? |
34847 | _ What Shall Be the Industrial Relation of the Races?_ So much for the political relationships of the races. |
34847 | _ Who Made Up the Mob?_ One more point I wish to make before taking up the extraordinary reconstructive work which followed the riot. |
34847 | _ Who Will Do the Dirty Work?_ One illustration more and I am through. |
34847 | _ Why Negroes Are Driven Out_ What does it all mean? |
34847 | but"How cunningly and efficiently can you build a house?" |
19746 | ''Dey ain''nobody hyuh but you an''me, is dey?'' 19746 ''Well, hoo''s de man-- hoo''s de man?'' |
19746 | And can any one hear us? |
19746 | And he had the money, in gold? |
19746 | And how is your mother? |
19746 | And what are ha''nts, Uncle Peter? |
19746 | And what are you doing here, Taylor? |
19746 | And what are you going to do? |
19746 | And what became of the industrial school project? |
19746 | And what has old Peter done to deserve a fine of twenty dollars-- more money than he perhaps has ever had at any one time? |
19746 | And what have you been doing all these years, Peter? |
19746 | And who is the woman? |
19746 | And you''d pay the note if you had to, would n''t you? |
19746 | Are n''t you satisfied with the wages? |
19746 | Are we alone, sir? |
19746 | Are you all through, gentlemen? 19746 Are you familiar with New York?" |
19746 | Are you looking for some one? |
19746 | Are you speaking to me? |
19746 | At this hour? |
19746 | Ben tells me you have a business matter to present to me? |
19746 | But cats do n''t fish, Uncle Peter, do they? |
19746 | But what will you do with it? |
19746 | But you''ll be back,she added, recovering herself quickly,"before the vacation season opens?" |
19746 | But, Henry, how could I leave my mother? 19746 But, Henry,"she said with some hesitation,"do you mean that coloured people should use the library?" |
19746 | But, Mistah Haines,asked Peter, excitedly,"is I got to stay here all night? |
19746 | But, papa, if I should die first, and then Uncle Peter, and you last of all, you''ll put Uncle Peter near me, wo n''t you, papa? |
19746 | By the way, Taylor,asked the colonel,"how do_ you_ know all this?" |
19746 | Ca n''t dey? 19746 Can we do anything to punish_ this_ crime?" |
19746 | Can you make it? |
19746 | Colonel French,she said as they were walking the horse up a hill,"are you going to give a house warming?" |
19746 | Could your mother see me,he asked, as they reached the gate,"if I went by the house?" |
19746 | Did Jeff go away? |
19746 | Did he? 19746 Do all spirits come back, Uncle Peter?" |
19746 | Do n''t you want me to come? |
19746 | Do they not need it most? 19746 Do you know where he hid it?" |
19746 | Do you remember that? 19746 Do you suppose I can get dinner at the hotel?" |
19746 | Do you think so? |
19746 | Does he own it still? |
19746 | Does his wife know where he is? |
19746 | Excuse me, suh,he said,"I''ve been wondering ever since we left New York, if you wa''n''t Colonel French?" |
19746 | Gone out to sea? |
19746 | Graciella,he had said,"are you going to marry me? |
19746 | Graciella,he said, taking her hand in his as they stood a moment,"will you marry me?" |
19746 | Has Dr. Moffatt been notified? |
19746 | Has Mr. Turner been in here? |
19746 | Have you any power in the matter? |
19746 | Have you anything to say? |
19746 | He is named Philip-- after his grandfather, I reckon? |
19746 | He left it here? |
19746 | He was the speculator,she said,"who bought and sold negroes, and kept dogs to chase runaways; old Mr. Fetters-- you must remember old Josh Fetters? |
19746 | He''s a lovely man, is n''t he, Aunt Laura? |
19746 | How can such a hotel prosper? |
19746 | How did he come to be arrested the first time? |
19746 | How did you come to lose Belleview? |
19746 | How do you do? |
19746 | How do you know, doctor? 19746 How is Mr. French, Judson?" |
19746 | How? |
19746 | Howdy do? |
19746 | Howdy, Haines,said Turner,"How''s things? |
19746 | Huh? |
19746 | Huh? |
19746 | I mean,he added, noting a change in the colonel''s expression,"why should n''t Fetters pay it?" |
19746 | I suppose that in New York every one has dinner at six, and supper after the theatre or the concert? |
19746 | I wonder which is it? |
19746 | I''m very glad to hear it; and how is Phil? |
19746 | In the barn? |
19746 | In the yard? 19746 Is Miss Laura here?" |
19746 | Is Mr. Fetters at home,inquired the colonel? |
19746 | Is Mr. French there? 19746 Is it a matter of money?" |
19746 | Is it in the house? |
19746 | Is that all? |
19746 | Is the old man sane? |
19746 | Is this the place, papa? |
19746 | It was nothing-- serious? |
19746 | Kin I speak just a word to you, ma''am? 19746 Kin you come hyuh a minute?" |
19746 | Laura,he said one evening when at the house,"will you go with me to- morrow to visit the academy? |
19746 | Mars Henry? |
19746 | May I ask the meaning of this proceeding? |
19746 | Me? 19746 Mr. Blake,"he said, addressing a gentleman with short side- whiskers who was approaching them,"have you had the pleasure of meeting Colonel French?" |
19746 | My man? 19746 No, Henry,"she said,"why should I deceive you? |
19746 | No, Mrs. Hughes, what is it? |
19746 | Not even-- Ben? |
19746 | Oh, Henry,exclaimed Miss Laura,"what is this dreadful story about Ben Dudley? |
19746 | Oh, indeed? 19746 Oh, you are the Nichols, are you, who bought our old place?" |
19746 | Papa, was Uncle Peter hurt? |
19746 | Papa,he said, upon one of these peaceful afternoons,"there''s room enough here for all of us, is n''t there-- you, and me and Uncle Peter?" |
19746 | Papa,he said,"am I going to die?" |
19746 | Phil? |
19746 | Quite well,returned the colonel,"how are you?" |
19746 | Sam,he asked the coachman,"who is that white man?" |
19746 | She is living yet, I trust? |
19746 | Sold,said the justice, bringing down his gavel,"for life, to-- what name, suh?" |
19746 | Surely you can not doubt it, Laura? |
19746 | Thank you,replied the colonel,"I''ll have my man drive me out to- morrow about ten, say; if you''ll be at home? |
19746 | That''s Mr. Dudley, I suppose? |
19746 | The son of Malcolm Dudley, of Mink Run, I suppose? 19746 Then it is good?" |
19746 | Well, Mr. Fetters, what say you? |
19746 | Well, then,she said with a deep sigh,"there is absolutely nothing left?" |
19746 | Well,said Peter,"does you''member dat coal- black man dat drives de lumber wagon?" |
19746 | Well? |
19746 | What is a ha''nted house, Uncle Peter? |
19746 | What is it, Catherine? |
19746 | What is your name? |
19746 | What is your total enrolment? |
19746 | What reason? |
19746 | What time does the train go back to Clarendon? |
19746 | What''ll you do with him, Colonel? |
19746 | What''s the matter with them, Peter? 19746 What''s the matter?" |
19746 | When will Mr. Fetters return? |
19746 | Where are you going? |
19746 | Where is he, papa? 19746 Where was it?" |
19746 | Who did? |
19746 | Who is the mucker, anyway? |
19746 | Who owns the mill? |
19746 | Why did n''t he want to talk to the black cat, Uncle Peter? |
19746 | Why didn''he wan''ter talk ter de black cat? 19746 Why has she never shown him?" |
19746 | Why not? 19746 Why not?" |
19746 | Why not? |
19746 | Why should I waste my time with you, if I did n''t care for you? |
19746 | Why should you pay it? |
19746 | Why, Colonel French,she cried,"you are not going already? |
19746 | Will you be in town long? |
19746 | Will you go for a walk with me? |
19746 | Will you tell me whose graves these are that you are caring for? |
19746 | Wo n''t you stay to supper, Ben? |
19746 | Wo n''t you''light and come in? |
19746 | Would n''t I? |
19746 | Would you like a drive? |
19746 | Yes, Peter, and the robins we used to shoot and the rabbits we used to trap? |
19746 | Yes, Uncle Peter, but those were just stories; they did n''t really talk, did they? |
19746 | You are not one of Fetters''s admirers then? |
19746 | You could never_ live_ in it again-- after a coloured family? |
19746 | You mean that you must regain your speech before you can explain? |
19746 | You saw my uncle? |
19746 | You taught her to sing--_''I dreamt that I dwelt in marble halls? 19746 You will tell me where it is?" |
19746 | You would n''t break the law? |
19746 | You''re Colonel French, ai n''t you, suh? |
19746 | You''re awfully sorry for the ladies, are n''t you? |
19746 | You''re taking Judson with you to look after the boy? |
19746 | ''Member dem chinquapin bushes, whar we killt dat water moccasin dat day? |
19746 | ''Member dem co''n- stalk fiddles we use''ter make, an''dem elderberry- wood whistles?" |
19746 | A rope, a tree-- a puff of smoke, a flash of flame-- or a barbaric orgy of fire and blood-- what matter which? |
19746 | Ai n''t I worth as much as a trip up North?" |
19746 | And shall we invite the old people?" |
19746 | And what higher work than to elevate humanity?" |
19746 | And you''ll wait for me, wo n''t you, Graciella?" |
19746 | Are you all done? |
19746 | Are you from the No''th, likely?" |
19746 | Are you still living in the old place?" |
19746 | Bill Fetters rich and great,"he mused,"who would have dreamed it? |
19746 | But could he expect to hold his own against a millionaire, who had the garments and the manners of the great outside world? |
19746 | But how have you been these many years, and where is your wife? |
19746 | But no Negro had ever thought of burying his dead elsewhere, and if their cemetery was not well kept up, whose fault was it but their own? |
19746 | But was not his, after all, the only way? |
19746 | But what is dere fer''em to do? |
19746 | But why smile at the sentiment? |
19746 | But, oh, Henry, if all of those who love justice and practise humanity should go away, what would become of us?" |
19746 | But, wo n''t you step into the library? |
19746 | Can such a possibility be contemplated without a shudder? |
19746 | Can we sit down over here in the shade and talk by ourselves for a moment?" |
19746 | Can you tell me where it is?" |
19746 | Consider their teachers-- if the blind lead the blind, shall they not both fall into the ditch?" |
19746 | Could he tell her that this seemingly fortunate accident was merely the irony of fate-- a mere cruel reminder of a former misfortune? |
19746 | Did he know Ward McAllister, at that period the Beau Brummel of the metropolitan smart set? |
19746 | Did the old Knickerbocker families recognise the Vanderbilts? |
19746 | Did you bring her with you?" |
19746 | Did you bring me a_ Herald_? |
19746 | Did you ever see his uncle Malcolm?" |
19746 | Did you see that hoss''n''-buggy hitched in front of the ho- tel?" |
19746 | Do n''t you suppose I have any feelings, even if I ai n''t much account? |
19746 | Do you know?" |
19746 | Do you remember what you told me, that night-- that happy night-- that you loved me because in me you found the embodiment of an ideal? |
19746 | Do you want to bid, suh? |
19746 | Does anybody wish to make it less?" |
19746 | Does you''member de place?" |
19746 | Dudley?" |
19746 | Fetters?" |
19746 | Fetters?" |
19746 | Fetters?" |
19746 | Guilty or not guilty? |
19746 | Had his growing absorption in other things led him to neglect his child? |
19746 | Had the colonel remained in his native State, would he have been able, he wondered, to impress himself so deeply upon the community? |
19746 | Had the lesson been in vain? |
19746 | Have somethin''mo''?" |
19746 | He has n''t gone yet?" |
19746 | He is dead?" |
19746 | He was not to blame for his want of knowledge; but could she throw herself away upon an ignoramus? |
19746 | Hoo said dey couldn''? |
19746 | How long shall I make it?" |
19746 | How long shall I say?" |
19746 | How many have you got this time?" |
19746 | How much am I offered for this bargain?" |
19746 | How much do you s''pose the Squire''ll fine Bud?" |
19746 | I did n''t keep my word about Johnson, did I?" |
19746 | I did not know; but he is alive, I trust, and well?" |
19746 | I do n''t suppose you remember me?" |
19746 | I''m offered two yeahs, gentlemen, for old Peter French? |
19746 | Is Phil worse?" |
19746 | Is it, for some reason, inappropriate to this particular case? |
19746 | It was hallowed by a hundred memories, and now!----"Will you have oil on yo''hair, suh, or bay rum?" |
19746 | May I buy him?" |
19746 | Me an''him will git along fine, wo n''t we, little Mars Phil?" |
19746 | Nobody ain''done tol''you''bout de Black Cat an''de Ha''nted House, is dey?" |
19746 | Now, what''s on your mind? |
19746 | On what days of the week was the Art Museum free to the public? |
19746 | Ought I to give a house warming?" |
19746 | Perhaps not many of them might wish to use it; but to those who do, should we deny the opportunity? |
19746 | Perhaps you can recommend such a person?" |
19746 | She wished her Aunt Laura happiness; no one could deserve it more, but was it possible to be happy with a man so lacking in taste and judgment? |
19746 | Should they put in any evidence, which would be merely to show their hand, since the prisoner would in any event undoubtedly be bound over? |
19746 | Strange things had happened, and why might they not happen again? |
19746 | Tendin''co''t?" |
19746 | The colonel had taken it up and was reading:"''Who can find a virtuous woman? |
19746 | Tombstones always tell the truth, do n''t they, Uncle Peter?" |
19746 | Turner?" |
19746 | Was Fifth Avenue losing its pre- eminence? |
19746 | Was he hurt badly?" |
19746 | Was he marrying her through a mere sentimental impulse, or for calculated convenience, or from both? |
19746 | We will not assimilate him, we can not deport him----""And therefore, O man of God, must we exterminate him?" |
19746 | Well, uncle, did this interesting old family die out, or is it represented in the present generation?" |
19746 | Were the Rockefellers anything at all socially? |
19746 | Were these his only motives; and, if so, were they sufficient to ensure her happiness? |
19746 | What I am bid, gentlemen, for ol''Peter French? |
19746 | What am I bid for this prime lot?" |
19746 | What better place for him than New York? |
19746 | What can be the matter with Ben? |
19746 | What can be the matter? |
19746 | What do you plead-- guilty or not guilty?" |
19746 | What do you want for it?" |
19746 | What else could be expected? |
19746 | What gentleman here would want his daughter to marry a blubber- lipped, cocoanut- headed, kidney- footed, etc., etc., nigger?" |
19746 | What good had freedom done for Peter? |
19746 | What have you got to tell me?" |
19746 | What house?" |
19746 | What is your standard of comparison?" |
19746 | What shall I call you?" |
19746 | What sort of a party shall it be?" |
19746 | What''s it all about?" |
19746 | What''s your trouble? |
19746 | What, in the end, do we get for all our labour?" |
19746 | When did it happen?" |
19746 | Where shall I build the library?" |
19746 | Who can measure the force of hope? |
19746 | Who was Fetters, Laura?" |
19746 | Whoever heard of anybody''s paying a note that was n''t presented?" |
19746 | Why had he chosen her? |
19746 | Why not? |
19746 | Why should Colonel French, an old man, who was of no better blood than himself, be rich enough to rob him of the woman whom he loved? |
19746 | Why should I make any more money? |
19746 | Why should he be poor, while others were rich, and while fifty thousand dollars in gold were hidden in or around the house where he lived? |
19746 | Will you come with me?" |
19746 | Will you come with me?" |
19746 | Will you let me keep our engagement secret until I-- am accustomed to it? |
19746 | Willis when they came out?" |
19746 | With what conscience could a white man in Clarendon ever again ask a Negro to disclose the name or hiding place of a coloured criminal? |
19746 | Wo n''t I look funny in a hoop skirt?" |
19746 | Would blood have been of any advantage, under the changed conditions, or would it have been a drawback to one who sought political advancement? |
19746 | Would the colonel wait? |
19746 | You ain''gwine off nowhere, and leave me alone whils''you are hyuh, is you, suh?" |
19746 | You are going to like me, are n''t you, Phil?" |
19746 | You have not forgotten the way?" |
19746 | You wanted to see me about Bud Johnson?" |
19746 | You''ll call up Mrs. Jerviss, of course, and let her know about the sale?" |
19746 | _"Gwine ter run all night, Gwine ter run all day, I''ll bet my money on de bobtail nag, Oh, who''s gwine ter bet on de bay? |
19746 | an''de minnows we use''ter ketch in de creek, an''dem perch in de mill pon''?" |
19746 | he asked,"w''at''s gone wid de chile?" |
19746 | she exclaimed,"and at such a time? |
19746 | the garden? |
19746 | the quarters?" |
19746 | the spring house? |
11228 | ''Den it is unde''stood, is it,''says Mis''Polly, w''en he had spoke,''dat I am ter take cha''ge er de house?'' 11228 ''Papers?'' |
11228 | ''Scuse me, Mistuh Tom, but is you heared er seed anybody er anything come in de house fer de las''ten minutes? |
11228 | Am I in time for dinner, Sandy? |
11228 | An''nothin''wouldn''make you b''lieve it, suh? |
11228 | An''you wouldn''b''lieve it, not even ef I wouldn''say one wo''d mo''about it? |
11228 | And Julia stayed? |
11228 | And if he had died afterwards, leaving a will? |
11228 | And now, what shall we do about it? |
11228 | And the child? |
11228 | And w''en he had wo''ked fer you ten years, suh, you sot''i m free? |
11228 | And was he really sick? |
11228 | And what became of Julia? |
11228 | And when my body- guard was shot, what then? 11228 And you have robbed me all these years, and now tell me that as a reason why I should forgive the murder of my child?" |
11228 | Are the gentlemen all present? |
11228 | Are you not a physician? |
11228 | Are you_ sho''_ dat''s you, doctuh? |
11228 | But where is the evidence? |
11228 | By the way, major,said the general, who lingered behind McBane as they were leaving,"is Miss Clara''s marriage definitely settled upon?" |
11228 | Ca n''t I go? |
11228 | Can I see him? |
11228 | Can this be true? |
11228 | Carteret,exclaimed Mr. Delamere,"what is all this talk about lynching my man for murder and robbery and criminal assault? |
11228 | Certainly not, Sandy, else why should I be here? |
11228 | Den w''at we gwine ter do? |
11228 | Dinah,exclaimed the old lady, sitting suddenly upright with a defiant assumption of wakefulness,"why do you take so long to come when I call? |
11228 | Do n''t you see that he is? |
11228 | Do n''t you see we''re in earnest? 11228 Do you need me for anything, ma''am?" |
11228 | Dr. Miller, I believe? |
11228 | Ef I should git laid out in dis commotion dat''s gwine on, will you collec''my wages f''m yo''brother, and see dat de ole''oman is put away right? |
11228 | Ef dat''s me gwine''long in front,mused Sandy, in vinous perplexity,"den who is dis behin''here? |
11228 | Excuse me, sir,said the conductor, addressing Dr. Burns,"but did I understand you to say that this man was your servant?" |
11228 | Gentlemen,interposed the general,"would you mind suspending the discussion for a moment, while I mind Jerry across the street? |
11228 | Gentlemen,said Watson,"what is the use? |
11228 | Has anything happened to Aunt Polly? |
11228 | Has he confessed? |
11228 | Have you no enemies? 11228 Have you seen anything of my wife and child?" |
11228 | Have you seen my grandson? |
11228 | Have you told me all, now, upon your honor? 11228 Hello, Sandy,"exclaimed Tom, with an assumed jocularity which he was very far from feeling,"what are you doing with those gorgeous garments?" |
11228 | How about the collector of the port? |
11228 | How about young Delamere? |
11228 | How can you prevent it? |
11228 | How did they catch him? |
11228 | How did this happen, Jane? |
11228 | How have I offended you, Miss Clara? |
11228 | How is Mr. Delamere, Sandy? |
11228 | How is he now? |
11228 | How is he, doctor? |
11228 | How is the baby? |
11228 | How''s the baby to- day, Olivia, and why did n''t you bring him? |
11228 | How, sir? 11228 I hope that all is well?" |
11228 | I wish you''d go up and tell him,said Ellis,"that-- What are you grinning about?" |
11228 | I wonder how his master is? 11228 I wonder,"he said musingly, as though he had not heard her question,"if that is the Ocean Belle?" |
11228 | I wonder,observed the general thoughtfully, after this conclusion had been reached,"if we could n''t have Jerry fetch us some liquor?" |
11228 | If this were election day, where would the negro vote be? |
11228 | Imagining such a case, just for the argument, would the marriage have been legal? |
11228 | Is Dr. Yates in? |
11228 | Is he not looking after Sandy? |
11228 | Is it serious? |
11228 | Is it to be public? |
11228 | Is it-- entirely authentic? |
11228 | Is that all? 11228 Is that skunk to be allowed to stay in town?" |
11228 | Is the child dead? |
11228 | Is the child still alive? |
11228 | Is there anything to that suggestion? |
11228 | Is there one in town? |
11228 | It''s an elegant specimen of journalism, is n''t it? |
11228 | Mars John,he asked dreamily,"you don''b''lieve dat I done dis thing?" |
11228 | May I ask to whom you refer? |
11228 | May I speak with you privately a moment, doctor? |
11228 | Mistuh Tom,asked Sandy solemnly,"ef I wuz in yo''place, an''you wuz in my place, an''we wuz bofe in de same place, whar would I be?" |
11228 | Mistuh Tom,inquired Sandy anxiously,"would you''low dat I''d be''n drinkin''too much?" |
11228 | Mr. Ellis,asked Mr. Delamere, in a voice which trembled with ill- suppressed emotion,"do you know who killed her?" |
11228 | My dear Mr. Delamere,asked Carteret, with an indulgent smile,"how could a negro possibly reflect discredit upon a white family? |
11228 | No, Billy; what is it? |
11228 | Now hold on, Josh,argued Miller;"what is to be gained by fighting? |
11228 | Now what are you croaking about, Jane? |
11228 | Now, Mis''''Livy, what is I ever uttered er said er spoke er done dat would make you s''pose I could tell you a lie''bout yo''own chile? |
11228 | Offended me? |
11228 | Oh, Mr. Ellis,exclaimed Clara, coming toward him with both hands extended,"can nothing be done to stop this terrible affair?" |
11228 | On your bare word, sir? |
11228 | Porter,he demanded of the colored train attachà © who passed through the car a moment later,"is this a smoking car for white men?" |
11228 | Sandy,asked Tom irrelevantly,"have you any money in the house?" |
11228 | Shall I try to drive you back, sir, or will you order your own carriage? |
11228 | So that legally, as well as morally,said Mrs. Carteret,"the will would have been of no effect?" |
11228 | Suppose he had left no will? |
11228 | The person to whom you refer is a negro, I believe? |
11228 | This man is with you? |
11228 | Well, Josh,asked the doctor, as he examined the fracture,"how did you get this? |
11228 | Well, den, suh,said Josh,"where does we stan''now? |
11228 | Well, gentlemen,demanded McBane impatiently,"what are we going to do with the scoundrel when we catch him?" |
11228 | Wellington? |
11228 | What about Billings? |
11228 | What about the colored doctor,queried McBane,"with the hospital, and the diamond ring, and the carriage, and the other fallals?" |
11228 | What became of that editorial in the nigger paper? |
11228 | What became of the other man? |
11228 | What became of the papers, Aunt Polly? |
11228 | What do you mean, Sandy? |
11228 | What do you suggest? |
11228 | What does old Mr. Delamere have to say about the matter? |
11228 | What foundation is there, sir,he asked,"for this astounding charge?" |
11228 | What in the world is the matter, Dinah? |
11228 | What is it, Dinah? |
11228 | What is the matter there? |
11228 | What is the matter, Will, and why are you back so soon? |
11228 | What on earth can be the matter? |
11228 | What shall I tell Mr. Delamere, suh? |
11228 | What shall we do? |
11228 | What was her mother''s name? |
11228 | What would you''vise me ter do, suh? |
11228 | What''s de trouble, suh? 11228 What''s the matter, Watson?" |
11228 | What''s the use of all this hypocrisy, gentlemen? |
11228 | What''s the use? |
11228 | What, in h-- ll is the matter with you, Jerry? 11228 Where are you going?" |
11228 | Where is Olivia? |
11228 | Where is the doctor? |
11228 | Which way did she go? |
11228 | Who are you talkin''to? |
11228 | Who is he? |
11228 | Who is that woman, Olivia? |
11228 | Who is that woman, Olivia? |
11228 | Who''s there? |
11228 | Whom can I call? |
11228 | Why do you want to know? |
11228 | Why does n''t he explain the suspicious circumstances? |
11228 | Why have n''t we thought of him before? 11228 Why should I come down?" |
11228 | Why should you be thankful to me? |
11228 | Why should you thank me? 11228 Why, what''s the matter, Phil?" |
11228 | Wid a nice coffin, an''a nice fune''al, an''a head- bo''d an''a foot- bo''d? |
11228 | Will it be dangerous? |
11228 | Will there be any danger for you, Phil? |
11228 | Will you be home ter suppah, suh? |
11228 | Will you take a hand in a game, Gus? |
11228 | William,she cried shrilly, poking the coachman in the back with the end of her cane,"who is that woman?" |
11228 | Wo n''t you wait for me just a moment, Miss Clara, while I step into the office? 11228 Would n''t you rather take a stroll on the beach, Miss Clara?" |
11228 | Yes, Josh; what is it? |
11228 | Yes, Sally; where are--"An''not some w''ite man come ter bu''n down de house an''kill all de niggers?" |
11228 | You really mean that about Dodie, do you, Mammy Jane? |
11228 | You will not let my baby die? 11228 Again he called his wife''s name, and was about rushing from the house, when a muffled voice came faintly to his ear,--Is dat you, Doctuh Miller?" |
11228 | Are you going to vote at the next election?" |
11228 | As they were coming up she asked him abruptly,--"Mr. Ellis, did you know Tom was in the hotel?" |
11228 | Ashe?" |
11228 | Been fighting again?" |
11228 | Burns?" |
11228 | But I wonder where that nigger is with them cocktails? |
11228 | But I wonduh w''at dem w''ite folks in dere is up ter? |
11228 | But how could he? |
11228 | But w''at could he do but say yas? |
11228 | But, by the way, since we are on the subject, may I ask what affair it is of yours?" |
11228 | By the way,"he added, turning to the ladies,"what was the arrangement with Tom? |
11228 | Dat low- down nigger oughter be lynch'', suh, do n''t you think, er e''se bu''nt? |
11228 | Delamere?" |
11228 | Delamere?" |
11228 | Dere''s one thing sho'',--dey''re gwine ter git after de niggers some way er''nuther, an''w''en dey does, whar is Jerry gwine ter be? |
11228 | Did Sandy mean anything in particular by this enigmatical inquiry, and if so, what? |
11228 | Did the horse run away, or did she see something that frightened her?" |
11228 | Did you see anything of my man Sandy back there on the road? |
11228 | Do n''t you see my niece waiting for me at the gate?" |
11228 | Do n''t you think, dearest, that the major might be induced to shorten our weary term of waiting?" |
11228 | Do you hear?" |
11228 | Do you know whether she will be at home this evening?" |
11228 | Do you take me for a thief, like yourself?'' |
11228 | Do you think they will murder us all, and burn down our houses?" |
11228 | Do you want to get killed?" |
11228 | Does I ever tell''i m''bout yo''gwines- on? |
11228 | Does dat gal w''at does de nussin''w''iles I''m gone ten''ter dis chile right, Mis''''Livy?" |
11228 | Does you''member de Ku- Klux?" |
11228 | Does you''member de time w''en my ole mist''ess, Mis''''Livy upstairs''s mammy, died? |
11228 | Ef I don''vote, I kin keep my job, ca n''t I, suh?" |
11228 | Ef I gits killt, will you do me a favor?" |
11228 | Ellis?" |
11228 | Even if all this had been true, why should Mr. Ellis have said it? |
11228 | Fer de Lawd''s sake, suh, you won''let''em kill me, will you, suh? |
11228 | Fo''ty yeahs ago who''d''a''ever expected ter see a nigger gal ridin''in her own buggy? |
11228 | Go, and go at once,--do you hear?'' |
11228 | Had her words, Mrs. Carteret asked herself, any serious meaning, or were they the mere empty babblings of a clouded intellect? |
11228 | Has he been seen?" |
11228 | Have any of you seen them?" |
11228 | Have n''t you some saved up?" |
11228 | Home!--a beautiful word that, is n''t it, for an exiled wanderer? |
11228 | How in the world did such a mistake ever happen? |
11228 | I am looking for my wife and child,--are they here?" |
11228 | I laughed,''what papers? |
11228 | I presume you saw his article in the Medical Gazette?" |
11228 | I s''pose he jes''fergot erbout it, but w''at is a po''nigger gwine ter do w''en he has ter conten''wid w''ite folks''s fergitfulniss? |
11228 | If the negro, with such overwhelming proofs against him, is not guilty, who is?" |
11228 | Is all de cullud folks be''n killt''cep''n''me an''you, suh? |
11228 | Is my wife here?" |
11228 | Is the doctor at home?" |
11228 | Is the riot almost over, Dr. Miller? |
11228 | Is there a notary public present, or a justice of the peace?" |
11228 | Is there any one in Wellington whom you imagine would like to do you an injury?" |
11228 | Is there any truth in the story?" |
11228 | Is you fell from hebben ter he''p me out er here? |
11228 | It ai n''t wuth nothin''now; but it has be''n money, an''who kin tell but what it mought be money agin? |
11228 | Lynch a man brought up by a Delamere, for a crime of which he is innocent? |
11228 | Merkell?'' |
11228 | Might she not have cast the evil eye upon the baby, and sought thereby to draw him out of the window? |
11228 | Miller, wo n''t you come up and dine with me?" |
11228 | Miller?" |
11228 | Miller?" |
11228 | Miller?" |
11228 | Moreover, upon what ground could she offer her sister any sum of money whatever? |
11228 | Mr. Ellis, would you mind looking about the hotel and seeing if there''s any one here that we know?" |
11228 | My grandson is a genuine Delamere, is he not, Sandy?" |
11228 | My word is worth yours a hundred times over, for I am a lady, and you are-- what? |
11228 | No? |
11228 | Now, what other negro, who might have been mistaken for you, could have taken your clothes? |
11228 | Oh dear, I think I hear Dodie,--I know you''ll excuse me, Mr. Ellis, wo n''t you? |
11228 | On the other hand, what would be the effect of this revelation upon Mrs. Carteret herself? |
11228 | On the other hand, would Miss Pemberton ever speak again to the man who had been the instrument of bringing disgrace upon the family? |
11228 | Perhaps you''d like another? |
11228 | Price?" |
11228 | Price?" |
11228 | Price?" |
11228 | See?" |
11228 | Shall I find you here?" |
11228 | Suppose he had been wrong? |
11228 | Suppose he_ had_ married her, and had then left a will,--would the marriage have made any difference, so far as the will was concerned?" |
11228 | Suppose her aunt had really found such papers,--papers which would seem to prove the preposterous claim made by her father''s mulatto mistress? |
11228 | Suppose that, with the fatuity which generally leads human beings to keep compromising documents, her aunt had preserved these papers? |
11228 | Suppose the colored people armed themselves? |
11228 | Suppose the negroes should also take a hand at the burning? |
11228 | Suppose we just stick it in a pigeon- hole, and let the editor,--what''s his name?" |
11228 | Suppose you got your crowd together and surrounded the jail,--what then?" |
11228 | Surely no one about the house?" |
11228 | There is one thing especially, Sandy: where did you get the gold which was found in your trunk?" |
11228 | Tom is here every other night, and how could he carry on so without showing the signs of it? |
11228 | W''at is we gwine ter do? |
11228 | Was he to come out this evening?" |
11228 | Was there no way to move this woman? |
11228 | Wat nigger ever give me twenty cents in all my bawn days?" |
11228 | We are going to put the niggers down because we want to, and think we can; so why waste our time in mere pretense? |
11228 | What are you doing here?" |
11228 | What became of the piece in the negro paper?" |
11228 | What better time to rescue it?" |
11228 | What can we do to protect him?" |
11228 | What could be expected of a race so utterly devoid of tact? |
11228 | What could have put such a notion into your head? |
11228 | What do you know about it?" |
11228 | What do you know about that?" |
11228 | What has any man in this town done to you, that you should thirst for his blood?" |
11228 | What have I not done for you?" |
11228 | What is the lady in the hall doing?" |
11228 | What more powerful medium for the propagation of an idea? |
11228 | What motive could Ellis have for such an act? |
11228 | What''s the matter with you?" |
11228 | Where is my child?" |
11228 | Where is my wife? |
11228 | Which was it, or was it both? |
11228 | Who are you, and what''s the trouble?" |
11228 | Who are you, and where are my wife and child?" |
11228 | Who more likely than he to try to poison Clara''s mind, or the minds of her friends, against her accepted lover? |
11228 | Who remembers even the names of those who have been done to death in the Southern States for the past twenty years?" |
11228 | Who was she, to have inherited the estate of your ancestors, of which, a few years before, she would herself have formed a part? |
11228 | Why should I save your husband''s child?" |
11228 | Why should I thank you for my inheritance?" |
11228 | Why should he marry you? |
11228 | Why should he not run for governor, representative, whatever he chose? |
11228 | Why should she be burdened with such a responsibility, at this late day, when the touch of time had well- nigh healed these old sores? |
11228 | Why should this fellow always be on hand to emphasize his own shortcomings? |
11228 | Why should we not? |
11228 | Why should your father marry his negro housemaid? |
11228 | Why tempt the danger?" |
11228 | Will I come an''nuss yo''baby? |
11228 | Will you- all come an''lead us?" |
11228 | Will-- will-- my child live until I can get Miller here?" |
11228 | Wo n''t you take me down there to the beach, Mr. Ellis? |
11228 | Would he be equally willing, he asked himself, to die for it? |
11228 | Would they die in the flames, or would they be driven out? |
11228 | You do n''t mind having it in gold, do you?" |
11228 | and where would he get the money? |
11228 | chuckled Mrs. Ochiltree with a cunning look,"did I not tell you that she found no papers?" |
11228 | cried Josh,"does you wan''ter jine us?" |
11228 | demanded Josh indignantly;"jes''set here an''let''em hang Sandy, er bu''n''i m?" |
11228 | did Mr. Ellis say that?" |
11228 | exclaimed the mother, in great alarm, taking the baby in her own arms,"what can be the matter with him, Mammy Jane?" |
11228 | he called in alarm,"where are you? |
11228 | what have we here? |
16810 | How many of you are in this thing? |
16810 | ( the Chairman) What do you think of his[ the black man''s] intellectual and moral qualities and his capacity for development? |
16810 | A barrel of about 3 bushels? |
16810 | A third, or a half, or a quarter? |
16810 | About that store system; how extensive is it, and how great an evil does it constitute? |
16810 | About what amount? |
16810 | All seasons of the year? |
16810 | All you ask is to continue to be let alone? |
16810 | And are the productions of the small holdings and large holdings similar; I inquire as to cotton particularly? |
16810 | And desire still more of it? |
16810 | And generally earnestly devoted to their work? |
16810 | And have they not signally failed to make omnipotent the one and practicable the other? |
16810 | And he becomes an employer himself? |
16810 | And it is as prevalent in Louisiana and Mississippi as in Arkansas? |
16810 | And of good quality? |
16810 | And of that which has not been improved but might be improved, how much? |
16810 | And political disturbances are at an end? |
16810 | And the aim of the Southern planter is to accommodate this tendency of things to smaller rentings? |
16810 | And the negroes prefer to be there to anywhere else? |
16810 | And what of the Bourbon Democratic party? |
16810 | And why is this? |
16810 | And why not? |
16810 | And why should there be royal revenues and princely preserves? |
16810 | And why? |
16810 | And will a white man find any difficulty in hiring another white man and negro to work together side by side in the field? |
16810 | And, pray, is the white man less magnanimous than the black man? |
16810 | And, without consumption, what does production amount to? |
16810 | Are any of the white teachers Southern in birth? |
16810 | Are oranges raised there? |
16810 | Are peaches raised there also? |
16810 | Are potatoes raised largely in Louisiana? |
16810 | Are the negroes on those lands generally having the same opportunities for education that they do on your plantation? |
16810 | At least one half? |
16810 | At what rates per acre have you known the title to change in some instances? |
16810 | Below the Red River, in Louisiana, is it not a relief in case of an overflow? |
16810 | Between what ages do they actually attend school? |
16810 | But to- day where are they? |
16810 | But what shall we say of that society which is incapable of extending the protection which is inherent in it? |
16810 | Ca n''t do it, do you say? |
16810 | Came they not through Norman conquest and robbery? |
16810 | Can it be anything else than training in elementary industry, such as is now demanded for our Northern common- schools? |
16810 | Can they block it at the outlet of the Red River? |
16810 | Can this be an education in Latin and Greek? |
16810 | Can you give the average crop of potatoes per acre? |
16810 | Charging them simply the cost of transportation? |
16810 | Do not colored men vote white men into office? |
16810 | Do the negroes conduct affairs with reasonable prudence, and consult the interest of the owners? |
16810 | Do these small white farmers employ negro help to any extent? |
16810 | Do they add anything to the wealth of a nation or the happiness of a people? |
16810 | Do they exhibit any reluctance to work in company with the negro? |
16810 | Do they pay their own expenses, board and shelter? |
16810 | Do they remain or do they go and buy homesteads for themselves? |
16810 | Do they work together? |
16810 | Do they, upon these farm or small plantations being converted into farms, work in companionship with the negro laborer? |
16810 | Do you anticipate in the near or remote future any further difficulty from the race question? |
16810 | Do you find any inclination among the older negroes who are past school age to endeavor to read and write? |
16810 | Do you find that desire strong among the colored people? |
16810 | Do you find that the feeling among the negroes which resulted in the exodus of a few years ago has been allayed and perhaps has disappeared? |
16810 | Do you know as to the relative size of the two counties? |
16810 | Do you mean to be understood that these traders do business upon borrowed capital? |
16810 | Do you see any reason why, with fair opportunities assured to himself and to his children, he may not become a useful and competent, American citizen? |
16810 | Do you think that is diminishing? |
16810 | Do you think that$ 80 or$ 100 per acre would be a reasonable price for these plantation lands? |
16810 | Do you think there is any sort of occasion for that? |
16810 | Do your people at home prefer the sweet to the Irish potato for their own use? |
16810 | Does he usually locate upon the plantation lands along the rivers? |
16810 | Eighty I think you said? |
16810 | Even with the Northwest? |
16810 | For how long a time each year is school kept open? |
16810 | From what States? |
16810 | From what circumstances comes this increase? |
16810 | From what fact does that arise? |
16810 | From what perennial fountain did it draw its nobility and wealth? |
16810 | Greater extremes, or is there a uniform flow? |
16810 | Has not labor a fair claim to an equal solicitude on the part of the State? |
16810 | Has there been any computation or reasonable estimate that you know of the value of those lands affected by the overflow? |
16810 | Has this increased drainage from the Atchafalaya resulted in any injury to the navigation of the river as far north? |
16810 | Have not the United States done this very thing? |
16810 | Have they ever been cleared as yet? |
16810 | Have they not conferred freedom and the ballot, which are necessary the one to the other? |
16810 | Have you observed the origin of these statistics? |
16810 | Have you traveled considerably through the North? |
16810 | He may hire some white and other colored laborers, I suppose? |
16810 | How as to their material prosperity and thrift and saving? |
16810 | How can anything else be fairly expected in our present state of things from the_ average_ workingman under the_ average_ employer? |
16810 | How can he furnish it, unless the education given him is chiefly industrial and technical? |
16810 | How can the interest of the laborers of your section be best subserved? |
16810 | How can the interest of the laborers of your section be best subserved? |
16810 | How could it be otherwise? |
16810 | How could it be otherwise? |
16810 | How could the men who devised it expect for it anything more than a speedy, ignominous collapse? |
16810 | How do they propose to check it? |
16810 | How in regard to oats, rye, corn, wheat, potatoes, and crops of that description? |
16810 | How is it to be otherwise? |
16810 | How many children are there on your own property? |
16810 | How many hours do the laborers work? |
16810 | How many hours do the laborers work? |
16810 | How many of them were there? |
16810 | How many suits will he want in a year? |
16810 | How much do these colored teachers themselves know? |
16810 | How valuable are these plantations per acre? |
16810 | I said to him,"What is the matter, where are you all going?" |
16810 | I said,"It is several miles to the river; how are they going?" |
16810 | I should like to ask this question further, whether any of the negroes along the alluvial bottoms are obtaining ownership of lands in fee- simple? |
16810 | If this be true, what should be the policy of the whites towards the blacks? |
16810 | If we may not call the violence, the assassinations, which have disgraced the South,_ treason_ by what fitter name, pray, shall we call it? |
16810 | Improved plantations? |
16810 | In Arkansas? |
16810 | In how large tracts are the plantations held? |
16810 | In money? |
16810 | In the Southern States proper about two thirds of the population is white, is it not? |
16810 | In those instances, how do matters work? |
16810 | In what way is the white laboring population of the South employed? |
16810 | Is he a capable man? |
16810 | Is he a capable man? |
16810 | Is it a fair vote and an honest count? |
16810 | Is it because he is the constitutionally invested oligarch of government? |
16810 | Is it because the law of the land reserves unto him the dominance of power? |
16810 | Is it because the white man is the created viceregent of government? |
16810 | Is it not to be found in the powerful monopolies we have created? |
16810 | Is it to be found in an unjust pension list? |
16810 | Is it to be found in burdensome taxation or ill- adjusted tariff regulations? |
16810 | Is it to be found in the dead- weight of illiteracy which we carry? |
16810 | Is that the only instance? |
16810 | Is the cost of clothing in your part of the country about the same as here? |
16810 | Is the potato of good quality raised on those rich lands? |
16810 | Is there any tendency among the white and colored laborers of any class to work in companionship, or to fraternize at all in labor? |
16810 | Is there or not any perceptible increase or diminution of the column of the Mississippi itself as compared with 25, or 50, or 100 years ago? |
16810 | Is this a fancy picture? |
16810 | It has taken us generations to arrive at the standard, has it not? |
16810 | It is necessary for you as well as the negro? |
16810 | No white man inquires whether he can work by himself or is to work in company with a negro? |
16810 | Not to as great extent as mechanics and artisans? |
16810 | Now, what is the solution of this manifold and grievous state of things? |
16810 | Now, will you state to us what the existing facilities for education are among the negroes? |
16810 | Of that which is thus useless now, what portion has been formerly under cultivation? |
16810 | Of the population, which is, as a rule, the more healthy in the South, the colored or the white population? |
16810 | One third of the entire amount that has been improved is now destroyed by reason of the overflow, resulting from imperfections in the levee system? |
16810 | Or is it simply to get their money? |
16810 | Q. I do not know that you are able to state to what extent they actually attend school in the hill districts? |
16810 | Q. I suppose some time they will be liable to make some accumulations, and they will now and then own a plantation? |
16810 | Q. I suppose the colored population hardly buy custom goods? |
16810 | Q. I suppose there is no doubt that the Atchafalaya furnishes an outlet, which relieves your plantations very much? |
16810 | Q. I understand you to say that nearly all of them attend? |
16810 | Q. I would use the word"leading"rather than"central"there-- the leading idea? |
16810 | Q. Plums? |
16810 | Said I,"What did you pay him for this?" |
16810 | Should we appropriate annually from nine to twelve millions of dollars to improve the morals of the people by informing their intelligence? |
16810 | Since that time you have been in the Mississippi Valley? |
16810 | Some may ask: Shall we, then, not have some scholars, men learned in all that higher education gives? |
16810 | Some pride in their race, to have them get on, I suppose? |
16810 | Suppose the same standard of distribution of school funds should be applied to the city or the State of New York; what would be the logical result? |
16810 | That is an advantage no farmer has elsewhere in the United States than in Arkansas? |
16810 | That must bring a suit of clothes pretty cheap in a colored family; they really expend nothing but buy the cloth themselves? |
16810 | That one year with another, more water runs down the channel? |
16810 | The amount of land that has been improved and which is now destroyed by reason of the overflow, you can not state? |
16810 | The central idea of the South is a national idea, then? |
16810 | The dagger of Brutus and the sword of Cromwell, were they not drawn in the name of Liberty-- the People? |
16810 | The data you consider reliable? |
16810 | The emigration to these States has been of the younger and more vigorous population, not so liable to die as those who remain behind and are older? |
16810 | The guillotine of the French Commune and the derringer of J. Wilkes Booth, were they not inspired by Liberty-- the People? |
16810 | The older Southern States? |
16810 | The question is settled? |
16810 | The question,"Which is the greater, the State or the Sisterhood of States?" |
16810 | The same is true, I suppose, of his wife and children? |
16810 | The size does not depreciate the quality, then? |
16810 | Their capital is hired in New Orleans? |
16810 | There are five schools? |
16810 | There are no middlemen, really; you transact this business for them? |
16810 | There is no prejudice of that kind? |
16810 | There is no strong tendency in that way, I suppose? |
16810 | There is really no established market price? |
16810 | There were two men came through here last week, one night, and said''You see this picture?'' |
16810 | These plantations? |
16810 | They are not owners of alluvial lands? |
16810 | They, I suppose are raised for exportation from the State? |
16810 | This is the Irish potato you speak of, not the sweet? |
16810 | Those are educated in public schools? |
16810 | To how large an extent are they now abandoned? |
16810 | To what do you attribute that improvidence on the part of the negro laborer? |
16810 | To what extent is Northern capital availing itself of opportunity to invest in these plantations? |
16810 | To what market? |
16810 | Under what possible system, save in a grievous dearth of laborers, can such labor be well off, and incompetence and indifference draw high wages? |
16810 | Under what system are the laborers in your section employed? |
16810 | Under what system do you work? |
16810 | Under what system do you work? |
16810 | Under what systems are the laborers in your section employed? |
16810 | Until 1869 you had been a resident of South Carolina? |
16810 | Upon these plantations is there any crop raised for consumption anywhere but upon the plantations, save the cotton? |
16810 | Upon what price per acre do you think those lands would pay, one year with another, an interest of 6 per cent? |
16810 | Was it the puissance of the barbarian arms or the corruption and enervation of the character of her people which worked the downfall of Rome? |
16810 | What are the chances of its dividing, and of the white vote dividing? |
16810 | What are the principal crops there? |
16810 | What avail the tireless labor of the machine and the mountains of material it places upon the market, if there are no purchasers? |
16810 | What became of them? |
16810 | What chance is there of the planter securing white labor to carry on these plantations? |
16810 | What compensation does a teacher get? |
16810 | What danger is there of strikes? |
16810 | What danger is there of strikes? |
16810 | What division is made between labor and capital of their joint production when you work on shares? |
16810 | What division is made between labor and capital of their joint production when you work on shares? |
16810 | What do you think of his intellectual and moral qualities and his capacity for development? |
16810 | What does it avail us that our stores and granaries are overstocked, if the people are unable to buy? |
16810 | What has become of those who went to Kansas? |
16810 | What is a recognized aristocracy, such as England maintains? |
16810 | What is it? |
16810 | What is left to the tenant after he pays this$ 10 an acre? |
16810 | What is the condition of the laborers in your section? |
16810 | What is the condition of the laborers in your section? |
16810 | What is the fact as to a progressive disintegration of the solid Republican or solid negro vote of the South? |
16810 | What is the feeling between the laborers, colored and white, and the owners of the land and of capital at the South? |
16810 | What is the home market price? |
16810 | What is the matter?" |
16810 | What is the nativity of those teachers, as a rule? |
16810 | What is the necessity, and in what degree is it difficult for those residing along the river banks to protect themselves? |
16810 | What is the relation existing between the planters and their employees? |
16810 | What is the relation existing between the planters and their employers? |
16810 | What is your own judgment? |
16810 | What kinds of fruit? |
16810 | What portions of the North have you visited within the last few years? |
16810 | What prevents their being cleared up and put into cultivation? |
16810 | What proportion of the colored children attend school, do you think? |
16810 | What proportion of the taxable property of the county would that have been? |
16810 | What prospect is there of a division in that regard; to what extent does it exist, or is it going on? |
16810 | What right have I to create debts for my grandson or granddaughter? |
16810 | What the colored boy, what all boys of the country need, is_ industrial not ornamental_ education; shall they have it? |
16810 | What vital principle affecting our citizenship is championed by the National Republican party of to- day? |
16810 | What we call up North a common school education? |
16810 | What zest can there be in this bit of manhood? |
16810 | When did you remove from South Carolina? |
16810 | When hired for wages what is paid? |
16810 | When hired for wages what is paid? |
16810 | When you rent what division is made? |
16810 | When you rent, what division is made? |
16810 | Where in all this is there anything for the educational improvement of the black laborer just where he needs education most? |
16810 | Where is the proprietor himself usually resident? |
16810 | Where is there any proper provision for such an education? |
16810 | Where is this ulcer located? |
16810 | Which will prove the more successful small holder, the black or the white? |
16810 | Which, on the whole, is the most profitable crop to raise of potatoes? |
16810 | Who pay the heavy taxes levied upon the people to support the privileged classes of England? |
16810 | Why is it that ten men in Ireland produce no more than four men produce in England? |
16810 | Why? |
16810 | Why? |
16810 | Will it come by standing solidly opposed to the sentiment, the culture, the statesmanship, and the possession of the soil and wealth of the South? |
16810 | Will this result in the ownership of the alluvial lands being transferred to the negro? |
16810 | With what amount of accumulation will a negro get up and go to the hills? |
16810 | Would you judge that one- half the cultivated surface of Arkansas is made up of the larger plantations? |
16810 | You are his grandson, then? |
16810 | You are left to yourselves now, are you not? |
16810 | You are speaking now of the alluvial lands? |
16810 | You buy the ready- made clothing largely for the population in general, I suppose? |
16810 | You have no idea of the extent of those lands? |
16810 | You mean that immigration from Europe is being employed on the plantations? |
16810 | You speak both of your own plantation and of other plantations as well as your own in that regard? |
16810 | You think the war of sections is pretty much over? |
16810 | Your question, therefore, reduces itself to, What is the condition of the negroes? |
16810 | _ Was_, do I say? |
10621 | ''At so? |
10621 | ''S matter? |
10621 | A brooch? |
10621 | A little under the weather, Aunt Ca''line? |
10621 | Ai n''t you de man whut''s gwine to ma''y Miss Cissie Dildine? |
10621 | Ai n''t you see whut it''s all in? |
10621 | And what are you doing here in Cairo? |
10621 | And you do n''t want me to go with you, Peter? |
10621 | And you made good? |
10621 | And you want me to help you? |
10621 | Anything else? |
10621 | Are n''t you going to school? |
10621 | Are those curtains velour, Peter? |
10621 | Are you offering me a permanent place, Captain Renfrew? |
10621 | Are you sick, Mother? |
10621 | Are-- are you about to-- to leave me, Peter? |
10621 | Arrested him on an old crap charge? |
10621 | Aunt Rose,said the young man, wistfully,"why are you always angry?" |
10621 | Aw, is that you, Siner? |
10621 | Boil it? |
10621 | But whuffo, whuffo, nigger, is it dat you ai n''t come to de kitchen an''eat off''n de shelf? 10621 But whut''s de use doin''hit ef we kin manage to shy roun''some o''dat wuck an''keep on libin''anyhow, specially wid wages so high?" |
10621 | But, my God, Doctor,gasped the son,"I''ll pay you--""Have you got the money there in your pocket?" |
10621 | But-- but how can a stroke of the pen, a mere gesture, estop a whole class of American citizens forever? |
10621 | Ca n''t go? |
10621 | Ca n''t you see how much there is for us black folks to do, and what little we have done? |
10621 | Can you trace the circulation of the blood? 10621 Captain, who in the world-- who could have told--""Are you?" |
10621 | Captain,he said with a certain stiffness,"I apologize for my mistake; but may I ask how you desire me to act?" |
10621 | Cissie? |
10621 | Come, Jim Pink, what do you know? |
10621 | D''recken it''s so? 10621 Desertion?" |
10621 | Did n''t you know where I was staying? |
10621 | Did n''t you know you''d get into trouble? |
10621 | Did old Becky Davis send you to me with any such proposition as that, Peter? |
10621 | Did you ever hear Bob Taylor''s yarn about Uncle''Rastus''s funeral? 10621 Do you know how I''ve built up my business here, Peter? |
10621 | Do you mean my school- teaching? |
10621 | Do you mean the study, Captain? |
10621 | Don''reckon nobody could git a deed off on you wid stoppers in it, does you? |
10621 | Don''you know''bout Tump Pack already, Mister Siner? |
10621 | For whom? |
10621 | Has he gone to jail? |
10621 | Has it been out of fix for three days? |
10621 | Have a good time in jail, Bob? |
10621 | Have you heard what Henry Hooker done to Siner in the land deal? |
10621 | Have you-- been looking for me? |
10621 | He-- was trying to get Cissie out? |
10621 | Heah in Niggertown? |
10621 | Hey, Peter,he drawled, winking at old Mr. Tomwit,"been investin''in real estate?" |
10621 | How came you to turn down my proposition, Mr. Tomwit,he asked,"after we had agreed and drawn up the papers?" |
10621 | How do you feel? |
10621 | How do you know you want to go at all? |
10621 | How do you like this place, anyway, Peter? |
10621 | How long''s he up for? |
10621 | How the hell can he arrest him when he hit town this minute? |
10621 | How''d you get here? |
10621 | How''s that? 10621 I believe you were wanting me, Captain?" |
10621 | I mean what is our aim, our goal, whom are we trying to be like? |
10621 | I sho is picked up, ai n''t I? |
10621 | If you did n''t know anything about my code, how do you know what I feel now? |
10621 | Is dat whut you two niggers wuz a- talkin''''bout over thaiuh in yo''house? |
10621 | Is dat you, Mars''Milt? |
10621 | Is he borrowed a gun fum you? |
10621 | Is it post- Revolutionary or pre- Revolutionary? |
10621 | Is she struck me fuh a ten? |
10621 | Is that a highboy? |
10621 | Is that you, Peter? |
10621 | Know it now, do n''t you? |
10621 | Leaving Hooker''s Bend? |
10621 | Like something tearing in the next room? |
10621 | Look here, Mother, you''re not using old canned goods that have been left over? |
10621 | Look here, are you puffed up because Cissie Dildine struck you for a ten? |
10621 | Me? |
10621 | Mother,asked Peter, thickly, through his swelling mouth,"do you want to know what did happen?" |
10621 | News? |
10621 | No? 10621 No?" |
10621 | Oh, Peter Siner; Caroline Siner''s sick? 10621 Oh, is that it?" |
10621 | On what grounds? |
10621 | Peeping where? |
10621 | Persimmon,he said uneasily,"what in the world are you talking about?" |
10621 | Peter, do you really mean that? |
10621 | Peter,she asked in a low tone,"did you ever think what we colored people are trying to reach?" |
10621 | Racially? |
10621 | Serious? |
10621 | She''s not ill? |
10621 | Sick o''yo''deal, Peter? |
10621 | So soon after your mother''s death, Peter? |
10621 | So you are n''t going to marry me, Peter? |
10621 | Stoppers-- what do you mean by stoppers? |
10621 | Surely, you''re not too ill to be kissed? |
10621 | That going on now? |
10621 | That your deed in your pocket? |
10621 | The Dillihay place? |
10621 | The husban''--leadin''a irreg''lar life? |
10621 | The wrong thing first, Cissie? |
10621 | Then is you''spectin''somp''n''bout him? |
10621 | Then what can I do with it? |
10621 | Then you are going to stay here and marry-- Tump? |
10621 | Then you had thought of it? |
10621 | Then you mean that you want me to stay here with you until-- until the end, Captain? |
10621 | Then you-- you wo n''t? |
10621 | There, there, dear, dear Cissie, what is the matter? 10621 Tired?" |
10621 | To me? |
10621 | Was I talking? |
10621 | Well, whut ef you is? |
10621 | Well, whut''s de cause uv''em? |
10621 | Well, whut- chu want done, Henry? |
10621 | Well-- confound it!--exactly what did happen, Jim Pink? |
10621 | Wh- whut you reckon she done, Peter? 10621 Wh- whut you talkin''to yo''se''f for?" |
10621 | Wha you gwine, son? |
10621 | Wha you gwine? |
10621 | What about? |
10621 | What are you sitting out here thinking about? |
10621 | What did he go there for? |
10621 | What did they arrest him for? |
10621 | What did you say, Rose? |
10621 | What did you say? |
10621 | What do you mean by Katie- lock- the- door with you? |
10621 | What do you mean-- visiting around? |
10621 | What do you think about it, Tump? |
10621 | What do you think you are? 10621 What do you want me to do?" |
10621 | What do you want, Cissie? |
10621 | What for? |
10621 | What girl would you be willing for me to go with? |
10621 | What have you been doing to yourself, Tump? |
10621 | What have you done? |
10621 | What is in my mind, Captain? |
10621 | What is it in? |
10621 | What is it? 10621 What it''s in?" |
10621 | What made her write? |
10621 | What you doing out here? |
10621 | What''s doing over there? 10621 What''s happened to Cissie?" |
10621 | What''s the matter, Mother? |
10621 | What''s the matter, Tump? |
10621 | What_ is_ the matter, Cissie? |
10621 | When a fellow goes to college he do n''t git marched to preachin'', does he, Siner? |
10621 | Where are you going? |
10621 | Where do you want to go, Cissie? |
10621 | Which end? |
10621 | Who is it? |
10621 | Who is it? |
10621 | Whuffo, Peter? |
10621 | Whut dis? 10621 Whut is I bruk now?" |
10621 | Whut is gran''larceny? |
10621 | Whut you goin''do''bout po- o- o''Cissie? |
10621 | Whut you goin''to do wid Cissie? |
10621 | Whut you gwine do wid dat lamp, son? |
10621 | Whut you raisin''so much dus''about? |
10621 | Whut you s''pose us niggers is got to roast in a tukky roaster? |
10621 | Whut you say''bout dat, Brudder Peter? |
10621 | Whut- chu goin''to do up thaiuh? |
10621 | Whut- chu want, nigger? |
10621 | Why ca n''t you? |
10621 | Why could n''t you? |
10621 | Why did that boy go running across like that? |
10621 | Why do colored girls straighten their hair, bleach their skins, pinch their feet? 10621 Why do n''t you want to marry us, Parson?" |
10621 | Why do you suppose he bought in the Tomwit tract and sold me the Dillihay place? |
10621 | Why should n''t I be here? |
10621 | Why you sent for me? |
10621 | Why, what makes you think I''m going to do anything with Cissie? |
10621 | Why-- er-- considering this work, Cissie--"Are n''t you going to marry anybody, Peter? |
10621 | Why? |
10621 | Whyn''t you git a white preacher? |
10621 | Will he-- get out soon? |
10621 | Will it be any better away from here? |
10621 | With Cissie?--Cissie Dildine? |
10621 | Wo n''t you have a seat? |
10621 | Would n''t he let you shoot any more? |
10621 | Would n''t it be better to have honest, self- respecting help than dishonest help? |
10621 | Wrote? |
10621 | Yeah; yo''en''or Peter''s en''? |
10621 | Yeah? |
10621 | You ai n''t never been in jail, is you, black man? |
10621 | You are n''t? |
10621 | You did n''t expect a little thing like a hundred dollars to stop me, did you? |
10621 | You do n''t care for Tump? |
10621 | You do n''t know where you want to go? |
10621 | You do n''t mean the cashier of the bank? |
10621 | You do n''t mean you put up your medal on a crap game, Tump? |
10621 | You do n''t mean, Cissie-- you do n''t mean you do n''t want to marry me? |
10621 | You mean-- morals? |
10621 | You mean-- you want us to live here? |
10621 | You''ll go, wo n''t you? |
10621 | You''s gwine to git ma''ied? |
10621 | You-- you mean you want m- me-- to go with you, Cissie? |
10621 | Your name on the marriage- certificate will-- can you write? |
10621 | After a while it fizzled out to nothing at all, and the Persimmon asked in a queer manner:"Did you give Tump some women''s clo''es, Peter?" |
10621 | And have n''t we met before somewhere? |
10621 | Apparently, he discovered nothing, for he said shortly:"How do I know before he''s tried? |
10621 | Are n''t they trying to look like white girls?" |
10621 | As he entered the rickety gate, old Caroline called out:"Whut is you after, anyway, white man?" |
10621 | At any rate, after these reflections, Peter now felt sure that marriage would cure him of his mission; but how had Cissie known it? |
10621 | Before the negro could reply, he added:"Was you on the Harvard football team, Siner? |
10621 | Bobbs?" |
10621 | Bobbs?" |
10621 | But, Mr. Killibrew, would n''t you like better and more trustworthy servants as cooks, as farm- hands, chauffeurs, stable- boys? |
10621 | By the way, Peter,"he broke off cheerily,"you ai n''t happen to see Tump Pack, is you?" |
10621 | Could Henry Hooker force them to pay the remaining seven hundred? |
10621 | Could n''t you spare five dollars, Bobbs, to go along with this?" |
10621 | D''reckon I could git in the navy, Siner?" |
10621 | D''reckon I could make the football team? |
10621 | Dear Peter, do n''t you_ know?_ You ca n''t go out and talk like that to white folks and-- and not have some terrible thing happen to you! |
10621 | Did dat fool Cap''n set up a nigger in dis bedroom winder jes to ketch ole Rose packin''off a few ole lef''-overs?" |
10621 | Did she enjoy her vituperation, her continual malice? |
10621 | Dildine?" |
10621 | Does n''t your cook carry away cold food?" |
10621 | Ef Peter ai n''t to be foun''at eider en'', wha is he?" |
10621 | Guess the white fellers have a pretty gay time in Harvard, do n''t they, Siner? |
10621 | Had he read them in a book? |
10621 | Have you seen Tump Pack anywhere?" |
10621 | He called Peter''s name in the strained voice of a man struggling not to cough:"Peter-- is Mr. Bobbs done--''rested Cissie?" |
10621 | He explained this to the Persimmon, and tacked on a curious,"Why?" |
10621 | He paused a moment, then asked:"Peter, have you ever thought that we men of the leisure class owe a debt to the world?" |
10621 | Hoccum dis?" |
10621 | How could he present so grave a message? |
10621 | How did that globe get bent?" |
10621 | How had she struck out so involved a theory, one might say, in the toss of a head? |
10621 | If he were innocent, why should not such a big, strong youth have stayed and helped an old gentleman off with his overcoat? |
10621 | If you''d go North--""What about you, Cissie? |
10621 | Indeed, what could he say? |
10621 | Is I bringin''dish- here breakfus''to a nigger?" |
10621 | Is you sick?" |
10621 | Let me see, where do I keep my manuscript?" |
10621 | Mars''Renfrew, whut diff''ence do it make whut Peter say? |
10621 | Musing by the window, Peter succeeded in stating his problem more broadly: Why was Captain Renfrew an intellectual reactionist? |
10621 | Next moment he heard himself saying in fairly normal tones:"Fellows, do you think we ought to be idling on the street corners like this? |
10621 | No reason why we should n''t get it over with-- Why, what''s the matter?" |
10621 | No? |
10621 | Now and then he caught a sentence:"What difference will it make?" |
10621 | Now, why such extraordinary occlusions? |
10621 | Peter waited patiently for Jim Pink to impart his information,"Well, what''s the idea?" |
10621 | Peter''s conscience smote him again for worrying his mother with his courtship of Cissie, yet what could he do? |
10621 | Peter?" |
10621 | Presently he asked:"Ai n''t you Mr. Peter Siner?" |
10621 | Presently he surprised himself by calling over his shoulder, as a sort of complaint:"How came you with the pistol, Tump? |
10621 | Right now?" |
10621 | Say, if Henry was n''t kind of held back by his religion, he''d use a gun, would n''t he?" |
10621 | Say, is Cissie Dildine at home?" |
10621 | Say, nigger, wha- chu doin''in heah, anyway? |
10621 | She was talking again, very earnestly, almost tremulously:"Why do n''t you go North, Peter? |
10621 | Should he accede to Tump Pack''s possession of Cissie Dildine and give up seeing the girl? |
10621 | The old negress considered this solemn speech, and then grunted out:"Which en''?" |
10621 | The women shivered and asked of the darkness,"_ What_ makes the negroes howl so?" |
10621 | Then whut fur dey go roun''peepin''at each other lak a couple o''niggers roun''a haystack?" |
10621 | They moved along for some distance in silence, when the girl asked:"What are you going to do now, Peter?" |
10621 | They-- they are n''t married, are they?" |
10621 | Tomwit?" |
10621 | Tomwit?" |
10621 | Tump stared after him a moment and presently called out:"Heah, nigger, whut you gwine do?" |
10621 | We ought to be at work, do n''t you think?" |
10621 | Well, what of it?" |
10621 | Wha you fum, nigger?" |
10621 | What about it?" |
10621 | What can I do?" |
10621 | What publisher shall we have publish these reminiscences? |
10621 | What signified their endless pages about dualism and monism, about phenomenon and noumenon? |
10621 | What were the boys raising such a hullabaloo about?" |
10621 | What you mean, ridin''my tribulations?" |
10621 | What''s so funny? |
10621 | What''s the matter with old Caroline?" |
10621 | Who told you I was? |
10621 | Whom should I marry?" |
10621 | Whut''s matter wid you, Peter? |
10621 | Why index a lot of nonsense? |
10621 | Why not?" |
10621 | Why should this Cissie Dildine trig herself out in sumac? |
10621 | Why? |
10621 | Why?" |
10621 | Will you do what I want?" |
10621 | With unpremeditation? |
10621 | Would n''t you prefer to give your cook a certain cash payment instead of having her taking uncertain amounts of your foodstuffs and wearing apparel?" |
10621 | Would you expect an educated stud horse to pay no attention to a mare, sir? |
10621 | [ Illustration:"You- you mean you want m- me-- to go with you, Cissie?" |
10621 | black man, whut''s Cissie doin''?" |
10621 | is you los''yo''way?" |
10621 | oh, Ahnt Carolin'', may I enter?" |
10621 | she ejaculated,"didn''you bow yo''haid while yo''mammy ast de grace?" |
15210 | A nigger? 15210 And do you like them all?" |
15210 | And this man here? |
15210 | Are they alive? |
15210 | Are you going into town? |
15210 | But how about them? 15210 Do all eating places discriminate?" |
15210 | Do you know the code? |
15210 | Do you know where I can get a good colored cook? |
15210 | Do you mean to sit there and tell me that this is what happens to you each day? |
15210 | Eh? 15210 Fleming?" |
15210 | Fred,she murmured, almost vaguely,"is the world-- gone?" |
15210 | Have you had to work hard? |
15210 | Here, my good fellow,he said, thrusting the money into the man''s hands,"take that,--what''s your name?" |
15210 | How many? |
15210 | How much do I git a day? |
15210 | I beg your pardon,--I think I have met you? |
15210 | Many? 15210 Shall we teach Latin, Greek, and mathematics to the''masses''?" |
15210 | The comet? |
15210 | Then you only fear it will happen? |
15210 | Valdosta? |
15210 | Valdosta? |
15210 | Well, have n''t you the courage to rise above a-- almost a craven fear? |
15210 | Well, what do you think of that? |
15210 | What can we do? |
15210 | What has happened? |
15210 | What has happened? |
15210 | What''s this man doing here, anyway? |
15210 | When shall culture training give place to technical education for work? |
15210 | Where is he? |
15210 | Where is it? |
15210 | Who shall go to college? |
15210 | Who was it? |
15210 | Who was saved? |
15210 | Why do n''t you stop all this? |
15210 | Why should you fight for this country? |
15210 | You''ll come and see my gold? |
15210 | You''ll come? |
15210 | You-- you remember me, do you not? |
15210 | Again, what is this theory of benevolent guardianship for women, for the masses, for Negroes-- for"lesser breeds without the law"? |
15210 | All this of woman,--but what of black women? |
15210 | Am I, in my blackness, the sole sufferer? |
15210 | And if all this be a lie, is it not a lie in a great cause? |
15210 | And is its beauty real or false? |
15210 | And must we not blame ourselves? |
15210 | And unless men rule industry, can they ever hope really to make laws or educate children or create beauty? |
15210 | And was this shifty dodging of the real issue the wisest statesmanship? |
15210 | And yet the mothers and fathers and the men and women of my race must often pause and ask: Is it worth while? |
15210 | And yet,--and yet is it so easy to give up the dream of democracy? |
15210 | Are Negroes human, or, if human, developed far enough to absorb, even under benevolent tutelage, any appreciable part of modern culture? |
15210 | Are not Negroes servants? |
15210 | Are the methods of such a revolt wise, howsoever great the provocation and evil may be? |
15210 | Are we not coming more and more, day by day, to making the statement"I am white,"the one fundamental tenet of our practical morality? |
15210 | Are we today evoking the necessary ability? |
15210 | Are you well? |
15210 | Are, then, these bullets piercing Thee? |
15210 | Behold little Belgium and her pitiable plight, but has the world forgotten Congo? |
15210 | Blood? |
15210 | Broadway? |
15210 | But could this program be expected long to satisfy colored folk? |
15210 | But how far shall this change go? |
15210 | But how? |
15210 | But is it not education that is the creator of this freedom and equality? |
15210 | But may not the world cry back at us and ask:"What better thing have you to show? |
15210 | But suppose that the out- voted minority is necessarily always a minority? |
15210 | But what of the darker world that watches? |
15210 | But what of this? |
15210 | But what shall we say of work where spiritual values and social distinctions enter? |
15210 | But where is the misfortune? |
15210 | But who set the limit of ten million dollars? |
15210 | But why am I talking simply of"colored"children? |
15210 | But why does hunger shadow so vast a mass of men? |
15210 | But, it is objected, what else can we do? |
15210 | But, now, are we prepared to spend less to make a world in which the resurgence of such devilish power will be impossible? |
15210 | Can all these women be vile and the hunted race continue to grow in wealth and character? |
15210 | Can it be the end, so long as sits enthroned, even in the souls of those who cry peace, the despising and robbing of darker peoples? |
15210 | Can not machinery, in the hands of self- respecting and well- paid artisans, do our cleaning, sewing, moving, and decorating? |
15210 | Can not the training of children become an even greater profession than the attending of the sick? |
15210 | Can so vast a power be kept from the people? |
15210 | Can they steal? |
15210 | Can we afford less? |
15210 | Can we do this and still make sufficient goods, justly gauge the needs of men, and rightly decide who are to be considered"men"? |
15210 | Can we not transfer cooking from the home to the scientific laboratory, along with the laundry? |
15210 | Can we teach Revolution to the inexperienced in hope that they may discern progress? |
15210 | Consider our so- called educational"problems";"How may we keep pupils in the high school?" |
15210 | Did this man sin? |
15210 | Did you ever see a"Jim- Crow"waiting- room? |
15210 | Do we despise darker races? |
15210 | Do we despise women? |
15210 | Do we really want war to cease? |
15210 | Do we sense somnolent writhings in black Africa or angry groans in India or triumphant banzais in Japan? |
15210 | Do we want the wants of American Negroes satisfied? |
15210 | Do you doubt it? |
15210 | Do you hear that noise? |
15210 | Does this sound like an impossible dream? |
15210 | Even the president, as he entered, smiled patronizingly at him, and asked:"Well, Jim, are you scared?" |
15210 | For what am I thankful this night? |
15210 | For while the motive was pure and the outer menace undoubted, is shielding and indulgence the way to meet it? |
15210 | Given ten millions of dollars a year, what can we best do with the education of a million children? |
15210 | Had not their mothers wept enough? |
15210 | Has not the experiment been tried in Haiti and Liberia, and failed? |
15210 | Has our own life failed? |
15210 | Has the minority, even though a small and unpopular and unfashionable minority, no right to respectful consideration? |
15210 | Have all the lies and thefts and hates-- Is this Thy Crucifixion, God, And not that funny, little cross, With vinegar and thorns? |
15210 | Have all the wars of all the world, Down all dim time, drawn blood from Thee? |
15210 | Have we any right to make human souls face what we face today? |
15210 | Have we degraded service with menials? |
15210 | He hurried the bishop to the waiting limousine, asking him anxiously:"Did you hear anything? |
15210 | He looked away, holding her hand in his, and said dreamily:"You love your neighbor as yourself?" |
15210 | He pointed down to the waters, and said quietly:"The world lies beneath the waters now-- may I go?" |
15210 | He, the beggar man, was-- was what? |
15210 | Here all honest minds turn back and ask: Is menial service permanent or necessary? |
15210 | His trumpet,--where does it sound and whither? |
15210 | How could he have forgotten? |
15210 | How did I dare these two things? |
15210 | How did the colonel come to invite this man here? |
15210 | How do we arrange to accomplish these things today? |
15210 | How far may those who reach up out of the slime that fills the pits of the world''s damned compel men with loaves to divide with men who starve? |
15210 | How far shall the modern world recognize nations which are not nations, but combinations of a dominant caste and a suppressed horde of serfs? |
15210 | How great a failure and a failure in what does the World War betoken? |
15210 | How is the drudgery of the world distributed, by thoughtful justice or the lash of Slavery? |
15210 | How long shall the mounting flood of innocent blood roar in Thine ears and pound in our hearts for vengeance? |
15210 | How many months saved on a high school course will make the largest export of wheat? |
15210 | How shall we be rid of him?" |
15210 | How should we think such a problem through, not simply as Negroes, but as men and women of a new century, helping to build a new world? |
15210 | How will it function? |
15210 | I am quite straight- faced as I ask soberly:"But what on earth is whiteness that one should so desire it?" |
15210 | I hear strong prayers throng by, Like mighty winds on dusky moors-- Can God pray? |
15210 | I see greens,--is it moss or giant pines? |
15210 | I sense that low and awful cry-- Who cries? |
15210 | If I cry amid this roar of elemental forces, must my cry be in vain, because it is but a cry,--a small and human cry amid Promethean gloom? |
15210 | If he had been black, like Paul Laurence Dunbar, would the argument have been different? |
15210 | If millionaires can buy science and art, can not the Democratic state outbid them not only with money but with the vast ideal of the common weal? |
15210 | If, now, we have a democracy with no excluded groups, with all men and women enfranchised, what is such a democracy to do? |
15210 | In fine, can we not, black and white, rich and poor, look forward to a world of Service without Servants? |
15210 | Is democracy a failure? |
15210 | Is it Thine? |
15210 | Is it a paradise of industry we thus contemplate? |
15210 | Is it better because Europeans are better, nobler, greater, and more gifted than other folk? |
15210 | Is it inconceivable that now and then it bursts all bounds, as at Brownsville and Houston? |
15210 | Is it necessary to ask how much of high emprise and honorable conduct has been found here? |
15210 | Is it wet with blood? |
15210 | Is not the God of the Fathers dead? |
15210 | Is not the problem of their education simply an intensification of the problem of educating all children? |
15210 | Is not the world wide enough for two colors, for many little shinings of the sun? |
15210 | Is not this its headlong progress? |
15210 | Is not this the record of present America? |
15210 | Is the appeal from a numerous- minded despot to a smaller, privileged group or to one man likely to remedy matters permanently? |
15210 | Is the cause racial? |
15210 | Is there anything we would accomplish with human beings? |
15210 | Is this Thy kingdom here, not there, This stone and stucco drift of dreams? |
15210 | Is this a dream? |
15210 | Is this our attitude toward education? |
15210 | Is wealth too crude, too foolish in form, and too easily stolen? |
15210 | Is yonder wall a hedge of black or is it the rampart between heaven and hell? |
15210 | Is, then, this war the end of wars? |
15210 | Mine? |
15210 | Must industry rule men or may men rule even industry? |
15210 | Must it apply to all human beings and to all work throughout the world? |
15210 | Not a soul was stirring, and yet it was high- noon-- Wall Street? |
15210 | Now what is the effect on a man or a nation when it comes passionately to believe such an extraordinary dictum as this? |
15210 | Of this there is no doubt and never has been; but why is it better? |
15210 | Or shall it be a new thing,--a new peace and a new democracy of all races,--a great humanity of equal men? |
15210 | Or shall we all be artists and all serve? |
15210 | Ought children be born to us? |
15210 | Out of this, what sort of black women could be born into the world of today? |
15210 | Paint with all riot of hateful colors the thin skin of European culture,--is it not better than any culture that arose in Africa or Asia?" |
15210 | Perhaps she had seen the elf- queen? |
15210 | Prayest Thou, Lord, and to me? |
15210 | Shall we step backward a thousand years because our present problem is baffling? |
15210 | She did not look, but said:"You have lost-- somebody?" |
15210 | She spoke almost before she thought:"You will enter and rest awhile?" |
15210 | She stood to us as embodied filth and wrong,--but whose filth, whose wrong? |
15210 | She thought it was the new Negro until he said in a soft voice:"Will you give me bread?" |
15210 | Subtly had they been bribed, but effectively: Were they not lordly whites and should they not share in the spoils of rape? |
15210 | Surely-- no-- was it the click of a receiver? |
15210 | That black and riven thing-- was it Thee? |
15210 | That gasp-- was it Thine? |
15210 | The lady sank into her chair and thought:"What will the judge''s wife say? |
15210 | The voice of the tall stranger in the corner broke in here:"It will be a good thing for them?" |
15210 | The world still wants to ask that a woman primarily be pretty and if she is not, the mob pouts and asks querulously,"What else are women for?" |
15210 | The world- old and fearful things,--war and wealth, murder and luxury? |
15210 | Then a new thought seized him: If they found him here alone-- with all this money and all these dead men-- what would his life be worth? |
15210 | Then returning to his guest,"You will excuse me, wo n''t you?" |
15210 | Then the tired agent yells across, because all the tickets and money are over there--"What d''ye want? |
15210 | This gold? |
15210 | This led to some grim bantering among Negroes:"Why do you want to volunteer?" |
15210 | This pain-- is it Thine? |
15210 | Those eyes,--where had he seen those eyes before? |
15210 | Thou needest_ me_? |
15210 | Thou_ needest_ me? |
15210 | To death? |
15210 | To life? |
15210 | Unfortunate? |
15210 | Unharmed?" |
15210 | VIII THE IMMORTAL CHILD If a man die shall he live again? |
15210 | Very many?" |
15210 | War? |
15210 | Was I the masterful captain or the pawn of laughing sprites? |
15210 | Was everybody dead? |
15210 | Was he looking at her or away? |
15210 | Was it fear of the balance of power in Europe? |
15210 | Was it national jealousy of the sort of the seventeenth century? |
15210 | Was it not curious? |
15210 | Was it that dark, little house in the far backyard that flamed? |
15210 | Was this the place to begin my life work? |
15210 | Was this the work which I was best fitted to do? |
15210 | We ask, and perhaps there is no answer, how far may the captain of the world''s industry do his deeds, despite the grinding tragedy of its doing? |
15210 | Welcome, dark sleep!_ Whither? |
15210 | What business had I, anyhow, to teach Greek when I had studied men? |
15210 | What came of it? |
15210 | What choir is it?" |
15210 | What did they see? |
15210 | What did they see? |
15210 | What did we study? |
15210 | What do we see today? |
15210 | What does it mean-- what does it mean? |
15210 | What does this mean? |
15210 | What happened? |
15210 | What have you done or would do better than this if you had today the world rule? |
15210 | What hinders our approach to the ideals outlined above? |
15210 | What hinders the answer to this question? |
15210 | What is that breath of life, thought to be so indispensable to a great European nation? |
15210 | What is the cause of the undoubted reaction and alarm that the citizens of democracy continually feel? |
15210 | What is the inevitable result of the clash of such ideals and such facts in the colored group? |
15210 | What is the least sum that will keep the average youth out of jail? |
15210 | What is the real lesson of the life of Coleridge- Taylor? |
15210 | What is the trouble? |
15210 | What is to hinder the same ability and foresight from being used in the future as in the past? |
15210 | What is today the message of these black women to America and to the world? |
15210 | What shall the end be? |
15210 | What shall we say to this new economic equality in a great laboring class? |
15210 | What sort of a world would this be if yellow men must be treated"white"? |
15210 | What was it? |
15210 | What was it? |
15210 | What was marriage? |
15210 | What was that awful word Thou saidst? |
15210 | What was that which he, too, heard beneath the rhythm of unnumbered feet? |
15210 | What was that whirring? |
15210 | What were petty slights, silly insults, paltry problems, beside this call to do and dare and die? |
15210 | What will be its field of work? |
15210 | What with all my dreaming, studying, and teaching was I going to_ do_ in this fierce fight? |
15210 | What would be in the present chaos your outlook and plan for the future? |
15210 | What would you say to a soft, brown face, aureoled in a thousand ripples of gray- black hair, which knells suddenly:"Do you trust white people?" |
15210 | What''s the crowd, Jim?" |
15210 | What''s the use? |
15210 | What, then, is this dark world thinking? |
15210 | What? |
15210 | What? |
15210 | When in this world a man comes forward with a thought, a deed, a vision, we ask not, how does he look,--but what is his message? |
15210 | Where is he? |
15210 | Where?" |
15210 | Whey, then, does it linger? |
15210 | Which is life and what is death and how shall we face so tantalizing a contradiction? |
15210 | Whither is this expansion? |
15210 | Whither? |
15210 | Whither? |
15210 | Who are the folk who live here? |
15210 | Who bought and sold their crime and waxed fat and rich on public iniquity? |
15210 | Who controls them? |
15210 | Who does the physical work of the world, those whose muscles need the exercise or those whose souls and minds are stupefied with manual toil? |
15210 | Who goes to high school, the Bright or the Well- to- Do? |
15210 | Who honored and loved"niggers"as they did? |
15210 | Who made these devils? |
15210 | Who makes these inner, but powerful, rules? |
15210 | Who may be excluded from a share in the ruling of men? |
15210 | Who nursed them in crime and fed them on injustice? |
15210 | Who prays? |
15210 | Who ravished and debauched their mothers and their grandmothers? |
15210 | Who says it shall not be ten thousand millions, as it ought to be? |
15210 | Who shall be Artists and who shall be Servants in the world to come? |
15210 | Who sought to own their black slaves but they? |
15210 | Who was I to fight a world of color prejudice? |
15210 | Who was this who dared to"interfere"with their labor? |
15210 | Who weeps? |
15210 | Why are we silent about it? |
15210 | Why in the minds of so many decent and up- seeing folks does the whole Negro problem resolve itself into the matter of their getting a cook or a maid? |
15210 | Why not always yield-- always take what''s offered,--always bow to force, whether of cannon or dislike? |
15210 | Why not, rather, face the facts and tell the truth? |
15210 | Why should he have worked so breathlessly, almost furiously? |
15210 | Why unanswered? |
15210 | Why, then, is Europe great? |
15210 | Why? |
15210 | Why? |
15210 | Why? |
15210 | Why? |
15210 | Why? |
15210 | With silent sob that rends and tears-- Can God sob? |
15210 | With what characteristic complacency did the slaveholders assume that Canaanites were Negroes and their"brethren"white? |
15210 | Would the world_ answer_? |
15210 | Yet today who goes to college, the Talented or the Rich? |
15210 | You know,--but you, how did you escape-- how have you endured this horror? |
15210 | _ Fourthly_, the children of such a union-- but why proceed? |
15210 | _ Have mercy upon us, miserable sinners!_ And yet, whose is the deeper guilt? |
15210 | _ Hear us, O heavenly Father!_ Doth not this justice of hell stink in Thy nostrils, O God? |
15210 | _ Justice, O Judge of men!_ Wherefore do we pray? |
15210 | _ Suppose_ I had missed a Harvard scholarship? |
15210 | _ Suppose_ my good mother had preferred a steady income from my child labor rather than bank on the precarious dividend of my higher training? |
15210 | _ Suppose_ the Slater Board had then, as now, distinct ideas as to where the education of Negroes should stop? |
15210 | _ Thou?__ Thee?__ I lynched Thee?_ Awake me, God! |
15210 | _ Thou?__ Thee?__ I lynched Thee?_ Awake me, God! |
15210 | _ Thou?__ Thee?__ I lynched Thee?_ Awake me, God! |
15210 | _ Thou_ needest me? |
15210 | and,"Suppose you think them ugly, what then? |
15210 | you say? |
10755 | ''Why do you ask?'' 10755 A boy?" |
10755 | A curious piece of irony, is n''t it? |
10755 | A letter? |
10755 | And Rahat Mian? |
10755 | And how should I prevent them? |
10755 | And no one listened, I suppose? |
10755 | And she is in Mecca now? |
10755 | And the Road? |
10755 | And the road? |
10755 | And then? |
10755 | And to that you put down my embarrassment? |
10755 | And what are you going to do with yourself? |
10755 | And what have their lives been afterwards? |
10755 | And what is that? |
10755 | And what was the exception? |
10755 | And what will happen to Mir Ali, whom we have promised to protect? |
10755 | And where are they now? |
10755 | And where is he now? |
10755 | And you answered? |
10755 | And you will stay in Chiltistan until you come back to us? |
10755 | And you? |
10755 | And your horse? |
10755 | Any trouble on the Frontier? |
10755 | Any trouble? |
10755 | Are you married, Ahmed Ismail? |
10755 | Are you ready? |
10755 | Are you sure that it was bolted before? |
10755 | Are you sure? |
10755 | Are you sure? |
10755 | As a right? |
10755 | Before me, Futteh Ali Shah? 10755 Bless my soul, what on earth sends all you young fellows racing out to India? |
10755 | But how many others? 10755 But is n''t there a danger-- if I succeed? |
10755 | But surely that was unwise? |
10755 | But was I honest then? |
10755 | But why does he sit covered with the blanket? |
10755 | But why should it get about? |
10755 | But why? |
10755 | But why? |
10755 | But you know him? |
10755 | By the thief? |
10755 | Can I do anything to help? 10755 Can we countermine?" |
10755 | Can you? |
10755 | Can your Excellency interpret the message? 10755 Certain? |
10755 | Could I forget? 10755 Dick,"she said,"I have never said a word to dissuade you, have I? |
10755 | Did he ever come here with you? |
10755 | Did he ever dine with you there amongst the lights and the merry- makers and the music? |
10755 | Did he say that? |
10755 | Did he? |
10755 | Did n''t he get the Victoria Cross? |
10755 | Did no one see you? |
10755 | Did the girls themselves mind? |
10755 | Did you ever hear of a man named Luffe? |
10755 | Did you recognise him? |
10755 | Did you see anything? |
10755 | Did you think that I should be afraid? |
10755 | Did you? |
10755 | Do I belong here? |
10755 | Do I indeed speak follies? 10755 Do n''t you understand-- you who know him, you who grew up with him, you who were his friend? |
10755 | Do you carry your troubles to your wife? 10755 Do you hear anything, sir?" |
10755 | Do you know that boy? |
10755 | Do you know what I think? 10755 Do you play with me, Ahmed Ismail?" |
10755 | Do you remember Linforth''s letters? 10755 Do you see that man?" |
10755 | Do you see that sign there,''Bahadur Gobind, Barrister- at- Law, Cambridge B.A.,''on the first floor over the cookshop? 10755 Do you see this, Linforth?" |
10755 | Do you think there will be trouble up there in Chiltistan? |
10755 | Does Shere Ali know? |
10755 | Does this mark Shere Ali''s return to the ways of his fathers? |
10755 | Does your Highness know this spot? |
10755 | Does your Highness know whose bones are laid at the foot of that monument? |
10755 | Does your mistress know of this? |
10755 | Earned-- but did not get it? |
10755 | Eton, is n''t it? |
10755 | For Chiltistan? |
10755 | For more than an hour? |
10755 | From Calcutta? 10755 Had he no wife?" |
10755 | Has anything gone? 10755 Has he been waiting up there alone all this time?" |
10755 | Have I bored you? |
10755 | Have you any clue to the man? |
10755 | Have you any influence there? |
10755 | Have you any suspicion as to who the man is? |
10755 | Have you forgotten everything? |
10755 | Have you forgotten that night when we sat in the doorway of the hut under the Aiguilles d''Arve? 10755 Have you forgotten them? |
10755 | Have you got your revolver? |
10755 | Have you heard anything of a melon and a bag of grain? |
10755 | Have you never crossed your threshold for five years? |
10755 | He comes to your house? |
10755 | He has gone north, you say? |
10755 | He has them now, then? |
10755 | He said that? |
10755 | His Highness would like to know if his Excellency is still talking, and if so, why? |
10755 | How can I explain it? 10755 How can I tell you until you ask it?" |
10755 | How did it happen? |
10755 | How did you come to notice him in the Maidan? |
10755 | How did you come? |
10755 | How do you mean-- right? |
10755 | How long have you been back, Colonel Dewes? |
10755 | How long is it since you left your house in the Khyber Pass? |
10755 | How many men will you require? |
10755 | How should I know? 10755 How should I know?" |
10755 | How will you ever get to Mecca? 10755 How?" |
10755 | I am forgiven then? |
10755 | I am to hinder the making of that Road? |
10755 | I ought to be grateful? |
10755 | I said that? |
10755 | I suppose you know,said the Khan, tugging at his great grey beard,"that my grandfather married a fairy for one of his wives?" |
10755 | I told you of a supper I had one night at the Savoy-- do you remember? 10755 I wonder if there is anything up the valley which I ought to know about?" |
10755 | I? |
10755 | In Ajmere? |
10755 | In Calcutta? |
10755 | In Calcutta? |
10755 | In Chiltistan? 10755 In Chiltistan?" |
10755 | In Mr. Luffe''s case? |
10755 | In a week''s time, then? |
10755 | In what way am I concerned? |
10755 | In your thoughts? |
10755 | Is he ill? |
10755 | Is he in Calcutta now? |
10755 | Is it true? |
10755 | Is it, by George? 10755 Is n''t that a little ungrateful-- what?" |
10755 | Is she in India, Huzoor? |
10755 | Is that so? |
10755 | Is that the Delhi Gate? |
10755 | Is that the Prince? |
10755 | Is the road stopped? 10755 Is there trouble in Chiltistan?" |
10755 | Is this his renunciation of the White People? |
10755 | It was for that reason--? |
10755 | It was on purpose, too, that you left out all mention of your visit to India? |
10755 | It will be taken as a sign of faith? |
10755 | Long ago-- in Peshawur-- do you remember? 10755 Might we go home now?" |
10755 | No one in the city? |
10755 | No? 10755 No?" |
10755 | Not even the Road? |
10755 | Now who would you say was going to win this fight? |
10755 | Of what else should I be speaking? 10755 Of what other could I be thinking?" |
10755 | On the contrary? |
10755 | On what journey are you going? |
10755 | One what? |
10755 | Or do I belong to Chiltistan? |
10755 | Relief? |
10755 | Set up another Prince? |
10755 | Shall I tell you? 10755 Shall we dance?" |
10755 | Shall we go together? |
10755 | Shall we ride back together? |
10755 | Shall we walk a little way together? |
10755 | Shere Ali? |
10755 | Since we submit to it, since we cringe at their indignities and fawn upon them for their insults, are they not right? |
10755 | Sirdar Khan, your Highness? |
10755 | Sixty? |
10755 | So it''s all over, eh? |
10755 | So your Highness has returned? |
10755 | Some months ago, then? |
10755 | Surely you have not forgotten me, Shere Ali? |
10755 | The Prince Shere Ali, too? |
10755 | The Prince cried out in anger,''How long must we wait?'' |
10755 | The Prince? |
10755 | The man lying there said that? |
10755 | The road through Chiltistan? |
10755 | The shared ambitions, the concerted plans-- gone, and not even a regret for them left, eh? 10755 Then what is it?" |
10755 | Then why was I sent to Oxford? |
10755 | Then why? |
10755 | Then your Highness has exorcised the fairy? |
10755 | There are some of my people in Delhi? |
10755 | There was a great- uncle of yours in the days of the John Company, was n''t there? 10755 They were without water for all that time-- and in August?" |
10755 | Thus they understand my gift to the Mullah? |
10755 | To Kohara? |
10755 | To me? 10755 To- morrow?" |
10755 | Violet, why should it end at all? |
10755 | Was Captain Oliver rich? |
10755 | We can threaten-- but what is the use of threatening without troops? 10755 Well, what news do you bring?" |
10755 | Well? |
10755 | Well? |
10755 | Were they wrong, your Highness? |
10755 | Were they wrong? |
10755 | Were you ever in Mecca? |
10755 | What are you doing in Lahore? |
10755 | What can I do to help? |
10755 | What can we do? |
10755 | What change? |
10755 | What danger do you foresee? |
10755 | What did he say? |
10755 | What did they want? |
10755 | What did you do? |
10755 | What did you talk about? |
10755 | What do you mean? |
10755 | What do you think? |
10755 | What does he do upon this balcony? |
10755 | What does he say? |
10755 | What does it matter? |
10755 | What does it mean? |
10755 | What gift? |
10755 | What is he hiding? |
10755 | What is it? 10755 What is it? |
10755 | What is it? |
10755 | What is it? |
10755 | What is the matter? |
10755 | What message could they convey? 10755 What must I do?" |
10755 | What of Luffe? |
10755 | What right? |
10755 | What shall I do? |
10755 | What shall I do? |
10755 | What sort of secrets? |
10755 | What was it that the Prince said,he asked,"when the first of those water- carriers came down the steps and did not slip? |
10755 | What was that? |
10755 | What was the matter? |
10755 | What was the other brave deed you have seen fit to rank with this? |
10755 | What will you do, then? |
10755 | What''s the matter, Sybil? |
10755 | What''s the old rascal up to now? |
10755 | What''s the use of making this pretence? |
10755 | What''s your name? |
10755 | When did you land? |
10755 | When did you reach Kohara? |
10755 | When do I start? |
10755 | When you went to your room,he asked,"did you find the window again unbolted?" |
10755 | When,he asked,"will Chiltistan be ready?" |
10755 | When? |
10755 | When? |
10755 | Where had you seen him? |
10755 | Where is Shere Ali now? |
10755 | Where is she, Huzoor? |
10755 | Where is the Khan? |
10755 | Where shall I find you? |
10755 | Where should I live? |
10755 | Whither did the Prince go? |
10755 | Who am I, then? |
10755 | Who is he? |
10755 | Who is he? |
10755 | Who is it? |
10755 | Who is she? |
10755 | Who is she? |
10755 | Who is that walking up and down the drawingroom, Evans? |
10755 | Who was the soldier? |
10755 | Who''s Linforth? |
10755 | Who''s that? |
10755 | Whose house? |
10755 | Why back there does one forget the discomfort of India? |
10755 | Why did he not wish it? |
10755 | Why did n''t you listen to him? 10755 Why did n''t you speak?" |
10755 | Why did you stand waiting there for me to look your way? |
10755 | Why does the danger grow? |
10755 | Why in the world was n''t I told? |
10755 | Why not, Dadu? |
10755 | Why not? 10755 Why not?" |
10755 | Why should Shere Ali have relapsed? |
10755 | Why should it end at all? |
10755 | Why should they be respected? |
10755 | Why should we go down to La Grave to- night? |
10755 | Why should we remain outside? |
10755 | Why, then, should I break my word? 10755 Why? |
10755 | Why? |
10755 | Why? |
10755 | Why? |
10755 | Why? |
10755 | Why? |
10755 | Why? |
10755 | Why? |
10755 | Why? |
10755 | Will it? |
10755 | Will they give him up? |
10755 | Will you answer it? |
10755 | Will you come down? |
10755 | Will you fetch it? |
10755 | Will you find me a chair? |
10755 | Will you follow me? |
10755 | Will you join us at supper? |
10755 | Will your Highness deign to enter? |
10755 | With news of Sahib Linforth? |
10755 | Would Prince of Chiltistan like to utter some few welcome words to great Indian public on extraordinary skill of respective pugilists? 10755 Would he be in time?" |
10755 | Would it be fair? |
10755 | Would you introduce Dick to Mrs. Oliver now, if you had not done it before? |
10755 | Would you like to dance? |
10755 | Would you like to see Dick? 10755 Yet you had looked forward to retiring and going home?" |
10755 | You are a friend of his? |
10755 | You are despondent now? |
10755 | You are going to live here? |
10755 | You are looking rather far ahead, are n''t you, sir? |
10755 | You are married? |
10755 | You are of my country? |
10755 | You are sorry? |
10755 | You are sure? |
10755 | You are tired, Violet? |
10755 | You are willing to make peace? |
10755 | You come from Wafadar Nazim, and alone? |
10755 | You did n''t bring her back? |
10755 | You forgot? |
10755 | You found life in England so dull? |
10755 | You have some control over him? |
10755 | You have special work for me? |
10755 | You know Shere Ali? |
10755 | You know her? |
10755 | You know him? |
10755 | You know that man? |
10755 | You promise? |
10755 | You see,Mrs. Linforth continued, as though Dewes had not interrupted,"it is not natural for a boy at his age to want to be alone, is it? |
10755 | You see? |
10755 | You take these boys, you give them Oxford, a season in London-- did you ever have a season in London when you were twenty- one, Dewes? 10755 You will dance no more?" |
10755 | You will give me a dance? |
10755 | You will not fail me? |
10755 | You will not tell that story? |
10755 | You will take me? |
10755 | You wish to speak to me? |
10755 | You wo n''t go down to Calcutta at Christmas, for instance? 10755 You?" |
10755 | You? |
10755 | Your Excellency rides up the valley? |
10755 | Your Highness has counted the cost? |
10755 | Your Highness has forgotten? 10755 Yours?" |
10755 | _ You_ want to help? 10755 --and,he said slowly,"I wonder what sort of fairyland it is actually to live and breathe in?" |
10755 | A strange story, eh?" |
10755 | After all, if you are going to be the governing race it''s not a good thing to let your women be insulted, eh?" |
10755 | And are they not right, Huzoor?" |
10755 | And at last in a whisper she said:"The Road?" |
10755 | And to whom?" |
10755 | And who sent them? |
10755 | Are the Mohammedans beyond the frontier such a very quiet people that you are anxious to add another to their number?" |
10755 | As they interpret it in Chiltistan?" |
10755 | Between the fulfilment of his hopes and the great failure what was there? |
10755 | But an advantage to whom? |
10755 | But could she keep it up? |
10755 | But oh, Dick, did I mean more?" |
10755 | But out of her self- knowledge sprang the insistent question:"Could I live it?" |
10755 | But we have been so much together, so much to each other-- how should I not know?" |
10755 | But what did the sign portend? |
10755 | But what did the tall stooping man care? |
10755 | But which of the pictures do you admire? |
10755 | But will you think gently of me-- always? |
10755 | Calcutta is the place to which people go at Christmas, is n''t it? |
10755 | Captain Lynes of the Sikhs broke the silence:"What''s this?" |
10755 | Could I forget?" |
10755 | Could she make them? |
10755 | Dick leaned his arms upon the sill and with his eyes on the Colonel''s face asked quietly:"How far does the Road reach now?" |
10755 | Did no memory of the short week during which she had longed to tread the road of fire and stones, the road of high endeavour, trouble her content? |
10755 | Did not that mean that she had at all events been thinking of him in some way? |
10755 | Did regret prompt it? |
10755 | Did the breaking of the pitcher mean that some definite thing had been done in Chiltistan, some breaking of the British power? |
10755 | Do ever white men act reasonably in India?" |
10755 | Do n''t you feel that your mind has broadened?" |
10755 | Do n''t you think so? |
10755 | Do you approve? |
10755 | Do you blame him? |
10755 | Do you know what was done that day in the Bibigarh at Cawnpore?" |
10755 | Do you know what would happen? |
10755 | Do you know why? |
10755 | Do you remember the unfinished letter which you brought home to me from Harry? |
10755 | Do you see that very respectable white- bearded gentleman on the balcony of his house? |
10755 | Do you see?" |
10755 | Do you think that good?" |
10755 | Do you think that is good for British rule in India? |
10755 | Do you think they will be content? |
10755 | Do you think they will have their heart in their work, in their humdrum life, in their elaborate ceremonies? |
10755 | Else how came it that Captain Phillips rode amidst that great and frenzied throng, unhurt and almost unthreatened? |
10755 | Else why should I be sent for? |
10755 | Finally she said:"I suppose you will not see your friend again before he starts?" |
10755 | For who else would dare to speak as he had spoken of the Mullahs? |
10755 | From the shelf Linforth spoke:"It is bad, Peter?" |
10755 | Had Violet Oliver arranged her visit so that it might coincide with his? |
10755 | Had it achieved more than he had wished to bring about? |
10755 | Had that party been too successful, he wondered? |
10755 | Had that story fired Shere Ali? |
10755 | Has anything been stolen? |
10755 | Has he talked?" |
10755 | Have I done it so often?" |
10755 | Have you forgotten the hills and valleys? |
10755 | Have you forgotten? |
10755 | Have you heard of that year, Ahmed Ismail, and of the month and of the day? |
10755 | Have you money?" |
10755 | He did not stop, but, after they had walked a few yards further, he said:"Was it pale blue that Violet Oliver was wearing? |
10755 | He had it in his thoughts to cry out:"Then what place have I in Chiltistan?" |
10755 | He merely glanced at his companion and asked:"What in the world were you doing in the Maldive Islands?" |
10755 | He opened it and read:"Dick, wo n''t you speak to me at all? |
10755 | He passed in well, did n''t he?" |
10755 | He pulled at his grey moustache thoughtfully, and asked:"Have the sons the Road in common, too?" |
10755 | He was of their faith himself, nominally at all events, but Mecca--? |
10755 | His chief friend?" |
10755 | How did the Englishwoman come to Mecca?" |
10755 | How do you think he received me? |
10755 | How does he use it, do you think? |
10755 | How in the world could there be an Englishwoman in Mecca-- above all, an Englishwoman who was in a position to ask me to tea? |
10755 | How is Travers?" |
10755 | How is he?" |
10755 | How long do you stay?" |
10755 | How much should he tell her, he asked himself? |
10755 | I am to go in pursuit?" |
10755 | I have heard a story, but whether it is true or not, who shall say?''" |
10755 | I reined in my horse and called sharply to one of the servants riding behind me,''Who is that?'' |
10755 | I saw that you cared-- I may say that, may n''t I?" |
10755 | I took the hand she held out to me and--"''But what are you doing here in Mecca?'' |
10755 | I used to see you at Eton, did n''t I? |
10755 | If Burton made one mistake, how many should I? |
10755 | If he did, would it trouble her? |
10755 | If they are alive-- well, could n''t they be evoked? |
10755 | Is Lahore more to you than Chiltistan?" |
10755 | Is she your companion as well as your wife? |
10755 | Is there anything I can do?" |
10755 | It is n''t comfortable in India, is it? |
10755 | It seemed that he was content, for he continued:''How should I know what the word means? |
10755 | Light of my life, hope of my race, who would dare?" |
10755 | Linforth recalled something that Violet Oliver had told to him in the garden at Peshawur--"Are you going to marry Linforth?" |
10755 | Linforth?" |
10755 | May I introduce my friend?" |
10755 | Nay, how can that be? |
10755 | Never a single word?" |
10755 | Never a word? |
10755 | Now when will your Excellency go shooting? |
10755 | Oh, why did I ever come here?" |
10755 | Oliver?" |
10755 | Oliver?" |
10755 | On Sunday, was n''t it?" |
10755 | Or was he beaten? |
10755 | Or was it the fat insignificant young man three seats away from her? |
10755 | Or were all these memories quite dead within his breast? |
10755 | Or, on the other hand, was she glad? |
10755 | Otherwise, why did n''t I see one?" |
10755 | Out of her dissatisfaction would there not grow disappointment in her husband? |
10755 | Poor old Luffe, a man with a bee in his bonnet, eh?" |
10755 | See, your Highness, is there a regiment in Peshawur whose rifles are safe, guard them howsoever carefully they will? |
10755 | Shall we look at the horses?" |
10755 | Shere Ali turned to Hatch again and said in a quiet voice which had some note of rather pathetic appeal:"Will you tell me what you thought of Mecca? |
10755 | The whole truth? |
10755 | Then I said to one of the workmen,''Would you like to earn your day''s wage and yet do no work?'' |
10755 | Then he asked of Sir John:"Your car was not seriously damaged, I suppose?" |
10755 | Then he said as he turned away:"What is Luffe to me? |
10755 | Then he said,"Are you going to marry-- Linforth?" |
10755 | Then he said:"And how was the gift interpreted?" |
10755 | They are Mahommedans all of them, and we hear a good deal about the loyalty of Mahommedans, do n''t we?" |
10755 | They walked on between the alleys of rose- trees and she asked:"Did you notice the book which Dick was reading?" |
10755 | Very likely you''ll believe me wrong yourself, eh? |
10755 | Was Russia at work? |
10755 | Was a single thing missing of all that the honourable lady possessed? |
10755 | Was he to be sent to Chiltistan? |
10755 | Was he to carry the Road no further than his father had done? |
10755 | Was it in this strange way the truth was to come to him? |
10755 | Was it of that country she was speaking? |
10755 | Was it the tall youth with the commonplace good looks opposite to her? |
10755 | Was it true that there was no change but the change from the young woman to the old one, from enthusiasm to acquiescence? |
10755 | Was she satisfied? |
10755 | What are twenty- one years to India? |
10755 | What can I do?" |
10755 | What could I do who a week ago was still a stranger to my people? |
10755 | What could it mean, he wondered? |
10755 | What did it matter whether he lived in unhappiness so long as that knowledge was the price of his unhappiness? |
10755 | What did it matter? |
10755 | What else was he waiting for from ten to eleven in the balcony above the well, except just for this news?" |
10755 | What in the world, he wondered, could Linforth have read in his letter, so to change him? |
10755 | What is it?" |
10755 | What life would there be there for me?" |
10755 | What of the others? |
10755 | What shall I do?" |
10755 | What should I know of Luffe?" |
10755 | What strange fate had cast her up there? |
10755 | What then? |
10755 | What was Shere Ali doing? |
10755 | What was it that was not"good for us"in the circus on the Maidan? |
10755 | What were they two and the two levies behind them against the throng? |
10755 | What would Linforth say when he knew that Shere Ali was lurking in Peshawur? |
10755 | What, then? |
10755 | When did I see you last? |
10755 | When he is told to go back to his State and settle down, what then? |
10755 | Where is he going to be during those twenty- one years?" |
10755 | Where is he?" |
10755 | Which of the two is the better man? |
10755 | Who knew but what the very leaves of the neem trees might whisper the words and bear witness against him? |
10755 | Why did not the attack begin? |
10755 | Why else should you say,''Ride forward and I will follow''?" |
10755 | Why has Shere Ali fled so quickly back to his country? |
10755 | Why should he and his not push on to Calcutta? |
10755 | Why should one respect those who take and do not give?" |
10755 | Why was the Residency left in peace? |
10755 | Why would n''t you speak to me?" |
10755 | Will he be content with a wife of his own people? |
10755 | Will it not go beyond Kohara?" |
10755 | Will you tell Poulteney Sahib that I would like to speak to him?" |
10755 | With what words and in what spirit would he have received Shere Ali''s summons to Chiltistan? |
10755 | Would another Linforth in another generation come to the tower in Peshawur with hopes as high as his and with the like futility? |
10755 | Would he meet her, he wondered, somewhere on the way to Chiltistan? |
10755 | Would he reach the door, pass in and be gone the next morning without another word to her except a formal goodnight in front of the others? |
10755 | Would he take the tips of those fingers from the floor, stand up again and face his man? |
10755 | Would not bitterness spring up between them and both their lives be marred? |
10755 | Would not dissatisfaction with herself follow very quickly upon her marriage? |
10755 | Would the soldier rise? |
10755 | Would you rather he sat down and grumbled and bragged of his successes, and took to drink, as more than one down south has done? |
10755 | Wrong definitely, undeniably wrong on the point of fact, was it not likely that Luffe was wrong too on the point of theory? |
10755 | Yet why should we grumble or complain? |
10755 | You have been going the pace a bit, eh? |
10755 | You knew him?" |
10755 | You know his history?" |
10755 | You remember it, no doubt?" |
10755 | You remember the night in Peshawur, the terrible night? |
10755 | You will sit down in my presence before I sit down? |
10755 | You will swear to divorce your wife, if you break your word?" |
10755 | Your friend as well as your mistress?" |
10755 | there''s a boy? |
11214 | ''Places to be attacked,''--don''t that seem to you as if it might be a list of places for these rioters to set upon? 11214 Ah, do n''t trouble yerself about that, squire; I don''t-- that is entirely off my mind; for now Whitticar is dead, where is yer witnesses?" |
11214 | Ai n''t you going? |
11214 | And are you going to accept him Ess? |
11214 | And are you not? |
11214 | And be sure to overset the milk that''s''long side of it-- yer hear? |
11214 | And did she never make any overtures for a reconciliation? |
11214 | And did you go? |
11214 | And did you leave all your friends well? |
11214 | And did you make any overtures of a social character? |
11214 | And do the Thomases know you are a coloured man? |
11214 | And do you intend to go? |
11214 | And have they got any nice shady trees on the ship? |
11214 | And he never mentioned names? |
11214 | And how came you there? |
11214 | And how did you''scape, honey,continued she,"from drowning''long wid the rest of''em?" |
11214 | And how do you like your house? |
11214 | And how does it affect our quiet Esther? |
11214 | And is Em going with me? |
11214 | And must I go, mother? |
11214 | And so you say, Winston, that they never suspected you were coloured? |
11214 | And still you are not afraid? |
11214 | And the children? |
11214 | And this is the first time you have attempted a sketch upon paper? |
11214 | And was there no redress? |
11214 | And what became of the boy? |
11214 | And what is to become of little Em?--she surely wo n''t remain alone with him? |
11214 | And where are you? 11214 And where did your father come from, Charlie?" |
11214 | And who is to be bridesmaid? |
11214 | And who, may I ask, were the principal opposers? |
11214 | And who, pray, instructed you to clean them? |
11214 | And will you do it afterwards? |
11214 | And will you give it? |
11214 | And you came here at once? 11214 And you have never received any instructions?" |
11214 | Any news of your father? |
11214 | Are there no other heirs? |
11214 | Are they not beautiful? |
11214 | Are we to fire on them at once, or wait for their attack? |
11214 | Are you a relation? |
11214 | Are you sure it came home? |
11214 | Are you sure it was my house? |
11214 | Are you sure of it? |
11214 | Are you? |
11214 | Beat whom over the head with a broom? |
11214 | But how did you manage to get introduced to that set? 11214 But tell me what kind of people are these you are visiting-- Abolitionists, or anything of that sort?" |
11214 | But where is Garie? 11214 But why do you ask, Allen?" |
11214 | But you just said you took him for a beggar? |
11214 | By the howly St. Patherick I did n''t know you, squire; what have you been doing to yourself? |
11214 | By whose direction did you set the child at that dirty work? |
11214 | Ca n''t you accommodate me with some place where I can put these on? |
11214 | Ca n''t you find it, squire? |
11214 | Ca n''t you tell me? |
11214 | Ca n''t your honour come and see him? |
11214 | Call through the key- hole, ma''am,suggested she, which advice Mrs. Stevens immediately followed, and inquired,"Who''s there?" |
11214 | Can I see him? |
11214 | Can this be true? |
11214 | Can you spell? |
11214 | Clary, do you think she will come? |
11214 | Come here, Jule,said he,"and look at our new neighbour''s children-- rather pretty, ai n''t they?" |
11214 | Come, out with it-- what has happened? |
11214 | Dear, dear, what am I to do? |
11214 | Did he give his name? |
11214 | Did not I tell you so? |
11214 | Did you ever draw before? |
11214 | Do n''t I know that? |
11214 | Do n''t he know any of you? |
11214 | Do n''t laugh, Ess; but tell me-- do you really intend to refuse him? |
11214 | Do n''t you think one or the other of us should go to the funeral? |
11214 | Do n''t you think we had better engage him? |
11214 | Do you call it a fair fight when you steal up behind a man, and break his skull with a slung shot? |
11214 | Do you know I found little Lizzy Stevens, your neighbour''s daughter, shivering upon the steps in a neighbouring street, fairly blue with cold? 11214 Do you know any one who sat on the inquest?" |
11214 | Do you know who is coming? |
11214 | Do you like it? |
11214 | Do you think I''m in my dotage, and I do n''t know a man from a mouse? |
11214 | Do you think, mother, I''d set Mr. Walters down to plain bread, when we always have hot rolls and short- cake at their house? 11214 Do you want a stretcher?" |
11214 | Do you want to buy anything? |
11214 | Do your pawents keep house? |
11214 | Does Mr. McCloskey live here? |
11214 | Does Mr. McCloskey live here? |
11214 | Ess, this is nonsense,said Charlie, impatiently:"if it''s anything worth knowing, why ca n''t you tell a fellow? |
11214 | Esther, I thought I was too cold in that-- tell me, do you think so? |
11214 | Father, would not your mind be easier still, if you could be persuaded to make restitution to his children? 11214 Good morning, Mr. Egan,"said he, extending his hand;"how is our friend McCloskey this morning?" |
11214 | Had you a pleasant journey? |
11214 | Has father come? |
11214 | Has he a family? |
11214 | Has he parents? |
11214 | Has she ever spoken to you since the night of her visit? |
11214 | Has the what? |
11214 | Have they attacked you-- are you hurt? |
11214 | Have you a father? |
11214 | Have you answered your brother''s letter? |
11214 | Have you come to any decision about taking him? |
11214 | Have you had your breakfast? |
11214 | Have you seen their mother? |
11214 | Have you seen your sister lately? |
11214 | He did, did he? |
11214 | Heard what? |
11214 | How absurd, Mr. Stevens, to ask such a question; of course they are not,said she, indignantly;"do you suppose I should be here if they were? |
11214 | How are mother and father to- day? |
11214 | How can I help going if father and mother say I must? |
11214 | How can I, Charlie? |
11214 | How can I? 11214 How cold your hand is,"he continued;"are you frightened?" |
11214 | How could he love her? |
11214 | How d''ye do? |
11214 | How dare you address me- in that disrespectful manner? 11214 How dare you interfere? |
11214 | How did you learn the answers to those questions-- you ca n''t read? |
11214 | How did you say father was? |
11214 | How did your mother come to think of putting you there? |
11214 | How is Em? |
11214 | How is he now? |
11214 | How is my husband? |
11214 | How much sooner does the other train arrive than we? |
11214 | How on earth, Stevens, was I to know you wanted them? |
11214 | How shall I ever find means to break this to the girls and their mother? |
11214 | How-- what do you mean? |
11214 | I do not understand you; what do you mean? |
11214 | I hear you have a little sister; were you not sorry to leave her behind? |
11214 | I hope you are not sulky,she rejoined;"we do n''t like sulky boys here; why do n''t you eat?" |
11214 | I hope, ma''am, I have n''t done anything wrong? |
11214 | I know it-- but how can I help it? 11214 I look badly,--don''t I Charlie?" |
11214 | I regret to hear of his indisposition,replied Mr. Burrell;"I hope it is not consequent upon his disappointment this morning?" |
11214 | I should like it well enough, to be sure; but where''s the money to come from, squire? |
11214 | I think the letter said plain, neat furniture, and not too expensive, did it not? |
11214 | I think those were the very words,replied Caddy;"and, oh, mother, is n''t it nice to have the buying of so many pretty things? |
11214 | I think we have met before,said he at last, in a cold, contemptuous tone, not unmingled with surprise,"have we not?" |
11214 | I wonder if they will ever send her away, as they did Clarence? |
11214 | If I am not too inquisitive-- what rent do you pay for this house? |
11214 | If I give you ever so much now, what guarantee have I that you''ll not return in a month or so, and want as much more? |
11214 | If you ca n''t get on without the boy''s earning something, why do n''t you do as white women and men do? 11214 Impossible!--why so? |
11214 | In the box, are they not? |
11214 | Indeed, what is it?--what can it be? |
11214 | Is dere many more of''em like you? |
11214 | Is he any better? |
11214 | Is his honour in? |
11214 | Is it possible, Caddy,asked Mr. Walters,"that your propensity to dabble in soap and water has overcome you even at this critical time? |
11214 | Is it? |
11214 | Is n''t it singular,she remarked,"that a man in his position should make such a choice?" |
11214 | Is n''t that our Charlie? |
11214 | Is that all? 11214 It''s a dear job to insult you, at that rate, squire; but where does he live?" |
11214 | It''s a mob-- and that word Amalgamationist-- can it be pointed at me? 11214 It''s very neatly written, very neatly written, indeed; is n''t it about time that he left school-- don''t you think he has education enough?" |
11214 | Look here,said he,"what do you think of these as the work of a lad of twelve or fourteen, who has never had more than half a dozen lessons?" |
11214 | Look here,she at last burst forth,"do you call this_ my_ dinner?" |
11214 | Look, Caddy,cried he,"is n''t this your mother?" |
11214 | Mother,said Caddy,"this is Mr. Grant''s new house-- isn''t it a splendid place? |
11214 | Mr. Garie, I presume? |
11214 | Never having been there I ca n''t say,rejoined Mr. Winston, smiling;"and how do you like the North? |
11214 | No use-- I''ll have to give it up,said he, at length;"but where is McCloskey? |
11214 | Now tell me,he continued,"where do you live when you are with your parents? |
11214 | Now, Charles,she continued,"do you know your letters?" |
11214 | Now, girls,said he, with the air of a patriarch,"what do you intend to do with your money?" |
11214 | Now,he continued,"do you know what I''m about to do?" |
11214 | Of course we can-- what is to prevent? |
11214 | Oh, Mr. Walters, nothing serious I hope has happened to him? |
11214 | Oh, did I? |
11214 | Oh, is n''t that a pretty calico, mother, that with the green ground? |
11214 | Oh, it''s you, is it? 11214 Oh, it''s you, is it?" |
11214 | Oh, no, do n''t,said Mr. Stevens;"that wo n''t do-- you forget what I came out for?" |
11214 | Oh, then he is a white man? |
11214 | Oh, what is the use of so much talk about it? 11214 Oh,"rejoined he, abstractedly,"am I? |
11214 | Oh,said Kinch, assuming a solemn look,"do n''t they always tie a rope round a man''s body when they are going to lower him into a pit? |
11214 | Oh,she replied,"dat ar is n''t Tom now, is it? |
11214 | Poor thing; I suppose they were very poor? |
11214 | Rather good- looking,she replied, after observing them for a few minutes, and then added,"Have you seen their parents?" |
11214 | Really, now-- you''re not joking me? |
11214 | Should n''t you say so, Dalton? |
11214 | Spirit of-- hic-- hic-- night, whence co- co- comest thou? |
11214 | Struck with what? 11214 Teacher, is school out?" |
11214 | That may very likely be so; but are you sure we can get one if we apply? |
11214 | That''s a pity,said Western, sympathisingly;"and what have you been doing?" |
11214 | Then Ash- grove must be abandoned; and in lieu of that what can you propose? |
11214 | Then they know_ all_, of course-- they know you are coloured? |
11214 | Then what are you so much together for? 11214 Then, of course you were aware that Mr. Garie was your cousin when he took the house beside you?" |
11214 | This is not the same,rejoined the teacher,"do n''t you see the little tail at the bottom of it?" |
11214 | Thomases? |
11214 | To whom? |
11214 | Umph,grunted the old woman, incredulously,"what''s de use of saying dat''s a Q, when you jest said not a minute ago''twas O?" |
11214 | Until they have done; how happens that? |
11214 | Very cold,replied Esther, taking a seat beside her mother;"how long will it be before we can go in?" |
11214 | Was it? 11214 We sent a note to_ your_ brother?" |
11214 | Well, I ca n''t say that I see so much in that,said Lee;"how can he expect to keep him? |
11214 | Well, Mrs. Bird, let us grant him admitted-- what benefit can accrue to the lad from an education beyond his station? 11214 Well, Snowball,"said Mr. Stevens,"do you keep this curiosity- shop?" |
11214 | Well, do, Mr. Walters, and hurry back: wo n''t you? |
11214 | Well, if it does,rejoined Alfred, with a stolid- look,"it do n''t say that man is n''t to be either, does it? |
11214 | Well, never mind that,said Mrs. Stevens, a little confused;"what has become of her things-- her clothing, and furniture?" |
11214 | Well, what do you say? |
11214 | Well, who was here last night? |
11214 | Well; and what then? |
11214 | What a nice, lady- like girl his sister is-- is her brother as handsome as she? |
11214 | What a ninny I am, to waste time in looking at the cover of this, when the contents will, no doubt, explain the whole matter? |
11214 | What are you doing here? |
11214 | What are you doing that for? |
11214 | What are you dressed up in this style for? |
11214 | What are you thinking of, Garie? |
11214 | What can the fellow have been doing here? |
11214 | What did you say? |
11214 | What do you all want-- why are you on my premises, creating this disturbance? |
11214 | What do you call a heavy cheque? |
11214 | What do you mean by such conduct? |
11214 | What do you propose? |
11214 | What do you want-- whatever will satisfy you? |
11214 | What do you wear it for, then? |
11214 | What had Charlie to- day in his dinner- basket to take to school with him? |
11214 | What has come over you, child? |
11214 | What has happened? |
11214 | What has he been doing? |
11214 | What has the boy been doing to himself? |
11214 | What have you got here? |
11214 | What have you got in here? |
11214 | What have you in your portfolio, there? |
11214 | What have you there? |
11214 | What is all this for? |
11214 | What is all this frightful noise occasioned by? |
11214 | What is it, Garie? 11214 What is it, then? |
11214 | What is it-- what is it? |
11214 | What is that-- who could have done that-- where has that water come from? |
11214 | What is the matter, dear? |
11214 | What is the matter? |
11214 | What is the matter? |
11214 | What is the price of it? |
11214 | What is your name? |
11214 | What kind of a case is it? |
11214 | What kind of a person is the teacher? |
11214 | What kind of folks are these Thomases? |
11214 | What makes you look so pale and worried-- and why do you and the old man start if the door cracks, as if the devil was after you? 11214 What on earth can induce you to want to eat with a nigger?" |
11214 | What on earth have you been doing with yourself? |
11214 | What on earth is the matter with the child? |
11214 | What shall I do with this? |
11214 | What shall we do? |
11214 | What would you do, Burrell? |
11214 | What''s all this-- what''s the matter, Jule? 11214 What''s his number?" |
11214 | What''s the matter, Jane; what has made you so grave? |
11214 | What, you do n''t mean Emily Winston''s husband? |
11214 | What_ shall_ we do with him? |
11214 | When did you arrive? |
11214 | When did you arrive? |
11214 | When did you come? 11214 When did you get the letter?" |
11214 | Where are you all going? |
11214 | Where are you going? |
11214 | Where do you think he was, mother? 11214 Where have you been, you runaway?" |
11214 | Where have you been? |
11214 | Where have you put the veil, my dear? |
11214 | Where is she? |
11214 | Where-- where is he? |
11214 | Who else would tell them? 11214 Who is Walters?" |
11214 | Who is it? |
11214 | Who is your husband?--you do n''t know his number, do you? 11214 Who is your physician?" |
11214 | Who procured that liquor for my father? |
11214 | Who spoke of hanging? |
11214 | Who was it, Esther? |
11214 | Why did n''t you resent it in some way? 11214 Why did n''t you tell me so before?" |
11214 | Why do n''t father come? |
11214 | Why do n''t she speak? |
11214 | Why do n''t you answer? |
11214 | Why do n''t you eat? |
11214 | Why not? |
11214 | Why should n''t I-- in the house of an ould acquaintance and particular friend-- just the place to feel at home, eh, Stevens? |
11214 | Why should n''t I? |
11214 | Why that''s Tom,exclaimed Robberts;"do n''t you know your own cat?" |
11214 | Why, Esther, how you talk, girl: what''s come over you? |
11214 | Why, bless me,said the old man,"dis is an early visit; where you come from, honey, dis time o''day?" |
11214 | Why, can this be you? |
11214 | Why, man, have n''t you heard? |
11214 | Why, no, Em; who ever heard of such a thing as trees on a ship? 11214 Why, these are excellently well done,"exclaimed he, after examining them attentively;"who taught you?" |
11214 | Why, what ails the boy? 11214 Why, what could it have been? |
11214 | Why, what is the matter? |
11214 | Why, where are you now? |
11214 | Why, where did you come from, chil? |
11214 | Why, would you have thought it,said she;"Mrs. Garie is a nigger woman-- a real nigger-- she would be known as such anywhere?" |
11214 | Why,said she, laughing,"you do n''t expect he can take that with him, do you?" |
11214 | Why? |
11214 | Will that buy mother back? |
11214 | Will you excuse me for not rising? |
11214 | Will you never mind me? 11214 Will you walk in?" |
11214 | With her parents''consent? |
11214 | Wo n''t come out of dere, wo n''t you? |
11214 | Wo n''t you look at her? |
11214 | Would n''t the boys go out with you? |
11214 | Would you believe it? 11214 Yes, dead,"repeated he, with a complacent look;"any relation of yours-- want an order for the body?" |
11214 | Yes, he is-- what do you want with him? |
11214 | Yes,he answered;"the new vest came home-- how do you like it?" |
11214 | Yes,he replied, and added, as he extended his hand;"I have the pleasure of addressing Mr. Walters, I suppose?" |
11214 | You all suppose him to be a white man, do you not? |
11214 | You are a white man, I believe? |
11214 | You are not going, are you, really? |
11214 | You could n''t catch anything of it? |
11214 | You do n''t call this cold potatoe and cheese- rind haricot, do you? |
11214 | You do n''t seem to be well? |
11214 | You do, do you? |
11214 | You have news of father? |
11214 | You only wish what, dear? 11214 You remember what I told you about the wig, do n''t you?" |
11214 | You sent for me? |
11214 | You wrote me he gave you letters to Philadelphia; was there one amongst them to the Mortons? |
11214 | You, I should have known from Clarence''s description-- you are his little Birdie? |
11214 | _ Is that all_? |
11214 | _ Where were you the night of the murder?_Mr. Stevens turned pale at this question, and replied, hesitatingly,"Why, at home, of course." |
11214 | _ You-- you_ apply? |
11214 | 27,"said he, opening the door of the carriage,"shall I ring?" |
11214 | A coloured boy happening to pass at the time, he asked him:"Which way do the numbers run, my little man?" |
11214 | Ai n''t I getting on nicely?" |
11214 | Ai n''t you ashamed to plague me so?" |
11214 | Am I not always kind and affectionate? |
11214 | And Mr. Glentworth-- surely he was on our side?" |
11214 | And Mrs. Ellis rubbed her spectacles and looked peevishly out of the window as she concluded.--"Where can he be?" |
11214 | And looking at Charlie from head to foot, he inquired,"Is that your best suit?" |
11214 | Are you his relation-- want an order for the body?" |
11214 | Are you ready?" |
11214 | Are you sure of it?" |
11214 | As Kinch was leaving the office, he called after him,"Did you find a paper in your shop this morning?" |
11214 | As he passed on, his assistant inquired,"Is n''t that a nigger?" |
11214 | As soon as partial order was restored, he turned to Wheeler, and demanded,"What is the occasion of all this tumult-- what does it mean?" |
11214 | As soon as they were out of hearing of the others, Mr. Stevens exclaimed,"Do n''t you know me, Morton?" |
11214 | Bird?" |
11214 | Blatchford''s?" |
11214 | Business, of course? |
11214 | But how did you hear of this affair?" |
11214 | But now, tell me, do you really think that drawing good?" |
11214 | But what is the matter? |
11214 | But who is here? |
11214 | But who is this you have with you?" |
11214 | But why do you ask-- is this Mr. Garie one?" |
11214 | But why do you take such an interest in it? |
11214 | But why should you be astonished at such treatment of the dead, when you see how they conduct themselves towards the living? |
11214 | But, Charlie,"she added,"how do you know that you can not obtain any other employment than that of a servant? |
11214 | But, Kinch, ca n''t you go down, and implore Caddy to come up and dress-- time is slipping away very fast?" |
11214 | Ca n''t you speak, eh?" |
11214 | Can he be what I suspect?" |
11214 | Can it be possible that he is the man you are in search of?" |
11214 | Can it be that you have entered into a conspiracy to deprive an inoffensive child of an opportunity of earning his bread in a respectable manner? |
11214 | Can you oblige me?" |
11214 | Can you tell where this came from?" |
11214 | Charlie laid these directions aside in his mind for future application, and asked,"What did you do, Kinch, to get away from the people you were with?" |
11214 | Clarence is getting to be quite a little man; do n''t you think it time, dear, that he was sent to school? |
11214 | Clarence, how can you remain so long away?" |
11214 | Come, Caddy, tell us what it is; is it powder?" |
11214 | Come, now, you''re joking-- you do n''t mean a real black nigger?" |
11214 | Come, walk on with me-- where do you live?" |
11214 | Did he ever do anything dishonourable?" |
11214 | Did you bring the bill?" |
11214 | Did you ever have a wish ungratified for a single day, if it was in my power to compass it? |
11214 | Did you ever have any little boys of your own?" |
11214 | Did you ever hear of any one who had made a fortune at service? |
11214 | Did you not notice how he changed colour, how agitated he became, when I was presented? |
11214 | Did you recognize George?" |
11214 | Do n''t deceive me, Esther, there''s something behind all this; are you telling me the truth? |
11214 | Do n''t you feel a little nervous?" |
11214 | Do you ever find them sending their boys out as servants? |
11214 | Do you intend to buy?" |
11214 | Do you know anything beyond that? |
11214 | Do you know of any one, now, who has been hired to put me to death?" |
11214 | Do you think they would take the trouble to write if they did not intend to give me the situation? |
11214 | Does she want them?" |
11214 | Ellis?" |
11214 | Ellis?--any one that I know?" |
11214 | Emily held out her hand to little Birdie, who clasped it in both her own, and said, inquiringly:"You are his sister?" |
11214 | Esther soon came in for her share of caresses; then Charlie inquired,"Where''s father?" |
11214 | Esther''s lips quivered again, as she repeated the words,"Little hope; did the doctor say that?" |
11214 | Full of boyish fun, he crept up behind her, and clasped his hands over her eyes, exclaiming, in an assumed voice,"Now, who am I?" |
11214 | George, what do you think?" |
11214 | God has blessed me with abundance, and to what better use can it be appropriated than the relief of my friends? |
11214 | Had n''t I better get an eye- glass and pair of light kid gloves?" |
11214 | Has he come in yet?" |
11214 | Has he had his breakfast, Aunt Rachel?" |
11214 | Have n''t you some room where we can be quite private for a little while?" |
11214 | Have you ever applied personally to any one?" |
11214 | Have you ever confided anything to him?" |
11214 | Have you got any money? |
11214 | Have you had your dinner?" |
11214 | Have you seen them?" |
11214 | Have you weighed it well?" |
11214 | He looks very much changed-- he has had a very severe time, I presume?" |
11214 | He must be hungry; do let him come down and get his tea, mother?" |
11214 | How approaches he the bar of that awful Judge, whose commands he has set at nought, and whose power he has so often contemned? |
11214 | How are mother and father and Esther?" |
11214 | How are you getting on?" |
11214 | How are you to guarantee success?" |
11214 | How dare you call her such a bad name? |
11214 | How dare you make those marks upon the steps? |
11214 | How do you know that I am as kind as you seem to suppose?" |
11214 | How many more had stopped that day to add their contributions to the mass which Charlie''s letter now joined? |
11214 | How would you like him to be a subservient old numskull, like that old Robberts of theirs?" |
11214 | How would you like to make yer appearance at court some fine morning, on the charge of murther, eh?" |
11214 | I believe you intimated you would be kind enough to say upon what evidence you purposed sustaining your claims?" |
11214 | I do n''t believe he is sick-- dying-- do you?" |
11214 | I really several times thought of sending to take Charlie off your hands: by- the- way, what is he doing now?" |
11214 | I think, George, we treat coloured people with great injustice, do n''t you?" |
11214 | I thought I heard you say, Jule, that the child got on excellently well there,--that she improved very fast?" |
11214 | I thought I missed somebody-- where is my boy?" |
11214 | I was anxious lest my feelings should be too strikingly displayed; yet it was better to be explicit-- don''t you think so?" |
11214 | I wonder if he really intends to live here permanently?" |
11214 | I wonder,"she continued,"if the children were well wrapped up this morning?" |
11214 | I''m going to wear a new pair of pants to meetin''to- morrow, and I expect to cut a dash, so you''ll do''em up slick, now wo n''t you?" |
11214 | I''ve been sitting here alone ever since the Ellises went: where have you been?" |
11214 | If I can call for you to- morrow,"he continued, turning to Mrs. Ellis,"will you accompany me there to take a look at the premises?" |
11214 | If I gave it back to them, what would become of you and George, and how am I to stop the clamours of that cormorant? |
11214 | If I''m hauled up for participation, who is to be your lawyer-- eh?" |
11214 | If he comes, we go-- that''s so, ai n''t it, boys?" |
11214 | If thus the Christian passes away-- what terror must fill the breast of one whose whole life has been a constant warfare upon the laws of God and man? |
11214 | Is dey all dere yet, honey?" |
11214 | Is it possible your place was assaulted also?" |
11214 | Is there a lad living here by the name of Charles Ellis?" |
11214 | Is there any stain on his character, or that of his family? |
11214 | Kinch, old fellow, how are you?" |
11214 | Laying his hand on her cold cheek, he cried, with faltering voice,"Mother,_ ca n''t_ you speak?" |
11214 | Morton?" |
11214 | Mr. Balch pondered a few moments, and then inquired, looking steadily at Mr. Stevens,"How long have you known of this relationship?" |
11214 | Mr. Garie put the curls aside, and kissing her fondly, asked,"How long have you known it, dear?" |
11214 | Mr. Stevens lay back upon his pillow, and for a moment seemed to doze; then starting up again suddenly, he asked,"Have you told George about it? |
11214 | Mr. Stevens turned to his visitor, and inquired,"What was done last night-- much of anything?" |
11214 | Mr. Stevens, how is he a villain or impostor?" |
11214 | Mr. Walters now looked round the room, as though he missed some one, and finally exclaimed,"Where is Charlie? |
11214 | Mr. Winston, amused at the boy''s manner, asked--"What is your name, my little man?" |
11214 | Mrs. Ellis''s voice quivered as she reiterated,"It''s Charlie-- our Charlie!--don''t you know him?" |
11214 | Mrs. Kinney now began to look quite interested, and, untying the strings of her bonnet, exclaimed,"Dear me, what can it be?" |
11214 | Now which of the two would you rather be-- coloured or white?" |
11214 | Now, then,"he concluded,"what do you think of that?" |
11214 | Now, what do you think of that?" |
11214 | Now, what objection can you urge against that arrangement?" |
11214 | Now, whom would you prefer? |
11214 | Ought we not to aid their escape from it if we can?" |
11214 | Ours is a new house, is it not?" |
11214 | Perhaps he may marry you when he grows up-- don''t you think you had better set your cap at him?" |
11214 | Springing forward, he grasped his hand, exclaiming,"My dear old friend, do n''t you know me?" |
11214 | Stevens winced at this, and asked,"What would you consider a fair offer?" |
11214 | Suppose it reached them through some other source, what would they then think of you?" |
11214 | Tell me what you have seen since you went away; and how is that dear Aunt Ada of yours you talk so much about?" |
11214 | Tell me, what is it you know?" |
11214 | The boy''s parents are poor, I presume?" |
11214 | The old man shook his head, and muttered,"The sins of the fathers shall-- what is that? |
11214 | The old man will swear till everything turns blue; and as for Clara, what will become of her? |
11214 | Then turning to Robberts, she inquired,"How is Aunt Rachel?" |
11214 | Umph, chile, you been dere?" |
11214 | Walters?" |
11214 | Walters?" |
11214 | We look like moving, do n''t we?" |
11214 | We need not care what others say-- evewybody knows who we are and what we are?" |
11214 | We''ve got our plans, have n''t we, Kinch?" |
11214 | Well, has he heard anything of your father?" |
11214 | Were n''t you afraid to go to the window?" |
11214 | What ails you?" |
11214 | What are you in such, a hurry for this morning,--no more mysteries, I hope?" |
11214 | What are you standing there for? |
11214 | What are you thinking about?" |
11214 | What can her complexion have to do with her being buried there, I should like to know?" |
11214 | What can we do?" |
11214 | What can you say to all this?" |
11214 | What did put it in your heads to come here to live?" |
11214 | What do you ask for this?" |
11214 | What do you mean?" |
11214 | What do you say to receiving a hundred and fifty, and going off for a month or two?" |
11214 | What do you want then?" |
11214 | What does he think of the arm?" |
11214 | What does it all mean, eh?" |
11214 | What does mother say?" |
11214 | What has brought you into this part of the country? |
11214 | What have I done to revive the recollection that any such relation existed between us? |
11214 | What is the matter?" |
11214 | What is the matter?" |
11214 | What is the meaning of that?" |
11214 | What is the result? |
11214 | What on earth are you going to whip Liz for?" |
11214 | What on earth has happened?" |
11214 | What shall it be? |
11214 | What use can Latin or Greek be to a coloured boy? |
11214 | What was decided?" |
11214 | What will mother and Esther say? |
11214 | What would you, advise me to do, Stevens?" |
11214 | What''s de use of having two of''em?" |
11214 | What''s the name of this rich nigger?" |
11214 | Whatever it may be, it ca n''t be worse than I expect; is he dead?" |
11214 | When Miss Ellstowe re- entered the room, he immediately inquired,"What was that Mr. Garie doing here? |
11214 | When is it to be?" |
11214 | Where are all the ladies?" |
11214 | Where are the children? |
11214 | Where is Miss Ellis?" |
11214 | Where is it all now?" |
11214 | Where would I or Ellis have been had we been hired out all our lives at so much a month? |
11214 | Where''s mother and Caddy?" |
11214 | Where_ do_ you think I found him?" |
11214 | Who are you, and what do you want, that you dare thrust yourself upon him in this manner?" |
11214 | Who can say that a similar fate may never be mine? |
11214 | Who could have left it here?" |
11214 | Who else knows it? |
11214 | Who has_ dared_ to tell them I am a coloured man?" |
11214 | Who is it?" |
11214 | Who the devil are you?" |
11214 | Who''s Stevens?" |
11214 | Why are you home so early; are you sick?" |
11214 | Why are you so much dressed to- night?--jewels, sash, and satin slippers,"he continued;"are you going out?" |
11214 | Why ca n''t he act,"he said,"like other men who happen to have half- white children-- breed them up for the market, and sell them?" |
11214 | Why ca n''t_ you_ take this boy?" |
11214 | Why did you not let him go for some one else? |
11214 | Why do you go, I say?" |
11214 | Why is there so much whispering and writing, and going off on journeys all alone? |
11214 | Why, Ellis, man, how came you to consent to his going? |
11214 | Why, boy, where you learn all dat?" |
11214 | Why, what''s the matter wid him?" |
11214 | Will God ever forgive me? |
11214 | Will you come?" |
11214 | Will you ever go again?" |
11214 | Winston?" |
11214 | Wo n''t they know I am coloured?" |
11214 | Would n''t you like to keep a jail, Liz?" |
11214 | Would n''t you like to live in the free States? |
11214 | Would you like to go to school again?" |
11214 | You certainly ca n''t be going to scrub?" |
11214 | You have n''t let that trifling dream affect you so? |
11214 | You remember old Colonel Garie? |
11214 | You remember they chopped his hands off and threw him over?" |
11214 | You remember what you told me this morning, eh, old boy?" |
11214 | You said you liked both those places-- why not live in one of them?" |
11214 | You''d only laugh if we were to tell you, so we''re going to keep it to ourselves, ai n''t we, Kinch?" |
11214 | You''ll let me take the liberty of sitting on your counter, wo n''t you?" |
11214 | You_ must not_ say that; you understand?" |
11214 | and how on earth do you ever expect we shall find you in the legs of them trowsers, unless something is fastened to you?" |
11214 | and what has become of his father-- did he die?" |
11214 | are you sick?" |
11214 | are you? |
11214 | asked Kinch, as he sat beside Charlie in the playground munching the last of the apple- tart;"what kind of folks are they? |
11214 | asked Mr. Blatchford in astonishment--"why this commotion?" |
11214 | asked his father;"you said you sold suthin''?" |
11214 | child, what are you about?--whose boots are those, and why are you cleaning them?" |
11214 | cried Charlie;"I''ve been dying to see you-- why have n''t you been up?" |
11214 | demanded Mr. Bates, in a tone of perplexity;"has he ever committed any crime?" |
11214 | do now make the trial-- won''t you?" |
11214 | exclaimed he, reproachfully,"how can you speak in that manner? |
11214 | exclaimed her father,"what on earth, is the matter with you, have you lost your senses?" |
11214 | he asked, feebly--"has she desired to have them back?" |
11214 | he asked, with great surprise;"what is all this masquerading for?" |
11214 | he continued, endeavouring to rise--"where is he?" |
11214 | he continued, looking at their tearful faces;"what has happened?" |
11214 | he exclaimed,"it is little Birdie, is it not?" |
11214 | he replied, vacantly;"whose son is he?" |
11214 | how am I to raise that much money? |
11214 | how came he there? |
11214 | how came you to do it?" |
11214 | how can you plague little Birdie so? |
11214 | interrupted Lizzie, with a gesture of alarm, and laying her hand upon her heart, which beat fearfully--"did he mention any name?" |
11214 | is he still alive?" |
11214 | is it you? |
11214 | is n''t that the mob coming?" |
11214 | it ca n''t be that you are the little fellow that used to go home with me sometimes to Savanah, and that was sold to go to New Orleans?" |
11214 | or have I ever been harsh or neglectful?" |
11214 | rejoined Ben,"do you think I''m a fool? |
11214 | rejoined Mr. Bates, in a tone of surprise;"What is it? |
11214 | repeated Clarence, with surprise;"where is that? |
11214 | repeated Miss Ellstowe,"what do you mean? |
11214 | said Caddy, with a wild and disappointed look--"I was dreaming, was n''t I? |
11214 | said Esther;"do you hear that noise? |
11214 | said he, extending his hand to Mrs. Ellis--"what''s the matter? |
11214 | said he, with assumed indifference;"worse than you expected, eh?" |
11214 | said she, stooping to assist in raising him;"can not you see he is entirely unfit for any business?" |
11214 | she asked distractedly,"what can this mean? |
11214 | she exclaimed, looking round;"What on yarth has happened? |
11214 | she whispered;"did n''t you say jest now dat you went to school wid''em?" |
11214 | then folding his arms and tilting back his chair, he asked, coolly:"You have n''t a cigar, have ye?" |
11214 | we heard she was sold at public sale in Savanah-- did you ever learn what became of her?" |
11214 | what for? |
11214 | what will become of her?" |
11214 | whispered Miss Ellstowe,"here he comes, my dear; he is very rich-- a great catch; are my curls all right?" |
11214 | you ai n''t though, are you?" |
11214 | you are acting in behalf of this new claimant, I suppose?" |
36112 | ''May I come in?'' 36112 A what?" |
36112 | A young man came here a few minutes since and went out through that door,said he, with difficulty suppressing his excitement:"who is he?" |
36112 | Abingdon? 36112 About your father''s defeat? |
36112 | Ah,said Edward, his heart turning to ice within him,"whose was it?" |
36112 | Am I cynical? 36112 Am I dreaming?" |
36112 | Am I? 36112 And General Evan-- did he never know?" |
36112 | And I can not go on, then? |
36112 | And I presume he is not what you call an English dog? |
36112 | And Rita-- where is she? |
36112 | And did not know you? 36112 And do you count your real friends as nothing?" |
36112 | And how is the little mamma to- day-- have her eyes given her any more trouble? |
36112 | And how is the little mamma? |
36112 | And how much will you give? |
36112 | And if it is refused? |
36112 | And in the opinion of John Morgan, Gerald is the son of Marion Evans? |
36112 | And is her success in prophecy as marked? |
36112 | And she pronounced it correct, I suppose? |
36112 | And since then? |
36112 | And the child''s coffin? |
36112 | And the other-- who is he? |
36112 | And then? 36112 And then?" |
36112 | And this room? |
36112 | And this? |
36112 | And what else? |
36112 | And what else? |
36112 | And what was the prediction? |
36112 | And what witnesses could there have been? |
36112 | And what, Mr. Montjoy, is the issue between you and Mr. Swearingen-- I understand that is his name-- your opponent in the campaign for nomination? |
36112 | And who could have done that? |
36112 | And who is he? |
36112 | And why would you dislike to have me fail? |
36112 | And you did not know it? |
36112 | And you have them all to support? |
36112 | And you,said Virdow, greatly affected,"have you ever felt the union of consciousness and mind- memory?" |
36112 | And your father? |
36112 | And your-- cousin-- is he here to receive it? |
36112 | Anything serious, Norton? |
36112 | Are there any passengers for the coast here? |
36112 | Are you a resident of the south? |
36112 | Are you a son of Col. Norton Montjoy of Georgia, colonel of the old''fire- eaters,''as we used to call the regiment? |
36112 | Are you ready, gentlemen? |
36112 | Are you satisfied? |
36112 | Are you so sure of this, doctor, that you would advise against further consultation? 36112 Assured"by whom? |
36112 | Aunt Mollie,Mary asked,"has its mother come up yet?" |
36112 | Awful? 36112 Back-- would you murder her?" |
36112 | Boss, kin air one er you gentlemen gi''me a match? 36112 Bring me musical instruments-- what?" |
36112 | But by the way,he added,"how is the madam to- day? |
36112 | But has any one ever sent the vibration into that''viewless vinculum''and awakened the hidden mind? 36112 But how could the Montjoys have helped him?" |
36112 | But how could you? |
36112 | But how? |
36112 | But of what use can it possibly be to you? 36112 But suppose that I prove conclusively that the information came from a member of the Montjoy family? |
36112 | But why should the negro have disinterred the body and have made a wound upon her head? 36112 But why this search? |
36112 | But why was the silence never broken? |
36112 | But you will get there in time? |
36112 | But,said Edward, laughing,"you do not sell the dew, I suppose?" |
36112 | Cambia? |
36112 | Can you give me the name of her husband? |
36112 | Come in, Norton,he said without moving from his great rocker;"what is troubling you?" |
36112 | Come, my good woman, what is it? 36112 Could not the young men do better with the plantations?" |
36112 | Daughter,said the colonel, checking his horse as he prepared to follow,"are you sure of Lorna?" |
36112 | De Lord bless yer, horse, whar you be''n an''what you done wid young missus? |
36112 | Dick who? |
36112 | Did I? 36112 Did he answer it?" |
36112 | Did he say so? 36112 Did you do it?" |
36112 | Did you ever have neuralgia, Mr. Morgan? 36112 Did you ever hear why Mr. Morgan concealed his identity under an assumed name?" |
36112 | Did you examine her for other wounds? |
36112 | Did you hear any sound of breaking glass? |
36112 | Did you hear voices? |
36112 | Did you notice any cuts or signs of blood? |
36112 | Did you see Mr. Morgan that night? |
36112 | Did you speak? |
36112 | Die away? |
36112 | Do I know? |
36112 | Do I look it? |
36112 | Do I? 36112 Do n''t you want me to go, too?" |
36112 | Do not cry out,he said;"keep calm and remember that the little mamma''s health--""What do you mean?" |
36112 | Do you not think it awful? |
36112 | Do you suppose that Mr. Morgan is without enemies? |
36112 | Do you think a mother does not know her offspring? 36112 Do you understand?" |
36112 | Evan? |
36112 | From what do you speak? |
36112 | From whom comes this? |
36112 | From whom did you get your information? |
36112 | From whom? |
36112 | Gen. Evan,asked the solicitor,"where were you upon the night that Rita Morgan died?" |
36112 | General,he said,"will you do me a favor? |
36112 | Gerald? 36112 Grandma, why do n''t grandpa wake up?" |
36112 | Grandpa, ai n''t it time to blow the horn? |
36112 | Hard? |
36112 | Has anybody seen Carlo? |
36112 | Has he ever seen you? |
36112 | Have you a health certificate? |
36112 | Have you challenged him? |
36112 | Have you ever seen that face before? |
36112 | Have you ever shown this account to Rita Morgan? |
36112 | Have you killed him? |
36112 | Have you no friends who should know of this, good Benoni; no relatives? 36112 Have you no theory, Judge, to account for his existence under such circumstances?" |
36112 | He has lived here a long time, I presume? |
36112 | Here is one; can you shoot? |
36112 | Herr Gerald,he began,"you know the human heart?" |
36112 | Honest, missy? |
36112 | How am I to help? |
36112 | How can it be? 36112 How can it proceed?" |
36112 | How could a man who has never seen you face to face have drawn this likeness? |
36112 | How did you discover her? 36112 How did you like them?" |
36112 | How do you do, Mr. Morgan? 36112 How do you make it go fast?" |
36112 | How long since you have seen him? |
36112 | How long? |
36112 | How much do you need? |
36112 | How quickly can you go there and back? |
36112 | How was he related to you? |
36112 | How was it you used to say good- night, Edward? 36112 How will I know you are not deceiving me?" |
36112 | How? 36112 How?" |
36112 | How? |
36112 | I am glad you have come-- where is Mary? |
36112 | I ask you, General, who have known life better than I, which of the two was my mother? 36112 I felt but the scratch of a needle,"said the patient;"it is indeed ended?" |
36112 | I have given my word; is that not enough? |
36112 | I know, but the house is still there, is it not? |
36112 | I noticed at one place on the way south that the people were using wheel implements, do you not find them profitable? |
36112 | I suppose I may smoke? |
36112 | I was expecting you,the young man said;"where have you been?" |
36112 | I will ask it straight,said Edward, resolutely:"Have you ever suspected that Gerald Morgan is the son of the young woman who went away?" |
36112 | If he refuses to fight? |
36112 | In what? |
36112 | In your opinion, then, this picture that Gerald drew is a mind memory? |
36112 | Is he up? |
36112 | Is his existence generally known? |
36112 | Is it true? 36112 Is not overproduction a factor, Colonel? |
36112 | Is she ill, so ill as all that? |
36112 | Is the marriage certain? |
36112 | Is there room for all? |
36112 | Is this-- the young man-- you spoke of? |
36112 | It is an odd room,he said, presently;"do you sleep here?" |
36112 | It is this: Have you ever met Gerald Morgan? |
36112 | It might not be well, General-- it is not necessary--"On the contrary, a strange voice may have more effect than yours-- no ladies about? 36112 It would depend, then, you think, upon the clearness of the original impression?" |
36112 | Jerry,she said,"how would you like that?" |
36112 | John Morgan-- our John Morgan? |
36112 | Judge Eldridge, did you purposely withhold the girl''s name-- my uncle''s fiancee? 36112 Let the matter drop here, you understand? |
36112 | Make it$ 10,000 to$ 5,000? |
36112 | Make it$ 2,000 to$ 1,000? |
36112 | Mamma, does your eye hurt you? |
36112 | Marse Evan, deir he sots; you do n''t spect me ter leave dat possum up dere? |
36112 | Mary,he said, musingly,"Mary? |
36112 | May I come in? |
36112 | May I come in? |
36112 | May I inquire what troubles you, sir? |
36112 | May I ride with you? |
36112 | Montjoy, you remember cousin Sam Pope of the Fire- Eaters-- died in the ditch at Marye''s Heights near Cobb? 36112 More? |
36112 | Mr. Morgan, have you a match? |
36112 | Mr. Morgan, how did you come here? |
36112 | Mr. Morgan,she said after awhile, looking up from under her lashes,"are you a very earnest man? |
36112 | My daughter,said Mrs. Montjoy, after a silence, her mind reverting to her visitor''s remark;"she is not ill?" |
36112 | My uncle stood well in the community, I suppose? |
36112 | Not happy? 36112 Not that I am aware of----""Certainly not face to face-- long enough for him to remember your every feature-- your expression?" |
36112 | Now something you have worn-- what can it be? 36112 Now,"he exclaimed excitedly,"as between the two of us, how can this woman be other than the mother of Gerald Morgan? |
36112 | Of what are you thinking? |
36112 | On Pet? |
36112 | One is? |
36112 | Refuse? 36112 Shall I read it to you?" |
36112 | Skillfully managed? |
36112 | Suppose I convince the bearer that a member of his family was my authority? |
36112 | Tell me where are the proofs of our marriage? 36112 Tell me,"he said,"what do you require to satisfy you that between the two I am the son of Marion Evan?" |
36112 | Tell me,said Royson, reverting to the note,"is there anything in that communication that we can take advantage of?" |
36112 | Tell the jury, do you know this man? |
36112 | Ten thousand to four thousand? |
36112 | Ten thousand to three thousand? |
36112 | That night-- pointed out that night? |
36112 | Then you have never known a mother? |
36112 | Then, madame,he said, with deep emotion, pointing to the grave and touching her arm,"what was he to you?" |
36112 | Theory? 36112 They would not stay long anywhere away from the city,"he said;"but do you never sigh for city life?" |
36112 | This note,said Edward, speaking rapidly in French;"has it been long here?" |
36112 | To do what? |
36112 | Too many; too many,he said, sadly;"but what can be done? |
36112 | WHICH OF THE TWO WAS MY MOTHER? |
36112 | WHICH OF THE TWO WAS MY MOTHER? |
36112 | WHO SAYS THERE CAN BE A''TOO LATE''FOR THE IMMORTAL MIND? |
36112 | WHO SAYS THERE CAN BE A''TOO LATE''FOR THE IMMORTAL MIND? |
36112 | WOMAN, WHAT WAS HE TO YOU? |
36112 | WOMAN, WHAT WAS HE TO YOU? |
36112 | Was there any blood visible? |
36112 | Was there-- anything marked-- or strange-- in his life? |
36112 | We have risked our lives and ruined our clothes-- for what? |
36112 | Well, Isam,he said, tossing his bag in,"how are all at home?" |
36112 | Well, when poor Gaspard died--"He is dead, then? |
36112 | Were the statements of Rita Morgan in writing? |
36112 | Were there no heirs? |
36112 | Were you ever hired by him? |
36112 | Were you not afraid of ghosts? |
36112 | What are you going to have, gentlemen? 36112 What are your chances for acquittal?" |
36112 | What are your plans? |
36112 | What became of the man, did you say? |
36112 | What dey want me for, Marse Evan? 36112 What do you mean? |
36112 | What do you mean? |
36112 | What do you say for the defense, gentlemen? |
36112 | What does it mean, my friend? |
36112 | What does it mean? |
36112 | What does it mean? |
36112 | What is his character? |
36112 | What is his name, General? |
36112 | What is it, Isham? |
36112 | What is it? |
36112 | What is it? |
36112 | What is it? |
36112 | What is it? |
36112 | What is it? |
36112 | What is it? |
36112 | What is that to you, sir? |
36112 | What is the tone? |
36112 | What is the trouble? |
36112 | What is this? 36112 What is your belief, Mr. Morgan, as to Gerald?" |
36112 | What is your name, boy? |
36112 | What trouble? |
36112 | What was he to you? 36112 What, then, is my duty?" |
36112 | What? |
36112 | When did he marry you, madame? |
36112 | When do you purpose returning? |
36112 | When shall we see you at The Hall again? |
36112 | When-- the last time? |
36112 | Where are you from, miss? |
36112 | Where did you knock her in the head? |
36112 | Where did you last see him? |
36112 | Where did you next see him? |
36112 | Where does your campaign open? 36112 Where is Carlo?" |
36112 | Where is he now? |
36112 | Where is he? |
36112 | Where is this child? 36112 Where were you when you first discovered the death of Rita Morgan?" |
36112 | Where? |
36112 | Who calls Gaspard Levigne? |
36112 | Who calls Marion? |
36112 | Who could be his enemy? |
36112 | Who dat ring dat bell dis time er day? |
36112 | Who is it speaks? 36112 Who ordered the cart, Isam?" |
36112 | Who will make it-- you? |
36112 | Who would bear the challenge? |
36112 | Who, me? 36112 Who, then?" |
36112 | Whom do you consider in this city the most powerful single man behind the movement to nominate Montjoy? |
36112 | Whose grave? |
36112 | Whose is it? |
36112 | Why are you-- here? 36112 Why did you fight a duel with the defendant, then-- knowing, or believing you knew, his base parentage?" |
36112 | Why did you leave us? 36112 Why do you ask?" |
36112 | Why do you ask? |
36112 | Why have n''t you been over to see us? |
36112 | Why not? 36112 Why, Caroline, you are imprudent, do n''t you know? |
36112 | Will he testify? |
36112 | Will he? 36112 Will you be kind enough to go before an attesting officer and complete the proofs? |
36112 | Will you leave me alone with him a few moments? |
36112 | Will you make the demand for me-- will you act for me? |
36112 | Will you name the informant? |
36112 | Will you not say it is false? |
36112 | Will you retire now, Master Gerald? |
36112 | Would you like to see? 36112 Would your father accept a loan from me?" |
36112 | You accused, Edward? 36112 You are Edward Morgan?" |
36112 | You are an artist, I suppose? |
36112 | You are the only heir aside from Gaspard? |
36112 | You astound me,said Edward, huskily;"is that an infallible sign?" |
36112 | You believe he has made a new discovery, then? |
36112 | You did not write? |
36112 | You did not write? |
36112 | You do not know that to be a fact? |
36112 | You do not swear, General Evan, that Mr. Morgan was not in the room at the time the woman Rita was seized with sudden illness? |
36112 | You got my letter, Mr. Morgan? 36112 You had information, then? |
36112 | You have been ill? |
36112 | You have known such men before, then? |
36112 | You have no remembrance, then? |
36112 | You have not heard, then? |
36112 | You have seen it before, then? |
36112 | You have the extra, I see, Mr. Morgan,said he;"may I ask what you will reply to it?" |
36112 | You have traveled much? |
36112 | You knew Mr. Morgan well, I presume? |
36112 | You knew him well? 36112 You know him?" |
36112 | You mean Rita is dead? |
36112 | You mean by that a picture never impressed upon the brain, but living within the past experience of the mind? |
36112 | You mean that I am indebted to Mr. Barksdale for that? |
36112 | You propose to capture him? |
36112 | You saw him? |
36112 | You say that Rita Morgan told you-- when? |
36112 | You say the time is come; what has been done? |
36112 | You speak for yourself? |
36112 | You told her, though? |
36112 | You were the author of the letter concerning the alleged parentage of Edward Morgan, which was published in an extra in this city a few weeks since? |
36112 | You wish to know what I think of it? 36112 You, I suppose, are Louis Levigne, who advertised recently for information of Gaspard Levigne?" |
36112 | Your other name? |
36112 | Your son, madame? 36112 A fear seized him; would she never speak again? 36112 A smile broke through his working features and shone in his tearful eyes:Edward, my boy, have you no word? |
36112 | After a long silence Edward lifted his head and said with deep emotion:"Then, in your opinion, I am your son?" |
36112 | After all was it wise to go forth, when the return to the solitude of a clouded life was inevitable? |
36112 | Ah, what have I said?" |
36112 | All are well, I trust?" |
36112 | And he? |
36112 | And how would it end? |
36112 | And if living, were her eyes to watch him, Edward Morgan, and his conduct? |
36112 | And now, how is the little mamma?" |
36112 | And now, madame, do you still believe in God?" |
36112 | And ought he not to banish himself? |
36112 | And should he keep on the disguise? |
36112 | And the woman, was she living or dead? |
36112 | And then, as Edward made no reply,"you found nothing whatever to explain the matter?" |
36112 | And then, as they were silent, he continued:"This woman Rita had a husband; how did they manage in old times? |
36112 | And to disprove it-- how? |
36112 | And what is all this to a woman''s eyesight?" |
36112 | And what was she doing abroad under such circumstances? |
36112 | And who else after that would take Montjoy''s place? |
36112 | And who was Gerald Morgan? |
36112 | And why go? |
36112 | And yet again, why not? |
36112 | And yet why not as well one fancy as another?" |
36112 | And yet why should that county have failed them? |
36112 | And yet, what would be the effect if he should burst out in that strange place with his fearful secret? |
36112 | And yet, why his marked interest? |
36112 | And yet,"assured"by whom? |
36112 | And, if I could be mistaken as to the resemblance, how could her father fall into my error? |
36112 | Answer me, my love, my only love-- let me say these words this once-- answer me; is this the course that an honorable man should pursue?" |
36112 | Are you ill? |
36112 | Are you on the Democratic or Republican ticket, colonel?" |
36112 | Are you still at work upon my interests? |
36112 | At last he asked:"Was Edward Mr. Morgan''s only intimate companion?" |
36112 | But I thought you had no idea of returning-- is it imperative?" |
36112 | But as he stood calmer, looking down into the night, a movement in the shrubbery attracted him back to earth; he called aloud:"Who is there?" |
36112 | But by whom? |
36112 | But could he accept the generous offer made by Morgan? |
36112 | But for what was he wanted? |
36112 | But he said:"What became of the other child?" |
36112 | But of what avail would the picture be without the explanation? |
36112 | But what am I saying? |
36112 | But what of that? |
36112 | But what was contained in that desk? |
36112 | But where was the great family carriage, with folding steps and noble bays, the driver in livery, the footman to hold the door? |
36112 | But where? |
36112 | But where? |
36112 | But you-- what can I say to comfort you?" |
36112 | But, madame, you know of Gaspard''s death; can you not give me the facts so that I may obtain proofs?" |
36112 | By the way, colonel, your friends will have many expenses in this campaign, will they not? |
36112 | By the way-- may I ask? |
36112 | Ca n''t you see? |
36112 | Can I be of assistance, gentlemen?" |
36112 | Can you turn from me, when if I have erred it is through the divine instinct that God has given me? |
36112 | Could any one prove the charge? |
36112 | Could he do this? |
36112 | Could he occupy that building with such a tenant? |
36112 | Did I tell you that?" |
36112 | Did he doubt? |
36112 | Did he not leave heirs?" |
36112 | Did she know, did she suspect? |
36112 | Did you ever hear that Albert Evan left a friend upon the field? |
36112 | Did you not know? |
36112 | Do n''t you know of him? |
36112 | Do they? |
36112 | Do you expect to make your home with us?" |
36112 | Do you hear me, miss? |
36112 | Do you know that you have come between two men and Mary Morgan?" |
36112 | Do you remember the fragmentary manuscript? |
36112 | Do you remember?" |
36112 | Do you understand?" |
36112 | Edward reciprocated the affection bestowed upon him; in Europe they traveled much--""Of what Mr. Morgan do you speak?" |
36112 | Edward trusted to my judgment in the other affair, and it came out right, did it not?" |
36112 | Edward waited a moment and then continued his questions:"Do you not think a sea voyage would be beneficial, doctor?" |
36112 | Edward went to him and said, abruptly:"When is it your steamer sails, Herr Virdow?" |
36112 | Edward, where was I when you discovered the body of the woman, Rita Morgan?" |
36112 | For what cared he that his name might shine forever in the annals of history if he could claim of his own mind the record of its wanderings? |
36112 | Forgotten? |
36112 | Go and come when you can; here are books-- what more does one need?" |
36112 | Greatly agitated, he exclaimed:"But what object could she have had in putting out such slander? |
36112 | Had he divined her secret and did Edward promise him that? |
36112 | Had he rested well? |
36112 | Had she watched my face, then, she would have known; but how could she suspect me, the blind, the scarred, the gray? |
36112 | Had the truth been stated at last? |
36112 | Have I indeed changed so much?" |
36112 | Have they replied to your note?" |
36112 | Have you any plan?" |
36112 | Have you considered how we would be involved if Mr. Morgan should be arrested?" |
36112 | He came and stood before her, and, looking her steadily in the face, said, abruptly:"Woman, what is the name of that young man, and what is mine?" |
36112 | He could neither act for nor advise, and in the absence of Col. Montjoy, who else could be found? |
36112 | He heard the general''s voice:"Are you hurt, Edward?" |
36112 | He laid his watch upon the little table; five, ten, fifteen, twenty, five-- would she never come? |
36112 | He left a large property, I presume?" |
36112 | He raised his brush and touched the spot; there was a crash, a shock, and-- what were they doing? |
36112 | He read the story in the pantomime, but what could he do? |
36112 | He seems to have been satisfied, and who would n''t?" |
36112 | He studied long the painted dashboard in front of him, and then, in a sort of awe, looked into her face:"What do you mean, Annie?" |
36112 | He was the man, the infamous, cowardly scoundrel who struck poor Rita in her coffin; but why-- why should any one want to strike Rita? |
36112 | How are you, Morgan? |
36112 | How come on your experiments?" |
36112 | How could anything be wrong with Rita? |
36112 | How could it be? |
36112 | How could there be?" |
36112 | How long would it be before pursuit began? |
36112 | How much did she know? |
36112 | How would Mary arrange that? |
36112 | How would it affect her? |
36112 | I had not been informed that he was ill.""Then you are the heir of John Morgan?" |
36112 | I presume you ascertained that the American wife was dead?" |
36112 | I suppose you have read to- day''s extra?" |
36112 | I thought the plan would succeed; did not his love for that instrument exceed all other passions? |
36112 | If it is true that every atom of our physical bodies undergoes a change at least once in seven years, how can the impressions survive? |
36112 | If she loved him what did it matter? |
36112 | If we can bring both parties out safely, is it not our duty to do so? |
36112 | In other words, if we wanted to buy the county and be certain of getting it, how much would it take?" |
36112 | In the meantime will you be guided by me?" |
36112 | In the name of God, how could you do it?" |
36112 | In what manner could this frightful hint be made effective without danger of reaction? |
36112 | In your opinion, is there the slightest grounds for his disagreeing with you?" |
36112 | Indeed, was it not the duty of Montjoy to stand aside for the sake of a younger man? |
36112 | Is he not noble and good? |
36112 | Is it for good or ill?" |
36112 | Is it indeed you? |
36112 | Is it not better to rest under your belief and take life quietly? |
36112 | Is that it?" |
36112 | Is there any one on earth who could be interested in your disgrace or death?" |
36112 | Is this not true?" |
36112 | Is you kinned to''i m?" |
36112 | It could do no harm under the circumstances, and might--""No harm?" |
36112 | It is possible?" |
36112 | It is true that the house was his for days, if he wished it, but how about the figure upon the bed? |
36112 | It may, indeed, be true that the mind can itself be shaped and biased anew by its detached experiences, but who can ever read its history backwards? |
36112 | It never occurred to me to ask; were you not in the room also?" |
36112 | It was a hurried note:"Dear Friend: What has happened? |
36112 | Its golden beams almost glorified the countenance of the man; or was it the light from a great soul shining through? |
36112 | John,"to the old waiter,"how are you, John?" |
36112 | Know you anything of him?" |
36112 | Lend me one; the American uses the revolver, I believe?" |
36112 | Madame, can you imagine the sorrow of the coming back? |
36112 | Man to man, is it not true?" |
36112 | May I ask if ever within your knowledge there was any romance or tragedy in his earlier life?" |
36112 | May I ask what is your theory of this strange situation-- as regards my ward?" |
36112 | Montjoy''s?" |
36112 | Montjoy?" |
36112 | Morgan?" |
36112 | Morgan?" |
36112 | Morgan?" |
36112 | Morgan?" |
36112 | Morgan?" |
36112 | Morgan?" |
36112 | Morgan?" |
36112 | Morgan?" |
36112 | Morgan?" |
36112 | Morgan?" |
36112 | Morgan?" |
36112 | Mr. Gerald Morgan?" |
36112 | My God, can you not understand? |
36112 | Oceans may roll between, Thine home and thee Love, if thou lovest me Lovest me, What care we, you and I? |
36112 | Of course you know Mary is going with her, and Morgan is to be their escort?" |
36112 | Of what use could this unexplained manuscript be to Gerald? |
36112 | One of those women?" |
36112 | Or could he afford to look the world in the face with disdain and hold himself above suspicion? |
36112 | Or how could Montjoy permit the duel to go on? |
36112 | Or was it a rat with a nut in the wall? |
36112 | Or was it revenge? |
36112 | Over his own senses he felt the languor stealing; how was it with the other? |
36112 | Presently he said abruptly:"When is it you leave for Europe?" |
36112 | Robley?" |
36112 | She smiled as she looked upon him from under the sleepy lids,"Why, then, are you not pleased?" |
36112 | She was attacked by a man and fell to the ground unconscious; you carried her off in your arms; her child was born soon after, and what then?" |
36112 | Should he go on to The Hall and throw himself upon the mercy of his connections? |
36112 | Should he tell her the history of Gerald and let her clear, honest mind guide him? |
36112 | Smiling up at the court he said:"Will Your Honor not make it a thousand? |
36112 | Solicitor, what do you say for the State?" |
36112 | Something in her pale face caused him to ask:"Have you read it, daughter?" |
36112 | Something like an oppression seized upon him and he was wondering if this should continue, would it be possible for him to endure the situation long? |
36112 | Suppose he should bring suit for libel, what could he offer? |
36112 | Suppose in a speech I should make the charge-- what would be the result?" |
36112 | Surrender? |
36112 | Tell me in His name, am I your child? |
36112 | Tell me the truth?" |
36112 | Tell me, do you float upon the lake or in the cloudy regions of heaven?" |
36112 | The look, the touch, the tender voice-- which was it? |
36112 | The matter was ended; but how? |
36112 | The only question to be discussed is, shall we make use of the fact-- and how?" |
36112 | The painful silence that followed was broken by his question:"Gerald''s real name?" |
36112 | The question with me now is, can any living substance retain a photographic impression? |
36112 | Then I began to cry out for her in the night-- in my loneliness-- do you know what that word means?" |
36112 | Then some day a family finds in its folds a child with a dark streak down its spine-- have you dropped your pipe? |
36112 | Then,"What can I do for you?" |
36112 | There was a long silence, and presently Edward said:"Will you say good- night now?" |
36112 | They must share the odium of his disgrace, and for him now what course was left? |
36112 | This is why you have advertised?" |
36112 | This will come by vibratory force, but how?" |
36112 | This would do for the world at large, but among intimates would it suffice? |
36112 | To whom had he talked? |
36112 | Trembling with emotion, Edward whispered:"Her name?" |
36112 | WOULD YOU MURDER HER?" |
36112 | WOULD YOU MURDER HER?" |
36112 | Was he free also? |
36112 | Was he less noble than the man himself-- than the frail being locked in the deathlike slumber? |
36112 | Was he not already weakened? |
36112 | Was he seeking to destroy his nerves, to overpower him with superior will? |
36112 | Was it all a dream? |
36112 | Was it brain? |
36112 | Was it his duty to furnish proof to his title to the name of gentleman? |
36112 | Was it not true that a large force in his nomination had been the belief that Swearingen''s right- hand man would probably be silenced thereby? |
36112 | Was it the conversation with Eldridge and the sudden dissipation of his error concerning Gerald, or did it date to the meeting in the club? |
36112 | Was it the loneliness of the man speaking to the loneliness of the silent woman, whose bandaged forehead rested upon one blue- veined hand? |
36112 | Was not the hotel warm, and-- was there anything of interest stirring in the city? |
36112 | Was she trying in vain to hold it? |
36112 | Was the breakfast hour too early? |
36112 | Was the great- hearted yet stern Cambia ill or distressed? |
36112 | Was the room upstairs not comfortable? |
36112 | Well, what would you think if I should tell you he is simply mistaken?" |
36112 | Well,"he continued aloud,"what next?" |
36112 | What I tole you?" |
36112 | What cause then had drawn him into that long- deserted room? |
36112 | What could have happened? |
36112 | What could she answer to such a revelation, such a declaration? |
36112 | What could they do? |
36112 | What did it mean? |
36112 | What did these mean? |
36112 | What do you know of Gaspard Levigne?" |
36112 | What do you suppose the country will say when these facts are handled on the stump? |
36112 | What do you think, Evan? |
36112 | What do you think?" |
36112 | What does become of him? |
36112 | What does he say, Aunt Sylla?" |
36112 | What enemy could the woman have had? |
36112 | What has become of this young person?" |
36112 | What has made you cynical?" |
36112 | What have they to do with the mind memory? |
36112 | What have you additional?" |
36112 | What idea, what fact, what overwhelming blow were killing him? |
36112 | What if this man should fail? |
36112 | What is it, Nancy?" |
36112 | What is it, my dear? |
36112 | What is the difference?" |
36112 | What is your pleasure as to the arrangements? |
36112 | What line of business are you in?" |
36112 | What next? |
36112 | What real position did this woman occupy in that strange family? |
36112 | What right had he, an alien, to be dumb when a word might bring hope and interest back to that saddened life? |
36112 | What right has such a man to live? |
36112 | What was Cambia-- John Morgan to him? |
36112 | What was his own duty? |
36112 | What was it? |
36112 | What was she to him?" |
36112 | What was to be done? |
36112 | What was to become of him? |
36112 | What were these? |
36112 | What would be the result of his unexpected discovery of the tragedy? |
36112 | Where are the keys?" |
36112 | Where are your English dogs?" |
36112 | Where can we speak privately?" |
36112 | Where do you want to get out? |
36112 | Where does the support for all come from?" |
36112 | Where had he seen that face? |
36112 | Where have you got him?" |
36112 | Where is the thread of connection? |
36112 | Where was Gerald''s room? |
36112 | Where was he to obtain such proof? |
36112 | Where was the father and why was the grandfather ignorant or silent? |
36112 | Where were father and friends? |
36112 | Where?" |
36112 | Which is the son of Marion Evans?" |
36112 | Who are you?" |
36112 | Who could extricate her? |
36112 | Who could have disturbed them? |
36112 | Who could have murdered poor Rita? |
36112 | Who gave you the information?" |
36112 | Who had spied upon his actions and kept watch over him to such an extent as would justify the sweeping confidences? |
36112 | Who is Edward Morgan-- where did he come from?" |
36112 | Who is Edward Morgan?" |
36112 | Who knows? |
36112 | Who says there can be a''too late''for the immortal mind? |
36112 | Who sent that clipping to John Morgan? |
36112 | Who was caring for him? |
36112 | Who was the note for?" |
36112 | Who was the undertaker? |
36112 | Who would be sought to make a demand upon me for the name of my informant?" |
36112 | Why are you so late?" |
36112 | Why are you so late?" |
36112 | Why can not Royson retract, when he has my assurance that he is in error?" |
36112 | Why had the young man drawn her profile? |
36112 | Why have you been silent all these years?" |
36112 | Why in the name of common sense has n''t he come to me and given me something to go upon?" |
36112 | Why may not I, why may not you and I take the little mamma to Paris and let the best skill in the world be invoked to save her from sorrow?" |
36112 | Why might not an inquest develop evidences of a crime? |
36112 | Why need there be any suspicion, any doubt? |
36112 | Why this clandestine interview and to what did it tend? |
36112 | Why this suspicious absence of relationship terms?--and they, both of them, Morgans and heirs to his wealth? |
36112 | Why was Annie''s bonnet and clothing in the buggy? |
36112 | Why was I not informed?" |
36112 | Why, he asked himself, did the man stare at him with that fixed, changeless expression? |
36112 | Why, then, was this one not forwarded? |
36112 | Why? |
36112 | Will you help me?" |
36112 | Will you kindly summon him, general?" |
36112 | Would he fail? |
36112 | Would he hesitate? |
36112 | Would her nerve forsake her? |
36112 | Would it have power again? |
36112 | Would it offend him?" |
36112 | Would it waken her if he spoke that name again? |
36112 | Would she lose her head? |
36112 | Would the man behind him never finish what he himself had devoured in three minutes? |
36112 | Would you believe it, the habit was as strong in the end as the beginning? |
36112 | You admit the reasonableness of this, do you not?" |
36112 | You at last?" |
36112 | You have answered the advertisement-- do I insult you by speaking of reward?" |
36112 | You have not seen Moreau yet?" |
36112 | You knew him then before he was grown?" |
36112 | You naturally supposed I knew it, did you not?" |
36112 | You understand? |
36112 | Your uncle never wrote you about Gerald Morgan-- the lawyers have never told you?" |
36112 | exclaimed Gerald;"do n''t you understand? |
36112 | exclaimed the general,"where now?" |
36112 | exclaimed the old man, passionately,"who will act for him?" |
36112 | he said, smiling, ignoring the query, but the intent look of Gerald caused him to add:"I slept late; how did you rest?" |
36112 | said Edward, white with his passion;"who was the infamous villain that paid you for the deed?" |
36246 | A Kentucky party, did you say, sir? |
36246 | A bit of local color? 36246 A flag of truce? |
36246 | A mine-- gold? |
36246 | A part of what? |
36246 | A specimen, then? |
36246 | A squaw man!--well, what if he is? |
36246 | A youth? 36246 Am I still under arrest?" |
36246 | Am I, now? |
36246 | Am I? 36246 An''did ye not know, then, that she was not o''Kootenai stock?" |
36246 | An''it''s to Owens ye be taken''the trail? |
36246 | An''swallowed it as gospel? |
36246 | An''you,he finally remarked, after listening in wonderful silence for him--"an''you''ve read it all, then?" |
36246 | And I do n''t wonder, Alec, do you? |
36246 | And a knife? |
36246 | And a man needs no fine attributes or high morality to wield that sort of influence, does he? |
36246 | And do you realize what that man did when he took that trail north? |
36246 | And has he at last given it up as hopeless? |
36246 | And he has gone to Fort Owens? |
36246 | And is he from the cities? |
36246 | And is that all you know about me? |
36246 | And is that what cut your hands? |
36246 | And know no other white people in this region? |
36246 | And no other Indians? |
36246 | And only a horse and a gun to keep you here? |
36246 | And so you got back unharmed from the midst of the hostiles? |
36246 | And that is the man suspected of stealing a few horses? 36246 And that is what you came for?" |
36246 | And the fire? |
36246 | And then what, Genesee? |
36246 | And then? |
36246 | And they have n''t showed up? |
36246 | And we have got lost? |
36246 | And we have n''t found the lost sheep? |
36246 | And when am I to tell the folks you will come back? |
36246 | And where is your Indian messenger of late? |
36246 | And why so? |
36246 | And you acknowledge, then, that you do n''t consider the cause of the whites as your own cause? |
36246 | And you do n''t reckon you can trust me to tell me why? |
36246 | And you have known no one in this country by the name of Stuart? |
36246 | And you like it? |
36246 | And you thought it was because of a marriage ceremony, not for the lack of one? |
36246 | And you were watching to see if I would vanish into thin air like a Macbeth witch, were you? |
36246 | And you wo n''t come? |
36246 | And your friend is at Owens? |
36246 | Are there any men among you that will get it out for me? |
36246 | Are ye, now? |
36246 | Are you afraid of softening of the brain? |
36246 | Are you cold? |
36246 | Are you fixed all right here in case of being snowed in? |
36246 | Are you going to look on yourself as a martyr after the rest have left you here in solitary confinement with me as a jailer? |
36246 | Are you jealous of Squaw- man- with- a- voice? |
36246 | Are you not coming with us? |
36246 | Are you trying to outrun the sun? 36246 Are you willing to follow me?" |
36246 | Are you-- can you get someone to go for me-- from the camp? |
36246 | Awake? |
36246 | Bought her? |
36246 | But I mean was there no one else here? |
36246 | But Talapa has na gone from the hills? |
36246 | But have n''t you a regular mail- carrier for this part of the country? |
36246 | But if it is to save my own life? |
36246 | But someone of their tribe does come to the Centre for mail,continued Stuart in half argument--"an Indian youth; have you never seen him?" |
36246 | But there are two men,said Fred, finding her voice again, with a sense of relief;"which one do you mean?" |
36246 | But what of Davy? |
36246 | By the way, Miss Rachel, do you know if there is room in the ranch stables for another horse? |
36246 | Can I not? 36246 Can we go straight across?" |
36246 | Can ye hit the trail down at the forks without me along? |
36246 | Can you? |
36246 | Coming back? |
36246 | Could you start at once with us, in the morning? |
36246 | Davy MacDougall? |
36246 | Did Captain Holt go? |
36246 | Did I? |
36246 | Did he? |
36246 | Did n''t you find any? |
36246 | Did she go out there at night, and alone, after we were all in bed? |
36246 | Did that Indian go with her? |
36246 | Did the mare throw you? |
36246 | Did ye now? 36246 Did you meet with Indians?" |
36246 | Did you say the night the horses were stolen? |
36246 | Did you? |
36246 | Do I look it? |
36246 | Do n''t you ever expect to go back home? |
36246 | Do n''t you know I''m likely to catch my death of cold tramping here after you? |
36246 | Do n''t you like him? |
36246 | Do n''t you think,said Tillie softly to Stuart,"that Rachel would win more glory as a missionary to the Indians than among her own race? |
36246 | Do you call that a bed? |
36246 | Do you come in for your share of commiseration? |
36246 | Do you expect to live your life out here, like this? |
36246 | Do you know the country northwest of here? |
36246 | Do you know them very well? |
36246 | Do you know where it is-- Hardy''s? 36246 Do you know where we are, my girl?" |
36246 | Do you live here in the Chinook country? 36246 Do you mean the Indian boy who brought me that black bear''s skin? |
36246 | Do you mean, is it true? |
36246 | Do you not agree with my idea of marriages between whites and Indians? |
36246 | Do you reckon there is any woman in the house who would speak to me if she could get out of it-- anyone except you? |
36246 | Do you want a share of our supper? |
36246 | Do you want to walk to the ranch? |
36246 | Do you, Rachel? |
36246 | Does he swear? |
36246 | Does he? 36246 Does it belong to you?" |
36246 | Does that state of existence impress itself so indelibly on one''s physical self? |
36246 | Doing a bit o''prospectin'', then? |
36246 | Engaged, is he? |
36246 | Find any? 36246 For what purpose?" |
36246 | Fred, my dear, you have met Mr. Genesee, our scout? 36246 From the Kootenais? |
36246 | Genesee gone? |
36246 | Genesee, why do n''t you let the other folks at the ranch, or the camp, know you as I do? |
36246 | Getting supper? |
36246 | Go where you please, only you''d better keep clear of the old gang, for I wo n''t buy you from them again-- kumtuks? |
36246 | Gold hunting? |
36246 | Gone!--where? |
36246 | Had n''t you better shove in a couple more? |
36246 | Had n''t you better wait for company, Miss? |
36246 | Has Mowitza ever before had to carry double? |
36246 | Has n''t she? 36246 Have I not, then?" |
36246 | Have you come back to the Kootenai country for good? |
36246 | Have you dared--"No, I have not told her, if that is what you mean; why-- why should I? |
36246 | Have you ever been scared so badly you could n''t yell, Aunty? |
36246 | He has not visited you since my arrival, has he? |
36246 | He is-- sorry,whispered Genesee,"and talks wild-- but-- you know now?" |
36246 | Hostile? |
36246 | How about that saddle, now, Jim? |
36246 | How are you? |
36246 | How do you know he is a tenderfoot? |
36246 | How do you know or imagine so much of what I feel? |
36246 | How long have you been here? |
36246 | How long have you been out here, Miss Rachel? |
36246 | How long since you left Fort Owens? |
36246 | How much? |
36246 | How old are you? |
36246 | How so? |
36246 | How''s that for second sight? |
36246 | How''s that, Aunty? |
36246 | How''s that? |
36246 | I am that-- for four weeks, if need be; but does it look like that out? |
36246 | I came out to help you with the things,she remarked from her post in the door- way;"where are they?" |
36246 | I do not mean to be rude, but do you mind telling me if work is a necessity to you? |
36246 | I had never realized before that she had grown up or that she was prettier than anyone I knew, until you warned me about it-- you remember? |
36246 | I have n''t been here since yesterday, and am afraid you did n''t find much-- any fresh meat? |
36246 | I imagined they were traveling on foot, did n''t you? |
36246 | I reckon you know I''m an Indian? |
36246 | I''ve been told something of the man''s character,said Rachel,"but have forgotten his name-- Bald Eagle?" |
36246 | I? 36246 I? |
36246 | If I want to turn guide and drop digging in that hill back there, why should n''t I? 36246 Ill- feeling?" |
36246 | In God''s name, Genesee, is this true? |
36246 | In here? |
36246 | In what tunnel was he injured? |
36246 | Indeed,remarked Stuart, with attention impressively flattering;"may I ask how it was effected?" |
36246 | Is Mowitza here? |
36246 | Is he not? |
36246 | Is he that? |
36246 | Is it entirely Chinook they are talking? 36246 Is it those of inferior tribes that are bartered, or prisoners taken in battle?" |
36246 | Is it you, Genesee? |
36246 | Is it? 36246 Is it?" |
36246 | Is n''t he? 36246 Is that all?" |
36246 | It sounds Russian-- is it? |
36246 | Jack Genesee, do you intend ever to come to see us-- I mean to walk in like your old self, instead of looking through the window at night? |
36246 | Jack, you will do what I ask? |
36246 | Jack,and her other hand was reached impulsively to his,"what''s the matter-- what makes you speak like that now?" |
36246 | Jack? |
36246 | Kalitan wait? |
36246 | Killed him? |
36246 | Klahowya, Rashell Hardy? |
36246 | Look here,and the young fellow straightened up with the conviction that he had struck the question,"is it because of my-- marriage?" |
36246 | Major come yet? |
36246 | May I ask what that is for? |
36246 | Me? 36246 Meaning that I did?" |
36246 | Money? |
36246 | More kind? 36246 No later news of that scout, Genesee?" |
36246 | No-- why? |
36246 | No? 36246 No? |
36246 | Not much farther to go,she remarked;"wo n''t they be surprised to find you carrying me into camp like this? |
36246 | Nothing? |
36246 | Now I want his rifle, his knife, a snake- skin belt, and a necklace of bear''s teeth-- who''s got them? |
36246 | Now that you have found me, are you going to leave me here all night? |
36246 | Oh, cam''ye here the fight to shun, Or herd the sheep wi''me, man? |
36246 | Oh, he has? |
36246 | Oh, he told you, did he? |
36246 | Oh, it is Kalitan, is it? 36246 Oh, you come to me now, do you?" |
36246 | Oh, you do? |
36246 | Oh, you want too much,she answered briskly;"I am content to sit up all night, if I only can find a dry place to stay in-- do you hear that?" |
36246 | Perhaps I felt so; is that weakness an added cause for trying to bar me out from the Kootenai hills? |
36246 | Rashell Hardy? |
36246 | Rashell Hardy? |
36246 | Rashell Hardy? |
36246 | Rather late to be out alone, Miss, ai n''t it? |
36246 | Say, Miss Rache, yer given''me a straight tip on this lay- out? |
36246 | Say, Miss Rachel,broke in Jim,"was Kalitan a Kootenai Injun?" |
36246 | Say, did you get any letters for me? |
36246 | Say,he added uneasily,"have you any money?" |
36246 | Shall I go there at once, or pour your coffee first? |
36246 | She does n''t approve of our savage mode of life, does she? |
36246 | Slaves? |
36246 | So am I,acknowledged her confederate;"you an''me is most alike about our eatin'', ai n''t we? |
36246 | So you are going? |
36246 | So you come this time to lay out proposals to me, eh? 36246 So you''re one of the party I''m to look after on this cultus corrie?" |
36246 | Tell Jack Genesee,she said, turning to him in complete negligence of arguments just used,"that Rachel Hardy sends to him greetings-- you understand? |
36246 | That in Chinook means the deer, does it not-- or the elk; which is it? 36246 That is the Indian you spoke of this morning, is it not?" |
36246 | That so? |
36246 | That''s so,said Genesee, with brief sympathy;"big gang?" |
36246 | The Arrow fly down; come back how soon? |
36246 | The Arrow? 36246 The Kootenais? |
36246 | The guard will not leave the door? |
36246 | The lass-- Rachel? 36246 The last from Grey Eagle or yourself?" |
36246 | The same thing that took you from camp at three yesterday and kept you out all night? |
36246 | Then why do they do it, if they are ashamed of it? |
36246 | Then why do you always seem to be skirmishing around for work? |
36246 | Then you refuse to tell me where you spent the night? |
36246 | Then, lass, ye''ll ne''er tak''leave o''the Kootenai hills? |
36246 | Then, since you can tell this much in his favor, can you tell why he himself refused to answer so simple a question? |
36246 | Therefore,reasoned this feminine watcher,"it is seldom that we see him as he really is; query-- why?" |
36246 | This morning? 36246 Though he is younger than yourself?" |
36246 | To know you''re right? |
36246 | To me? 36246 Up into this country?" |
36246 | Was n''t she? |
36246 | Was this Genesee of another tribe? |
36246 | Well, are you going to escort me home, or must I go alone? |
36246 | Well, did you find any white men among the Kootenais? |
36246 | Well, is it time to be moving? |
36246 | Well, there is n''t anything more to say, is there? |
36246 | Well, what then? 36246 Well, who knows but that I may develop into a worker; is industry contagious here?" |
36246 | Well, why not? |
36246 | Well,he said sharply;"what have you brought me?" |
36246 | Well--and Rachel glanced over at her, noting that she looked both amused and hesitating--"well, what is it?" |
36246 | Well? |
36246 | Well? |
36246 | Were they friendly? |
36246 | Were you so much alarmed? |
36246 | What are you going to do here, Davy MacDougall? |
36246 | What brought you out to the stable? |
36246 | What day do they look for your father back? |
36246 | What did they do to you? |
36246 | What did you find to cook? |
36246 | What did you have it made for? |
36246 | What difference does it make whether the man''s wife has been red, or white, or black, so long as she suited him? 36246 What difference whether an act is deliberate or careless, so long as the effect is evil? |
36246 | What do ye mean by that, lass? |
36246 | What do you call a torch in Chinook? |
36246 | What do you call it? |
36246 | What do you know about it? |
36246 | What do you mean? 36246 What else could you do?" |
36246 | What have you been doing with the man? |
36246 | What is it? 36246 What is it?" |
36246 | What is it? |
36246 | What is the matter back there? |
36246 | What is the matter with the man? |
36246 | What is the white thing moving along that line of timber? |
36246 | What made you ask that? |
36246 | What matter about the hour, Miss Rachel? |
36246 | What of Nard Stevens? |
36246 | What possessed you to go to- day, Rachel? |
36246 | What territory is that? |
36246 | What was that you said? |
36246 | What would you suggest as an improvement on their simplicity? |
36246 | What''s the matter with everyone this morning? |
36246 | What''s the matter with that? |
36246 | What''s this? |
36246 | What''s up? 36246 What''s up?" |
36246 | What, then? |
36246 | What? 36246 What?" |
36246 | What? |
36246 | When did she leave? |
36246 | When may we look for you back? |
36246 | When you brought him his horse? |
36246 | Where has Mr. Hardy gone? |
36246 | Where would you have slept? |
36246 | Where''s his blanket? |
36246 | Where''s your gallantry, MacDougall? |
36246 | Where, Kalitan? |
36246 | Where? |
36246 | Where? |
36246 | Whereabouts? |
36246 | Which trail did she take? |
36246 | Who do you want? |
36246 | Who is it? |
36246 | Who told you this? |
36246 | Who''d be paying the post? |
36246 | Why did n''t you come home? |
36246 | Why did n''t you stay at home, as I told you to? |
36246 | Why myself more than another? |
36246 | Why not now? |
36246 | Why should he be? 36246 Why, how far is it?" |
36246 | Why, it is n''t cold-- are you? 36246 Why, look here, old fellow, what''s up?" |
36246 | Why, papa,broke in his commanding officer,"you are not going to turn scout or runner, are you, and leave me behind? |
36246 | Why, this same Arrow is called Kalitan,broke in Jim;"an''what''d you make out of that? |
36246 | Why-- why did she not write to me? |
36246 | Will I do, Jack? |
36246 | Will it be of use? |
36246 | Will that matter much to the company or the command? |
36246 | With you? |
36246 | Wo n''t sending him up among the Indians do just as well? |
36246 | Worse? 36246 Worse? |
36246 | Would you eat nothing because it was mine? |
36246 | Ye dinna like him, then? |
36246 | Ye have, have yeh? |
36246 | Yes, a big jar full,reported the steward;"an''here is a little crock half full of eggs-- prairie- chicken, I guess-- say, can you make a pone?" |
36246 | Yes, but when Rache and I have gone back to civilization? |
36246 | Yes, ca n''t you see? |
36246 | Yes, it was in the night,answered the Captain,"about two o''clock; but you surely knew about it?" |
36246 | Yes? 36246 Yes?" |
36246 | Yes? |
36246 | Yes? |
36246 | Yet he is a horse- thief,she said, in that tone of depreciation that expresses praise,"and he sent me his glove? |
36246 | You are Annie''s boy? |
36246 | You are doing this for me,he said, drawing her to him,"without knowing whether I deserve shooting or not?" |
36246 | You are such old friends, then? |
36246 | You did? |
36246 | You have a great deal of impatience with anyone who is not a worker, have n''t you? |
36246 | You have a hard time of it with me, have n''t you, dear? 36246 You have read and measured it, have n''t you?" |
36246 | You have seen Kalitan? |
36246 | You know nothing of the country in that direction? |
36246 | You mean that you two have been getting supper alone? |
36246 | You think I''m a bit loony, do n''t you, Davy MacDougall? 36246 You took his wife from him?" |
36246 | You two are old neighbors, are you not? |
36246 | You''re just about the same place where you watched the sun come up once-- may be you remember? |
36246 | Young Indian? |
36246 | Young or old? |
36246 | Your cause? |
36246 | A blessin'', say you, Miss? |
36246 | A half- breed?" |
36246 | A touch of remorse even led her to lay a couple of fingers on the sleeve of his coat, to remind him of her presence as she repeated:"And then?" |
36246 | Again and again Genesee''s eyes seemed to say,"Can it be you?" |
36246 | An''so they''re flittin''to the Reservation to live off the Government? |
36246 | An''ye come from Holland''s without a guide? |
36246 | And how many do they marry?" |
36246 | And how shy you were, and how secret-- was it not delightful? |
36246 | And is that a brother-- the lad there? |
36246 | And may I ask who he is, this white man with the Indian name-- what is he?" |
36246 | And now may be you''ll just tell me whose horse I stole?" |
36246 | And pray what it is that-- a chief rich in lineage and blooded stock? |
36246 | And she-- she allows them to call her so?" |
36246 | And the prisoner? |
36246 | And then, after he had gone from her, could it be so? |
36246 | And think, after all these years, that I''m to be talked over to what you want by a few soft words? |
36246 | And this girl-- it is someone you-- love?" |
36246 | And was the half- breed girl one of the few timid ones? |
36246 | And we owe it to him that we see you here alive again? |
36246 | And what did you do?" |
36246 | Are you afraid of fighting?" |
36246 | Are you going to, papa?" |
36246 | Are you going with us on foot?" |
36246 | Are you going?" |
36246 | Are you not getting a little mixed, Professor?" |
36246 | But do you understand that it is as hard sometimes to be thought too highly of as to be accused wrong- fully? |
36246 | But does n''t it seem strange to think of Mr. Stuart being married? |
36246 | But it''s comin''down solid,"he gasped;"where are you?" |
36246 | But the cause of it? |
36246 | But was he quite uncouth? |
36246 | But what''s the argument?" |
36246 | But where? |
36246 | By the way, Clara, who prompted you to this lecture-- Hen?" |
36246 | By the way, I suppose you do n''t care to add Professor of Languages to your other titles, do you, Mr. Jack Genesee?" |
36246 | By the way, I wonder if it is Mrs. Stuart? |
36246 | Ca n''t you see out?" |
36246 | Can I? |
36246 | Can I?" |
36246 | Can you give me a bottle of brandy and some biscuits?" |
36246 | Can you make a dash for it and get away?" |
36246 | Can you mind that? |
36246 | Come, are you ready?" |
36246 | Could he sing? |
36246 | Could you give me space to live in for a while, without my being a nuisance to the establishment?" |
36246 | Davy MacDougall, did you bring me nothing at all as a relic of your trip? |
36246 | Death brings back the curves of youth to aged faces sometimes-- is it the only change that does so? |
36246 | Did he stop to ask if I was entirely a proper sort of person before he started to hunt for me that time in the Kootenai hills?" |
36246 | Did he tell you and Jim that she was his wife?" |
36246 | Did he, for an instant, mistake it for another hand that had slipped into his that one night? |
36246 | Did you catch me?" |
36246 | Did you ever hear folks about here speak of old Davy MacDougall?" |
36246 | Did you meet them?" |
36246 | Did you say you had some biscuits? |
36246 | Did you see the bear?" |
36246 | Do you folks go to bed with the sun? |
36246 | Do you hear? |
36246 | Do you know he is very rich?" |
36246 | Do you know there''s a big lot of meaning in those words, Miss, especially to a man who has n''t known what home meant for years? |
36246 | Do you know what it is to absorb the elastic breath of the mountains at the awakening of day? |
36246 | Do you mean that you think of-- of me like that-- tell me?" |
36246 | Do you see?" |
36246 | Do you suppose I have no natural curiosity as to how we are to get there, and when? |
36246 | Do you think you would care for a closer acquaintance?" |
36246 | Does living in the woods make people feel like monarchs of all they survey? |
36246 | Does that seem strange? |
36246 | Does your neighbor ever have any better manners, Rachel?" |
36246 | For heaven''s sake, what have you been doing?" |
36246 | Genesee?" |
36246 | Genesee?" |
36246 | Genesee?" |
36246 | Genesee?" |
36246 | Going?" |
36246 | Gramachree, Mavourneen; oh, wo n''t you marry me?" |
36246 | Had her instincts then told her truly when she had connected his presence with the memory of that older man''s sombre eyes and dogged exile? |
36246 | Had the other died, or was it only asleep? |
36246 | Had there ever been any of their music published? |
36246 | Had they any? |
36246 | Had they possessed any to begin with? |
36246 | Hardy promised; and Kalitan presented himself, with the usual interrogation:"Rashell Hardy?" |
36246 | Has she been here?" |
36246 | Have you any matches?" |
36246 | Have you any report to make?" |
36246 | Have you heard this? |
36246 | He did not answer at once, and Captain Holt spoke again:"What is the object of digging up that Indian?" |
36246 | He did not answer at once-- was he trying to remember that also? |
36246 | He took to hanging around Scot''s Mountain more than of old, with the query,"Maybe Genesee send lettah-- s''pose? |
36246 | He was talking soberly, if rather brusquely; but-- that strange look in his face at first? |
36246 | He would do all right for the poet- prince-- or was it a king? |
36246 | Help me up, will you? |
36246 | How about your chief of scouts-- is he asleep, too?" |
36246 | How am I as a guesser?" |
36246 | How dare you?" |
36246 | How dared you-- how dared you do it?" |
36246 | How did it happen?" |
36246 | How do you expect to live always in this out- of- the- way place?" |
36246 | How does it pan out in the balance with half- breeds?" |
36246 | How often is it brought to the ranch?" |
36246 | How would they listen to this story? |
36246 | How''s that as a trade for six months''work? |
36246 | Hunting good?" |
36246 | I felt so ashamed I cried, and yet I knew I was right all the time-- now what are you laughing at?" |
36246 | I guess everyone seems a different person with different people; but you wanted to tell me something of yourself, did n''t you?" |
36246 | I know it''s rather late, but if he is awake, it does n''t matter, I suppose; or is no one allowed to see him?" |
36246 | I only ask one thing-- you will not, unless it is the last means of saving your own life, turn one of these against my friends?" |
36246 | I wo n''t stand in your way much longer; wait till I come back--""You are coming back? |
36246 | I wonder if these Chinook winds have a tendency to softening of the brain-- have they, Hen? |
36246 | I would n''t take a man from the place, so--""What about a woman?" |
36246 | I-- I-- suppose so; but how are you to get there?" |
36246 | If they had so many kind words now, why had they not found some for him when he needed them? |
36246 | If you see him, will you send him to the house?" |
36246 | Is Jim the usual mail- carrier?" |
36246 | Is breakfast all ready? |
36246 | Is it any wonder I rebel?" |
36246 | Is it hard to learn?" |
36246 | Is n''t it beautiful?" |
36246 | Is she not a picture? |
36246 | Is that it?" |
36246 | Is that message much to remember?" |
36246 | Is that the effect we are supposed to have on the character of our lords and masters?" |
36246 | Is the manuscript on the table in your room? |
36246 | Is there any?" |
36246 | Is your name Jack Genesee?" |
36246 | It''ll be the''divarsion''you were suggesting a little while back; and if Mr. Hardy wants a guide, give me a recommend, ca n''t you?" |
36246 | Jack?" |
36246 | Jim looked at him with surprised eyes, and managed to stammer,"How are you?" |
36246 | Jim, how far do you suppose we are from home?" |
36246 | Just keep quiet and let me get to bed, will you?" |
36246 | Kalitan, will ye be building up that fire a bit? |
36246 | Klat- awah si- ah-- do you understand?" |
36246 | Laugh though the world may at the vibrations of poet hearts echoing the songs of the youngest of seasons, how can they help it? |
36246 | Live in the cabin if you want; only get out in the spring-- do you hear? |
36246 | May I expect to be presented to his interesting family to- morrow, Rachel?" |
36246 | Might it not have been only that? |
36246 | Mr. Jack,"she said easily;"got wet, did n''t you? |
36246 | No? |
36246 | None of the men sighted them?" |
36246 | Now, can you do that?" |
36246 | Now, have you any pressing reason for loafing down here any longer? |
36246 | Now, hearken to that-- will you?" |
36246 | Now, what are you going to do about it?" |
36246 | Now, why do n''t you say,''Just as you like, Miss?'' |
36246 | Of what use were words, if he should never come back-- never know that he was cleared of suspicion? |
36246 | Only by Rachel saying,"He is my friend; will you not listen?" |
36246 | Past chuck?" |
36246 | Rachel answered him then brusquely:"You saw a white man with the Kootenais, did you not-- one who lives as they do, with a squaw wife, or slave? |
36246 | Say, Tillie, did we look altogether ridiculous?" |
36246 | Say, suppose you hustle Aunty up about that supper, wo n''t you? |
36246 | Say, was it that Injun cook o''his you was afeared to eat after?" |
36246 | She felt the hand on her shoulder trembling; was it with her weight-- and he so strong? |
36246 | She said it so deliberately that he could not but feel some special thing was meant, and asked quickly:"What?" |
36246 | She scarcely knew what to say, and yet could give no sensible reason for such embarrassment; and then--"The lad-- what lad?" |
36246 | She wondered if it was Genesee the girl was hiding from, and if so, why? |
36246 | Sit you down close that I can see ye-- a sight good for sore een; an''I have no heard o''ye? |
36246 | Sleep well?" |
36246 | So you have a bit of natural, womanly weakness?" |
36246 | Sometimes he would say:"S''pose you hear where Genesee is-- may be?" |
36246 | Stickin''to that old trail was a pay streak-- hey?" |
36246 | Stuart?" |
36246 | That torch ready?" |
36246 | That''s enough said, is n''t it? |
36246 | The action recalled him to the immediate practical things, and he said:"Think I can stay all night here?" |
36246 | The clouds were comin''up heavy, she said, and she must get home before the snow fell; an''it snows now?" |
36246 | The hope? |
36246 | The silence was so long that Stuart himself was the first to lift his eyes to those opposite, and tried to say carelessly:"Well?" |
36246 | The slow, half- bitter words impelled her to continue:"Then you-- you heard the-- the conversation over there?" |
36246 | The story? |
36246 | The voice had an insinuating tone, as if it would express"will you stop it?" |
36246 | The whites here blame you for helping the trouble-- the beginning it, the--""You mean the horse stealing?" |
36246 | Then Kalitan wo n''t be over?" |
36246 | Then she fell to wondering about that half- breed girl who had hid back of the ponies; was it Genesee she was afraid of, and if so, why? |
36246 | There is only one more hill to cross until we reach camp-- is there not?" |
36246 | They knew, or believed, that here was the one man who had the power to save them, if he cared to use it; but would he? |
36246 | This is-- my-- my--"Did he say wife? |
36246 | To feel the cool crispness of the heights, tempered by the soft"Chinook"winds? |
36246 | To stand far above the levels and watch the faint amethystine peaks catch one by one their cap of gold flung to them from an invisible sun? |
36246 | WHAT IS A SQUAW MAN? |
36246 | Want him?" |
36246 | Was he asleep, or only resting? |
36246 | Was he asleep? |
36246 | Was he then to come back and again drop his life into its old lines? |
36246 | Was he thinking as she was of that ride and its revelations? |
36246 | Was he watching them, too? |
36246 | Was it an omen of good? |
36246 | Was it for that he was still singing? |
36246 | Was it really an understanding of him? |
36246 | Was it so in this case? |
36246 | Was she trying to fathom his meditations, or determine how far they were to affect her own future? |
36246 | Was their guide one of those heroes of the border whose face is a thing of terror to Indian foe? |
36246 | Was there a sort of fate that had set her apart for this sort of thing? |
36246 | We do n''t like cooking our own grub, do we, Mowitza? |
36246 | We''ll both be down at your camp by sun- up to- morrow; will that do?" |
36246 | What about that transfer?" |
36246 | What are you doing here?" |
36246 | What did you do with the horses, Jim?" |
36246 | What do you intend doing with your share?" |
36246 | What do you think of that?" |
36246 | What has he done?" |
36246 | What have you to say for yourself?" |
36246 | What is it Kalitan?" |
36246 | What is it you are talking about? |
36246 | What is it? |
36246 | What is it?" |
36246 | What is it?" |
36246 | What is the quotation, to begin with?" |
36246 | What matter the sort of person one has been, or the life one has lived if he come out of it with knowledge and the wish to use it well? |
36246 | What right had he for such a wish? |
36246 | What right had he to let go of himself as he had done, and show her how his life was bound up in hers? |
36246 | What sister could ever yet see the reason for a sister- in- law''s blind adoration? |
36246 | What time this morning?" |
36246 | What was it you shot this time, Alec-- a pole- cat or a flying- squirrel? |
36246 | What was it? |
36246 | What was that verse about-- giving back the pledge when-- the sun goes down? |
36246 | What was there left for the man to say? |
36246 | Whatever the cause of that quick attention, she noticed it, and added:"Well, Mr. Genesee, do n''t you think so? |
36246 | When you''re owned by a whole regiment, it''s so hard to gather up any dignity, or keep it if you do get hold of it; do n''t you think so?" |
36246 | Where are they?" |
36246 | Where are you bound for?" |
36246 | Where was all that glory of the east at sunrise which those two had once watched from a mountain not far from this? |
36246 | Who is your friend?" |
36246 | Who taught you them?" |
36246 | Who was the man?" |
36246 | Who''s in command?" |
36246 | Why did n''t you come?" |
36246 | Why did n''t you tell me?" |
36246 | Why did you not?" |
36246 | Why should I not tell them you brought me?" |
36246 | Why wo n''t you come in the house?" |
36246 | Why, you are begging on a full hand, Mister; and what are you begging to? |
36246 | Why?" |
36246 | Why?" |
36246 | Will the Arrow carry a message as it flies?" |
36246 | Will ye no''light an''have a crack at a pipe an''a glass?" |
36246 | Will you help me, please?" |
36246 | Will you not come to me? |
36246 | Would he meet her again with that queer, distant manner of his? |
36246 | Would it fall? |
36246 | Would it stay where it was? |
36246 | Would n''t you love to read it?" |
36246 | Would they grant him a hearing now? |
36246 | Yes, I suppose so-- yet,''a woman whom I cared for, and who was lost-- long ago!''--Lost? |
36246 | Yes, you did, Mr. Stuart-- didn''t he, Mrs. Hardy? |
36246 | You are unjust-- don''t I know?" |
36246 | ai n''t it?" |
36246 | and where are you going?" |
36246 | asked Talapa sullenly, her back against the wall as if in a position to show fight; that is, she said"Pe- kah- ta?" |
36246 | asked a deep, rather musical voice from the cabin door;"and your national love for the''winsome sex,''as I''ve heard you call it? |
36246 | but, for the benefit of the civilized reader, the ordinary English is given--"And why so?" |
36246 | could she carry double?" |
36246 | he returned; and having regained the use of his tongue, he added, in an easier way:"You''ll excuse me, lady, if I sort of scared you?" |
36246 | he said, with a good deal of relief in his manner;"were you the scarecrow? |
36246 | laughed the older woman;"one would think you were married yesterday and the honeymoon only begun, would you not, Alec? |
36246 | lost?" |
36246 | or for what? |
36246 | or would they shoot him down, as the soldier had shot Snowcap, with his message undelivered? |
36246 | said Jim, taking a peep at it;"it''s gettin''as brown as-- as your hair; an''them berries is done, an''ai n''t it time to put in the coffee?" |
36246 | said his sister, commiseratingly;"to think of her being exiled in that park, twenty miles from a white woman!--didn''t you say it was twenty?" |
36246 | she asked in a clearer, more matter- of- fact way, as she propped herself up on his outstretched arm;"and did you come alone to find me?" |
36246 | she asked, drawing her chair close beside him and glancing comprehensively about the cabin;"weather- board it up for winter?" |
36246 | she asked;"giving him some potion brewed by an Indian witch? |
36246 | she called sharply;"when was it the stock was run off from camp-- what time?" |
36246 | she growled, quoting MacDougall;"what does the fellow mean by shouting like that this time of the night? |
36246 | she persisted;"is he a sort of Mormon, then-- an Indian Mormon? |
36246 | she repeated;"have you heard any word of him?" |
36246 | she said, in a maze of conflicting revelations; and Jack looked at Stuart, as she added,"and who were you?" |
36246 | she said;"she did not have such a load when she came over this road before; it was the day after you joined us, do you remember?" |
36246 | that is it? |
36246 | then you have n''t much faith in a tenderfoot getting through the hostiles or snow- banks?" |
36246 | what proof have you that will weigh against courage like that?" |
36246 | what''s that?" |
36246 | who''s that?" |
36246 | wo n''t you marry me? |
32325 | Ai n''t them old crippled picks and things in there good enough to dig a nigger out with? |
32325 | And ai n''t it natural and right for a cat and a cow to talk different from_ us_? |
32325 | And ai n''t you had nothing but that kind of rubbage to eat? |
32325 | And so you ai n''t had no meat nor bread to eat all this time? 32325 And_ Jim?_""The same,"I says, but could n''t say it pretty brash. |
32325 | Any men on it? |
32325 | Bilgewater, kin I trust you? |
32325 | Blame it, ca n''t you_ try?_ I only_ want_ you to try-- you need n''t keep it up if it do n''t work. |
32325 | Brought you down from whar? 32325 But I reckon we ought to tell Uncle Harvey she''s gone out awhile, anyway, so he wo n''t be uneasy about her?" |
32325 | But I thought_ you_ lived in Sheffield? |
32325 | But how can we do it if we do n''t know what it is? |
32325 | But it''s_ somebody''s_ plates, ai n''t it? |
32325 | But looky here, Tom, what do we want to_ warn_ anybody for that something''s up? 32325 But my lan'', Mars Sid, how''s I gwyne to make''m a witch pie? |
32325 | But what time o''day? |
32325 | But you can guess, ca n''t you? 32325 Cairo? |
32325 | Come, ai n''t that what you saw? |
32325 | Could n''t they see better if they was to wait till daytime? |
32325 | Dad fetch it, how is I gwyne to dream all dat in ten minutes? |
32325 | Dern your skin, ai n''t the company good enough for you? |
32325 | Did anybody send''em word? |
32325 | Did n''t I_ say_ I was going to help steal the nigger? |
32325 | Did you ever see us before? |
32325 | Do I know you? 32325 Do n''t anybody know?" |
32325 | Do n''t mind what I said-- please don''t-- you_ wo n''t_, now,_ will_ you? |
32325 | Do n''t they give''em holidays, the way we do, Christmas and New Year''s week, and Fourth of July? |
32325 | Do you belong on it? |
32325 | Does a cat talk like a cow, or a cow talk like a cat? |
32325 | Drinkin''? 32325 Drot your pore broken heart,"says the baldhead;"what are you heaving your pore broken heart at_ us_ f''r? |
32325 | For what? |
32325 | Funeral to- morrow, likely? |
32325 | Geewhillikins,I says,"but what does the rest of it mean?" |
32325 | Get? |
32325 | Gone away? 32325 Goodness gracious, is dat you, Huck? |
32325 | Goshen, child? 32325 Hamlet''s which?" |
32325 | Has anybody been killed this year, Buck? |
32325 | Has there been many killed, Buck? |
32325 | Has this one been going on long, Buck? |
32325 | Have you got hairy arms and a hairy breast, Jim? |
32325 | Him? 32325 His''n? |
32325 | How I gwyne to ketch her en I out in de woods? 32325 How can he blow? |
32325 | How does I talk wild? |
32325 | How does he get it, then? |
32325 | How long will it take, Tom? |
32325 | How you going to get them? |
32325 | How you gwyne to git''m? 32325 How''d you come?" |
32325 | How''d you get your breakfast so early on the boat? |
32325 | How''m I going to guess,says I,"when I never heard tell of it before?" |
32325 | How''s it a new kind? |
32325 | I do n''t know where he was,says I;"where was he?" |
32325 | I do n''t reckon he does; but what put that into your head? |
32325 | I is, is I? 32325 I thought he lived in London?" |
32325 | If fifteen cows is browsing on a hillside, how many of them eats with their heads pointed the same direction? |
32325 | Is a cat a man, Huck? |
32325 | Is dat so? |
32325 | Is it_ ketching?_ Why, how you talk. 32325 Is that what you live on?" |
32325 | It''s natural and right for''em to talk different from each other, ai n''t it? |
32325 | Keep what, Mars Tom? |
32325 | Laws, how do I know? 32325 Looky here, Jim; does a cat talk like we do?" |
32325 | Looky here,I says;"did you ever see any Congress- water?" |
32325 | Must we always kill the people? |
32325 | No, sir,I says;"is there some for me?" |
32325 | No-- is that so? |
32325 | No; is dat so? |
32325 | No? |
32325 | None of it at all? |
32325 | Nor church? |
32325 | Not a word? |
32325 | Now, George Jackson, do you know the Shepherdsons? |
32325 | Now,says Ben Rogers,"what''s the line of business of this Gang?" |
32325 | Oh, that''s the way of it? |
32325 | Oh, well, that''s all interpreted well enough as far as it goes, Jim,I says;"but what does_ these_ things stand for?" |
32325 | Oh, you did, did you? 32325 Oh,_ do_ shet up!--s''pose the rats took the_ sheet?__ Where''s_ it gone, Lize?" |
32325 | Oh,_ do_ shet up!--s''pose the rats took the_ sheet?__ Where''s_ it gone, Lize? |
32325 | Old man,said the young one,"I reckon we might double- team it together; what do you think?" |
32325 | Ransomed? 32325 Roun''de which?" |
32325 | Say, wo n''t he suspicion what we''re up to? |
32325 | The widow, hey?--and who told the widow she could put in her shovel about a thing that ai n''t none of her business? |
32325 | Then what on earth did_ you_ want to set him free for, seeing he was already free? |
32325 | They do n''t, do n''t they? 32325 They''re-- they''re-- are you the watchman of the boat?" |
32325 | To dig the foundations out from under that cabin with? |
32325 | Tools for what? |
32325 | Tools? |
32325 | Was Peter Wilks well off? |
32325 | Was you in there yisterday er last night? |
32325 | Well, anyway,I says,"what''s_ some_ of it? |
32325 | Well, are you rich? |
32325 | Well, den, why could n''t he_ say_ it? |
32325 | Well, did you have to go to Congress to get it? |
32325 | Well, does a cow? |
32325 | Well, hain''t he got a father? |
32325 | Well, if you knowed where he was, what did you ask me for? |
32325 | Well, spos''n it is? 32325 Well, then, a horse?" |
32325 | Well, then, how''d you come to be up at the Pint in the_ mornin_''--in a canoe? |
32325 | Well, then, how''s he going to take the sea baths if it ai n''t on the sea? |
32325 | Well, then, what are they_ for_? |
32325 | Well, then, what did you want to kill him for? |
32325 | Well, then, what does the rest of''em do? |
32325 | Well, then, what makes you talk so wild? |
32325 | Well, then, what possessed you to go down there this time of night? |
32325 | Well, then, what we going to do, Tom? |
32325 | Well, then, what''ll we make him the ink out of? |
32325 | Well, then, what''s the sense in wasting the plates? |
32325 | Well, then, why ai n''t it natural and right for a_ Frenchman_ to talk different from us? 32325 Well, then,"I says,"how''ll it do to saw him out, the way I done before I was murdered that time?" |
32325 | Well, then,I says,"if we do n''t want the picks and shovels, what do we want?" |
32325 | Well, we can wait the two hours anyway and see, ca n''t we? |
32325 | Well, what did come of it, Jim? |
32325 | Well, what in the nation do they call it the_ mumps_ for? |
32325 | Well, what_ did_ you say, then? |
32325 | Well, who done the shooting? 32325 Well, who said it was?" |
32325 | Well, why would n''t you? |
32325 | Well, you must be most starved, ai n''t you? |
32325 | Well,I says,"s''pose we got some genies to help_ us_--can''t we lick the other crowd then?" |
32325 | Well--_what?_he says, kind of pettish. |
32325 | Wh- hat, mum? |
32325 | What are you prowling around here this time of night for-- hey? |
32325 | What did he do to you? |
32325 | What did you do with the ten cents, Jim? |
32325 | What did you reckon I wanted you to go at all for, Miss Mary? |
32325 | What did you speculate in, Jim? |
32325 | What did you think the vittles was for? |
32325 | What do we want of a saw? |
32325 | What do we want of a shirt, Tom? |
32325 | What do we_ want_ of a saw? 32325 What do you want?" |
32325 | What fog? |
32325 | What got you into trouble? |
32325 | What in the nation can he_ do_ with it? |
32325 | What is it you wo n''t believe, Jo? |
32325 | What is it, duke? |
32325 | What kind of stock? |
32325 | What letter? |
32325 | What letters? |
32325 | What made you think I''d like it? |
32325 | What other things? |
32325 | What three? |
32325 | What town is it, mister? |
32325 | What whole thing? |
32325 | What wreck? |
32325 | What you been doing down there? |
32325 | What!--to preach before a king? 32325 What''re you alassin''about?" |
32325 | What''s a feud? |
32325 | What''s de harem? |
32325 | What''s de use er makin''up de camp- fire to cook strawbries en sich truck? 32325 What''s de use to ax dat question? |
32325 | What''s onkores, Bilgewater? |
32325 | What''s the matter with you, Jim? 32325 What''s them?" |
32325 | What''s your real name? 32325 What''s_ that_ got to do with it? |
32325 | What, all that time? |
32325 | What, you do n''t mean the_ Walter Scott? 32325 What_ does_ the child mean?" |
32325 | What_ put_ it dar? 32325 When did you say he died?" |
32325 | Wher''you bound for, young man? |
32325 | Where do you set? |
32325 | Where is it, then? |
32325 | Where''bouts do you live? 32325 Where''s Jim?" |
32325 | Whereabouts? |
32325 | Which one? |
32325 | Which side of a tree does the moss grow on? |
32325 | Who do you reckon''tis? |
32325 | Who is your folks? |
32325 | Who makes them tear around so? |
32325 | Who''d you give the baggage to? |
32325 | Who''s me? |
32325 | Who? 32325 Who? |
32325 | Why did n''t you roust me out? |
32325 | Why did n''t you tell my Jack to fetch me here sooner, Jim? |
32325 | Why do n''t it, Huck? |
32325 | Why do you reckon Harvey do n''t come? 32325 Why, Huck, doan''de French people talk de same way we does?" |
32325 | Why, Jim? |
32325 | Why, are they after him yet? |
32325 | Why, blame it, it''s a riddle, do n''t you see? 32325 Why, how did you get hold of the raft again, Jim-- did you catch her?" |
32325 | Why, how long you been on the island, Jim? |
32325 | Why, pap and mam and sis and Miss Hooker; and if you''d take your ferryboat and go up there--"Up where? 32325 Why, what do they want with more?" |
32325 | Why, what else is gone, Sally? |
32325 | Why, where ever did you go? |
32325 | Why, where was you raised? 32325 Why, who''s got it?" |
32325 | Why? |
32325 | Why? |
32325 | Will you do it, honey?--will you? 32325 With_ who?_ Why, the runaway nigger, of course. |
32325 | Yes, it_ is_ good enough for me; it''s as good as I deserve; for who fetched me so low when I was so high? 32325 Yes,_ dey_ will, I reck''n, Mars Tom, but what kine er time is_ Jim_ havin''? |
32325 | You do n''t_ know?_ Do n''t answer me that way. 32325 You hain''t seen no towhead? |
32325 | You mean to say our old raft warn''t smashed all to flinders? |
32325 | You numskull, did n''t you see me_ count_''m? |
32325 | You wo n''t, wo n''t you? 32325 You would n''t look like a servant- girl_ then_, would you?" |
32325 | You''re s''rp-- Why, what do you reckon_ I_ am? 32325 _ Ain''_ dat gay? |
32325 | _ Do_ with it? 32325 _ Hannel_''m, Mars Sid? |
32325 | _ Him?_says Aunt Sally;"the runaway nigger? |
32325 | _ Him?_says Aunt Sally;"the runaway nigger? |
32325 | _ How?_ Why, hain''t you been talking about my coming back, and all that stuff, as if I''d been gone away? |
32325 | _ How?_ Why, hain''t you been talking about my coming back, and all that stuff, as if I''d been gone away? |
32325 | _ Sold_ him? |
32325 | _ Which_ candle? |
32325 | _ Whose_ pew? |
32325 | _ Work?_ Why, cert''nly it would work, like rats a- fighting. 32325 _ You_ talk like an Englishman,_ do n''t_ you? |
32325 | Ai n''t I right?" |
32325 | Ai n''t that sensible?" |
32325 | Ai n''t that so?" |
32325 | All through dinner Jim stood around and waited on him, and says,"Will yo''Grace have some o''dis or some o''dat?" |
32325 | And I_ did_ start to tell him; but he shut me up, and says:"Do n''t you reckon I know what I''m about? |
32325 | And after a minute, he says:"How''d you say he got shot?" |
32325 | And ai n''t that a big enough majority in any town?" |
32325 | And by and by the old man says:"Did I give you the letter?" |
32325 | And could n''t the nigger see better, too? |
32325 | And did the sad hearts thicken, And did the mourners cry? |
32325 | And do you reckon they''d be mean enough to go off and leave you to go all that journey by yourselves? |
32325 | And leave my sisters with them?" |
32325 | And looky here-- you drop that school, you hear? |
32325 | And not sell out the rest o''the property? |
32325 | And s''pose he steps in here any minute, and sings out my name before I can throw him a wink to keep quiet? |
32325 | And they call it the_ mumps?_""That''s what Miss Mary Jane said." |
32325 | And turns to me, perfectly ca''m, and says,"Did_ you_ hear anybody sing out?" |
32325 | And what do you reckon they said? |
32325 | And what do you think? |
32325 | And what kind o''uncles would it be that''d rob-- yes,_ Rob_--sech poor sweet lambs as these''at he loved so at sech a time? |
32325 | And what would you want to saw his leg off for, anyway?" |
32325 | And what_ for_? |
32325 | And when the king got done this husky up and says:"Say, looky here; if you are Harvey Wilks, when''d you come to this town?" |
32325 | And would n''t he throw style into it?--wouldn''t he spread himself, nor nothing? |
32325 | And you ca n''t get away with that tooth without fetching the whole harrow along, can you? |
32325 | And you wo n''t go? |
32325 | And you would n''t leave them any? |
32325 | And, besides, he said them little birds had said it was going to rain, and did I want the things to get wet? |
32325 | And_ then_ what did you all do?" |
32325 | Are you all ready? |
32325 | Ask him to show up? |
32325 | Bekase why: would a wise man want to live in de mids''er sich a blim- blammin''all de time? |
32325 | Buck?--land?" |
32325 | But Bill says:"Hold on--''d you go through him?" |
32325 | But Tom thought of something, and says:"You got any spiders in here, Jim?" |
32325 | But answer me only jest this one more-- now_ do n''t_ git mad; did n''t you have it in your mind to hook the money and hide it?" |
32325 | But at supper, at night, one of the little boys says:"Pa, may n''t Tom and Sid and me go to the show?" |
32325 | But he''ll be pooty lonesome-- dey ain''no kings here, is dey, Huck?" |
32325 | But how you goin''to manage it this time?" |
32325 | But now she says:"Honey, I thought you said it was Sarah when you first come in?" |
32325 | But other times they just lazy around; or go hawking-- just hawking and sp-- Sh!--d''you hear a noise?" |
32325 | But s''pose she_ do n''t_ break up and wash off?" |
32325 | But when he did get the thing straightened around he looked at me steady without ever smiling, and says:"What do dey stan''for? |
32325 | But you got a gun, hain''t you? |
32325 | But you wouldn''tell on me ef I''uz to tell you, would you, Huck?" |
32325 | By and by Jim says:"But looky here, Huck, who wuz it dat''uz killed in dat shanty ef it warn''t you?" |
32325 | By and by, when they was asleep and snoring, Jim says:"Do n''t it s''prise you de way dem kings carries on, Huck?" |
32325 | Ca n''t you think of no way?" |
32325 | Ca n''t you_ see_ that_ they''d_ go and tell? |
32325 | Come slow; push the door open yourself-- just enough to squeeze in, d''you hear?" |
32325 | Conscience says to me,"What had poor Miss Watson done to you that you could see her nigger go off right under your eyes and never say one single word? |
32325 | Could you raise a flower here, do you reckon?" |
32325 | Dad blame it, why doan''he_ talk_ like a man? |
32325 | Did n''t you?" |
32325 | Did you come for your interest?" |
32325 | Did you hear''em shooting the cannon?" |
32325 | Did you inquire around for_ him_ when you got loose? |
32325 | Did you speculate any more?" |
32325 | Did you tell Aunty?" |
32325 | Didn''he jis''dis minute sing out like he knowed you?" |
32325 | Do n''t I generly know what I''m about?" |
32325 | Do n''t I tell you it''s in the books? |
32325 | Do n''t anybody live there? |
32325 | Do n''t you know about the harem? |
32325 | Do n''t you know nothing?" |
32325 | Do n''t you know what a feud is?" |
32325 | Do n''t you reckon I know who hid that money in that coffin?" |
32325 | Do n''t you reckon that the people that made the books knows what''s the correct thing to do? |
32325 | Do n''t you see I has?" |
32325 | Do they treat''em better''n we treat our niggers?" |
32325 | Do you know him?" |
32325 | Do you like to comb up Sundays, and all that kind of foolishness? |
32325 | Do you own a dog? |
32325 | Do you reckon Tom Sawyer would ever go by this thing? |
32325 | Do you reckon that''ll do?" |
32325 | Do you reckon you can learn me?" |
32325 | Do you reckon_ you_ can learn''em anything? |
32325 | Do you want to go to doing different from what''s in the books, and get things all muddled up?" |
32325 | Do you want to spread it all over?" |
32325 | Does three hundred dollars lay around every day for people to pick up? |
32325 | Does you know''bout dat chile dat he''uz gwyne to chop in two?" |
32325 | Does you want to go en look at''i m?" |
32325 | Down by the woodpile I comes across my Jack, and says:"What''s it all about?" |
32325 | En did n''t I bust up agin a lot er dem islands en have a turrible time en mos''git drownded? |
32325 | En what dey got to do, Huck?" |
32325 | En what use is a half a chile? |
32325 | En you ain''dead-- you ain''drownded-- you''s back ag''in? |
32325 | Every little while he jumps up and says:"Dah she is?" |
32325 | Everybody says,"Why,_ doctor!_"and Abner Shackleford says:"Why, Robinson, hain''t you heard the news? |
32325 | George Jackson, is there anybody with you?" |
32325 | Going to feed the dogs?" |
32325 | Hain''t he run off?" |
32325 | Hain''t we got to saw the leg of Jim''s bed off, so as to get the chain loose?" |
32325 | Hain''t you got no principle at all?" |
32325 | Hain''t your uncles obleeged to get along home to England as fast as they can? |
32325 | Has I ben a- drinkin''? |
32325 | Has I had a chance to be a- drinkin''?" |
32325 | Has everybody quit thinking the nigger done it?" |
32325 | Has n''t he got away?" |
32325 | Have you ever trod the boards, Royalty?" |
32325 | He can hide it in his bed, ca n''t he? |
32325 | He looked astonished, and says:"Hel-_lo!_ Where''d_ you_ come from?" |
32325 | He says:"Ai n''t they no Shepherdsons around?" |
32325 | He says:"If gentlemen kin afford to pay a dollar a mile apiece to be took on and put off in a yawl, a steamboat kin afford to carry''em, ca n''t it?" |
32325 | He says:"What you doin''with this gun?" |
32325 | He says:"Why, what can you mean, my boy?" |
32325 | He says:"Why,_ Tom!_ Where you been all this time, you rascal?" |
32325 | He see me, and rode up and says:"Whar''d you come f''m, boy? |
32325 | He set there a- mumbling and a- growling a minute, and then he says:"_ Ai n''t_ you a sweet- scented dandy, though? |
32325 | He stirred up in a kind of a startlish way; but when he see it was only me he took a good gap and stretch, and then he says:"Hello, what''s up? |
32325 | He took up a little blue and yaller picture of some cows and a boy, and says:"What''s this?" |
32325 | He''d_ let_ me shove his head in my mouf-- fer a favor, hain''t it? |
32325 | Hey?--how''s that?" |
32325 | His eyes just blazed; and he says:"No!--is that so? |
32325 | Honest injun, you ai n''t a ghost?" |
32325 | How can they get loose when there''s a guard over them, ready to shoot them down if they move a peg?" |
32325 | How could a body do it in de night? |
32325 | How do dat come?" |
32325 | How do_ they_ get them?" |
32325 | How does he go at it-- give notice?--give the country a show? |
32325 | How does that strike you?" |
32325 | How fur is it?" |
32325 | How is servants treated in England? |
32325 | How long you ben on de islan''?" |
32325 | How much do a king git?" |
32325 | How old is the others?" |
32325 | How would you like to be treated so?" |
32325 | How''d it get there?" |
32325 | How''d they act?" |
32325 | I ai n''t the man to stand it-- you hear? |
32325 | I ben a- buyin''pots en pans en vittles, as I got a chanst, en a- patchin''up de raf''nights when--""_ What_ raft, Jim?" |
32325 | I hunched Tom, and whispers:"You going, right here in the daybreak? |
32325 | I live up there, do n''t I? |
32325 | I ranged up and says:"Mister, is that town Cairo?" |
32325 | I reckon he can stand a little thing like that, ca n''t he?" |
32325 | I said, why could n''t we see them, then? |
32325 | I says to myself, if a body can get anything they pray for, why do n''t Deacon Winn get back the money he lost on pork? |
32325 | I says to myself, shall I go to that doctor, private, and blow on these frauds? |
32325 | I says to myself, spos''n he ca n''t fix that leg just in three shakes of a sheep''s tail, as the saying is? |
32325 | I says to myself, there ai n''t no telling but I might come to be a murderer myself yet, and then how would I like it? |
32325 | I says:"What do we want of a moat when we''re going to snake him out from under the cabin?" |
32325 | I says:"Who done it? |
32325 | I says:"Why, Jim?" |
32325 | I was going to say yes; but she chipped in and says:"About what, Sid?" |
32325 | I wonder who''tis? |
32325 | I''m for killin''him-- and did n''t he kill old Hatfield jist the same way-- and do n''t he deserve it?" |
32325 | I''ve a good notion to take and-- Say, what do you mean by kissing me?" |
32325 | If the profits has turned out to be none, lackin''considable, and none to carry, is it my fault any more''n it''s yourn?" |
32325 | If they have, wo n''t the complices get away with that bag of gold Peter Wilks left? |
32325 | If you do n''t hitch on to one tooth, you''re bound to on another, ai n''t you? |
32325 | In this neighborhood?" |
32325 | Is I heah, or whah_ is_ I? |
32325 | Is I_ me_, or who_ is_ I? |
32325 | Is Mary Jane the oldest? |
32325 | Is a Frenchman a man?" |
32325 | Is a cow a man?--er is a cow a cat?" |
32325 | Is a_ harrow_ catching-- in the dark? |
32325 | Is dat like Mars Tom Sawyer? |
32325 | Is dey out o''sight yit? |
32325 | Is it Bill, or Tom, or Bob?--or what is it?" |
32325 | Is it ketching?" |
32325 | Is she took bad?" |
32325 | Is something the matter?" |
32325 | Is that_ all_?" |
32325 | Is there anybody here that helped to lay out my br-- helped to lay out the late Peter Wilks for burying?" |
32325 | Is your husband going over there to- night?" |
32325 | Is your man white or black?" |
32325 | It ai n''t my fault I warn''t born a duke, it ai n''t your fault you warn''t born a king-- so what''s the use to worry? |
32325 | It make me mad; en I says ag''in, mighty loud, I says:"''Doan''you hear me? |
32325 | It was all she could do to hold in; and her eyes snapped, and her fingers worked like she wanted to scratch him; and she says:"Who''s''everybody''? |
32325 | It''s only saying, do you know how to talk French?" |
32325 | Just keep a tight tongue in your head and move right along, and then you wo n''t get into trouble with_ us_, d''ye hear?" |
32325 | Kill the women? |
32325 | Long as you''re in this town do n''t you forgit_ that_--you hear?" |
32325 | Look yonder!--up the road!--ain''t that somebody coming?" |
32325 | Looky here, did n''t de line pull loose en de raf''go a- hummin''down de river, en leave you en de canoe behine in de fog?" |
32325 | Looky here, warn''t you ever murdered_ at all?_""No. |
32325 | Looky here-- do you think_ you''d_ venture to blow on us? |
32325 | Me? |
32325 | Mrs. Phelps she jumps for him, and says:"Has he come?" |
32325 | Next time you roust me out, you hear?" |
32325 | Next, she says:"Do you go to church, too?" |
32325 | Now I want to ask you-- if you got any reasonableness in you at all-- what kind of a show would_ that_ give him to be a hero? |
32325 | Now ain''dat so, boss-- ain''t it so? |
32325 | Now if you''ll go and--""By Jackson, I''d_ like_ to, and, blame it, I do n''t know but I will; but who in the dingnation''s a- going to_ pay_ for it? |
32325 | Now, what do you reckon it is?" |
32325 | Now,_ would n''t_ he? |
32325 | One of them says:"What''s that yonder?" |
32325 | Pretty soon Jim says:"Say, who is you? |
32325 | Pretty soon Tom says:"Ready?" |
32325 | Pretty soon she says:"What did you say your name was, honey?" |
32325 | S''e, what do_ you_ think of it, Sister Hotchkiss? |
32325 | S''pose a man was to come to you and say Polly- voo- franzy-- what would you think?" |
32325 | S''pose he contracted to do a thing, and you paid him, and did n''t set down there and see that he done it-- what did he do? |
32325 | S''pose he opened his mouth-- what then? |
32325 | S''pose he_ do n''t_ do nothing with it? |
32325 | S''pose people left money laying around where he was-- what did he do? |
32325 | S''pose she dug him up and did n''t find nothing, what would she think of me? |
32325 | Say, boy, what''s the matter with your father?" |
32325 | Say, do we kill the women, too?" |
32325 | Say, gimme a chaw tobacker, wo n''t ye?" |
32325 | Say, how long are you going to stay here? |
32325 | Say, how much you got in your pocket? |
32325 | Say, where_ is_ that song-- that draft?" |
32325 | Says I, kind of timid- like:"Is something gone wrong?" |
32325 | Says I--"I broke in and says:"They''re in an awful peck of trouble, and--""_ Who_ is?" |
32325 | Says he:"Do n''t you know, Mars Jawge?" |
32325 | Says the king:"Dern him, I wonder what he done with that four hundred and fifteen dollars?" |
32325 | See? |
32325 | Shall I go, private, and tell Mary Jane? |
32325 | She looked me all over with her little shiny eyes, and says:"What might your name be?" |
32325 | She says:"Did you ever see the king?" |
32325 | She says:"Honest injun, now, hain''t you been telling me a lot of lies?" |
32325 | She was smiling all over so she could hardly stand-- and says:"It''s_ you_, at last!--_ain''t_ it?" |
32325 | Snake take''n bite Jim''s chin off, den_ whah_ is de glory? |
32325 | So I laid there about an hour trying to think, and when Buck waked up I says:"Can you spell, Buck?" |
32325 | So Tom says:"What''s the vittles for? |
32325 | So Tom turns to the nigger, which was looking wild and distressed, and says, kind of severe:"What do you reckon''s the matter with you, anyway? |
32325 | So she put me up a snack, and says:"Say, when a cow''s laying down, which end of her gets up first? |
32325 | So she run on:"Lize, hurry up and get him a hot breakfast right away-- or did you get your breakfast on the boat?" |
32325 | So the question was, what to do? |
32325 | So when I says he goes to our church, she says:"What-- regular?" |
32325 | So, says I, s''pose somebody has hogged that bag on the sly?--now how do_ I_ know whether to write to Mary Jane or not? |
32325 | So, then, what you want to come back and ha''nt_ me_ for?" |
32325 | Soon as I could get Buck down by the corn- cribs under the trees by ourselves, I says:"Did you want to kill him, Buck?" |
32325 | That''s the whole yarn-- what''s yourn?" |
32325 | The doctor he up and says:"Would you know the boy again if you was to see him, Hines?" |
32325 | The duke bristles up now, and says:"Oh, let_ up_ on this cussed nonsense; do you take me for a blame''fool? |
32325 | The duke says, pretty brisk:"When it comes to that, maybe you''ll let me ask what was_ you_ referring to?" |
32325 | The duke says:"Have you seen anybody else go in there?" |
32325 | The king he smiled eager, and shoved out his flapper, and says:"_ Is_ it my poor brother''s dear good friend and physician? |
32325 | The king kind of ruffles up, and says:"Looky here, Bilgewater, what''r you referrin''to?" |
32325 | The king says:"Was you in my room night before last?" |
32325 | The king says:"Why?" |
32325 | The man sung out:"Snatch that light away, Betsy, you old fool-- ain''t you got any sense? |
32325 | The next minute he whirls on me and says:"Do you reckon that nigger would blow on us? |
32325 | The old gentleman stared, and says:"Why, who''s that?" |
32325 | Then Ben Rogers says:"Here''s Huck Finn, he hain''t got no family; what you going to do''bout him?" |
32325 | Then I says to myself, s''pose Tom Sawyer comes down on that boat? |
32325 | Then I says:"Blame it, do you suppose there ai n''t but one preacher to a church?" |
32325 | Then I says:"How do you come to be here, Jim, and how''d you get here?" |
32325 | Then I says:"Miss Mary Jane, is there any place out of town a little ways where you could go and stay three or four days?" |
32325 | Then I thought a minute, and says to myself, hold on; s''pose you''d''a''done right and give Jim up, would you felt better than what you do now? |
32325 | Then he did n''t look so joyful, and says:"What was your idea for asking_ me?_"he says. |
32325 | Then he says, kind of glad and eager,"Where''s the raft?--got her in a good place?" |
32325 | Then he says:"How are you on the deef and dumb, Bilgewater?" |
32325 | Then he says:"What did you want to walk all the way up to the steamboat for?" |
32325 | Then he says:"Who dah?" |
32325 | Then he studied it over and said, could n''t I put on some of them old things and dress up like a girl? |
32325 | Then he turns to Jim, and looks him over like he never see him before, and says:"Did you sing out?" |
32325 | Then she took off the hank and looked me straight in the face, and very pleasant, and says:"Come, now, what''s your real name?" |
32325 | Then the doctor whirls on me and says:"Are_ you_ English, too?" |
32325 | Then the duke says:"What,_ all_ of them?" |
32325 | Then the duke says:"You are what?" |
32325 | Then the old man turns toward the king, and says:"Peraps this gentleman can tell me what was tattooed on his breast?" |
32325 | They sets down then, and the king says:"Well, what is it? |
32325 | Think o''that bed- leg sawed off that a way? |
32325 | Think o''what, Brer Phelps? |
32325 | Thinks I, what does it mean? |
32325 | Thinks I, what is the country a- coming to? |
32325 | Tired of our company, hey?" |
32325 | Tom he looked at the nigger, steady and kind of wondering, and says:"Does_ who_ know us?" |
32325 | Tom looks at me very grave, and says:"Tom, did n''t you just tell me he was all right? |
32325 | Twenty people sings out:"What, is it over? |
32325 | Very well, then; is a_ preacher_ going to deceive a steamboat clerk? |
32325 | W''y, what has you lived on? |
32325 | Want to keep it off?" |
32325 | Warn''dat de beatenes''notion in de worl''? |
32325 | Was Solomon Wise? |
32325 | Was it a Grangerford Shepherdson?" |
32325 | Was there any such mark on Peter Wilks''s breast?" |
32325 | Was you looking for him?" |
32325 | We ai n''t a- going to_ gnaw_ him out, are we?" |
32325 | We both knowed well enough it was some more work of the rattlesnake- skin; so what was the use to talk about it? |
32325 | Well, did he? |
32325 | Well, then, I said, why could n''t she tell her husband to fetch a dog? |
32325 | Well, then, what kind o''brothers would it be that''d stand in his way at sech a time? |
32325 | Well, we got to save_ him_, hain''t we? |
32325 | Well, what did he do? |
32325 | Well, what do you think? |
32325 | Well, you answer me dis: Did n''t you tote out de line in de canoe fer to make fas''to de towhead?" |
32325 | Well,_ was n''t_ he mad? |
32325 | Whar is you? |
32325 | Whar was you brought down from?" |
32325 | What I wanted to know was, what he was going to do, and was he going to stay? |
32325 | What are we going to do?--lay around there till he lets the cat out of the bag? |
32325 | What did that poor old woman do to you that you could treat her so mean? |
32325 | What did they do? |
32325 | What did you say your name was?" |
32325 | What did you_ reckon_ he wanted with it?" |
32325 | What do we k''yer for_ him?_ Hain''t we got all the fools in town on our side? |
32325 | What do we k''yer for_ him?_ Hain''t we got all the fools in town on our side? |
32325 | What do you mean?" |
32325 | What does I do? |
32325 | What does_ he_ want with a pew?" |
32325 | What he gwyne to do?" |
32325 | What is he up to, anyway? |
32325 | What kep''you?--boat get aground?" |
32325 | What made you think somebody sung out?" |
32325 | What makes them come here just at this runaway nigger''s breakfast- time? |
32325 | What towhead? |
32325 | What was it?" |
32325 | What was the use to tell Jim these warn''t real kings and dukes? |
32325 | What you going to do about the servant- girl?" |
32325 | What you know''bout witches?" |
32325 | What you reckon I better do? |
32325 | What you want to know when good luck''s a- comin''for? |
32325 | What you''bout?" |
32325 | What''s a bar sinister?" |
32325 | What''s a fess?" |
32325 | What''s that?" |
32325 | What''s the good of a plan that ai n''t no more trouble than that? |
32325 | What''s the matter with her?" |
32325 | What''s the matter with''em?" |
32325 | What''s the trouble?" |
32325 | What''s your lay?" |
32325 | What''s your line-- mainly?" |
32325 | What''s your real name, now?" |
32325 | What_ has_ become of that boy?" |
32325 | What_ is_ the matter with your pap? |
32325 | What_ is_ you a- talkin''''bout? |
32325 | What_ will_ he do, then? |
32325 | When I struck Susan and the hare- lip, I says:"What''s the name of them people over on t''other side of the river that you all goes to see sometimes?" |
32325 | When Jim called me to take the watch at four in the morning, he says:"Huck, does you reck''n we gwyne to run acrost any mo''kings on dis trip?" |
32325 | When was that?" |
32325 | When we was at dinner, did n''t you see a nigger man go in there with some vittles?" |
32325 | Wher''does he live?" |
32325 | Where are they?" |
32325 | Where could you keep it?" |
32325 | Where did you hide it?" |
32325 | Where would I go to?" |
32325 | Where''d she get aground?" |
32325 | Where''s that ten cents? |
32325 | Where''s the raft?" |
32325 | Where?" |
32325 | Where_ would_ he live?" |
32325 | Where_ would_ it be?" |
32325 | Which end gets up first?" |
32325 | Who ever heard of a state prisoner escaping by a hickry- bark ladder? |
32325 | Who ever heard of getting a prisoner loose in such an old- maidy way as that? |
32325 | Who nailed him?" |
32325 | Who told you this was Goshen?" |
32325 | Who told you you might meddle with such hifalut''n foolishness, hey?--who told you you could?" |
32325 | Who''d you reckon?" |
32325 | Who''s Jim''s mother?" |
32325 | Who''s there?" |
32325 | Who''s_ they?_""Why, everybody. |
32325 | Who_ is_ it?" |
32325 | Whoever would''a''thought it was in that mare to do it? |
32325 | Why ca n''t Miss Watson fat up? |
32325 | Why ca n''t a body take a club and ransom them as soon as they get here?" |
32325 | Why ca n''t the widow get back her silver snuff- box that was stole? |
32325 | Why ca n''t you stick to the main point?" |
32325 | Why could n''t you said that before? |
32325 | Why did n''t you come out and say so? |
32325 | Why did n''t you get mud- turkles?" |
32325 | Why did n''t you step into the road, my boy?" |
32325 | Why did n''t you stir me up?" |
32325 | Why do n''t your juries hang murderers? |
32325 | Why would n''t they? |
32325 | Why, Biljy, it beats the Nonesuch,_ do n''t_ it?" |
32325 | Why, Huck, s''pose it_ is_ considerble trouble?--what you going to do?--how you going to get around it? |
32325 | Why, hain''t you ever read any books at all?--Baron Trenck, nor Casanova, nor Benvenuto Chelleeny, nor Henri IV., nor none of them heroes? |
32325 | Why, how in the nation did they ever git into such a scrape?" |
32325 | Why, that ai n''t_ Tom_, it''s Sid; Tom''s-- Tom''s-- why, where is Tom? |
32325 | Why, what in the nation do you mean? |
32325 | Why?" |
32325 | Will you?" |
32325 | Will you?" |
32325 | William Fourth? |
32325 | Would he say dat? |
32325 | Would n''t that plan work?" |
32325 | Would ther''be any sense in that? |
32325 | Would_ you_''a''done any different? |
32325 | You been a- drinking?" |
32325 | You ca n''t slip up on um en grab um; en how''s a body gwyne to hit um wid a rock? |
32325 | You do n''t reckon it''s going to take thirty- seven years to dig out through a_ dirt_ foundation, do you?" |
32325 | You going to Orleans, you say?" |
32325 | You got any rats around here?" |
32325 | You got anything to play music on?" |
32325 | You know that one- laigged nigger dat b''longs to old Misto Bradish? |
32325 | You lemme catch you fooling around that school again, you hear? |
32325 | You prepared to die?" |
32325 | You take a man dat''s got on''y one or two chillen; is dat man gwyne to be waseful o''chillen? |
32325 | You think you''re a good deal of a big- bug,_ do n''t_ you?" |
32325 | You think you''re better''n your father, now, do n''t you, because he ca n''t? |
32325 | You''ll say it''s dirty, low- down business; but what if it is? |
32325 | You''ll take it-- won''t you?" |
32325 | You_ ai n''t_ him, are you?" |
32325 | Your uncle Harvey''s a preacher, ai n''t he? |
32325 | _ Hain''t_ you ben gone away?" |
32325 | _ Now_ what do you say-- hey?" |
32325 | _ Raf''?_ Dey ain''no raf''no mo''; she done broke loose en gone!--en here we is!" |
32325 | _ Think_ of it? |
32325 | _ Well_, den, is_ Jim_ gywne to say it? |
32325 | _ What_ did he sing out?" |
32325 | _ When_ did he sing out? |
32325 | _ Who_ sung out? |
32325 | ai n''t it there in his bed, for a clue, after he''s gone? |
32325 | and I as high as a tree and as big as a church? |
32325 | and do n''t you reckon they''ll want clues? |
32325 | and"Where, for the land''s sake,_ did_ you get these amaz''n pickles?" |
32325 | anybody hurt?" |
32325 | do he know you genlmen?" |
32325 | is dat you, honey? |
32325 | is he going to deceive a_ ship clerk?_--so as to get them to let Miss Mary Jane go aboard? |
32325 | is_ he_ her uncle? |
32325 | it wo n''t do to fool with small- pox, do n''t you see?" |
32325 | s''e? |
32325 | says Aunt Sally;"_ is_ he changed so? |
32325 | she says,"what in the world_ can_ have become of him?" |
32325 | spos''n it takes him three or four days? |
32325 | they give a glance at one another, and nodded their heads, as much as to say,"What''d I tell you?" |
32325 | what are they doin''_ there_, for gracious sakes?" |
32325 | would a runaway nigger run_ south?_"No, they allowed he would n''t. |
32325 | you ca n''t mean it?" |
29581 | ''Sure enough''friend-- what do you mean? |
29581 | A few months ago you did not question my motives,she said, reprovingly; then in a lower tone,"Your commander has never questioned, why should you? |
29581 | A lady has fainted there in the alcove,he said, in a voice which sounded strange to her;"will you go to her?" |
29581 | A lady who is no longer living? |
29581 | Advantageous? |
29581 | Ah, a slave? |
29581 | Ah, that touches you, does it? |
29581 | Ah, you absolutely refuse, Madame? |
29581 | Alone? |
29581 | Already? |
29581 | American-- I suppose? |
29581 | An hour ago you said:''Will you?'' 29581 And Captain Monroe?" |
29581 | And I was idiot enough to disdain that invitation? |
29581 | And I? |
29581 | And I? |
29581 | And Mr. Larue asks how much for her child? |
29581 | And Mr. Loring-- how is he? |
29581 | And brother Ken knew her, too? |
29581 | And by what professions, or what mystic rhymes or runes, did he bring about this enchantment? |
29581 | And does he, also, oppress you with his professional knowledge? |
29581 | And for what purpose was she educated in such an establishment? |
29581 | And if I refused it? |
29581 | And in the meantime what are we to do with the squad from down the river? |
29581 | And in the_ Yankee Army_? |
29581 | And is this sensation to illustrate her ideas? |
29581 | And my little Evilena the cause? |
29581 | And of the two? |
29581 | And of warriors? |
29581 | And she is dead-- how long? |
29581 | And the child was sold?--do you mean that? |
29581 | And the estate you have just purchased in order to enjoy this Eden- like plantation life? |
29581 | And the faculty-- they allowed it? |
29581 | And the poor woman''s child? |
29581 | And the reason of their depravity? |
29581 | And the woman? |
29581 | And this is all you have to tell me, Marquise? |
29581 | And treat him a- la- Holofernes? 29581 And what, pray, do you intend doing with my sailor here?" |
29581 | And when is this sale to be? |
29581 | And when you realize that there is-- some one else-- will you then resume your former role of friend? |
29581 | And who arranged this affair?--not-- my father? |
29581 | And why not? |
29581 | And why should a white girl like that be bought for the McVeigh plantation? |
29581 | And why? |
29581 | And you depend on me? |
29581 | And you do not call that a romance? |
29581 | And you eluded him? |
29581 | And you finally went? |
29581 | And you have lost those instructions? |
29581 | And you knew her well in Paris? |
29581 | And you parted unknown to each other? |
29581 | And you ran the risk? 29581 And you-- married me, knowing this?" |
29581 | And your mother? |
29581 | And,with a little mocking glance,"do the violets and forget- me- nots also grow among the bushes here?" |
29581 | And-- a--_Yankee_? |
29581 | And--? |
29581 | Any visitors today through all this storm? |
29581 | Anything serious? |
29581 | Anything wrong, Colonel? |
29581 | Are all the arrangements made by our people entirely satisfactory? |
29581 | Are the contents to be considered professionally, that is, confidentially? |
29581 | Are they, now? 29581 Are you serious, Judithe de Caron?" |
29581 | Are you sorry? |
29581 | Are you sure, mother, that she has not treated you to enchantment? 29581 Astute pupil of the nuns!--and Monsieur Incognito?" |
29581 | Aunt Sajane, when do you reckon we can dance at Kenneth''s wedding-- his and Gertrude''s? 29581 Blue?" |
29581 | Brigadier? 29581 But if it were so?" |
29581 | But my brother? |
29581 | But pray enlighten me as to why you will be unable to exchange words with the medical stranger? 29581 But suppose I could-- and should?" |
29581 | But suppose he''s away somewhere on business, or up there at Columbia on state councils or conventions, or whatever they are, as he is just now? |
29581 | But this so- called Duke could help parading the doubtful honor of his descent; yet who fails to return his bow? 29581 But to what use then all these accomplishments, all this pursuit of knowledge? |
29581 | But what of the divorce? 29581 But what will you do when there?" |
29581 | But when no one travels the highway? |
29581 | But why, why, why? 29581 But you are surely not the English- Americans of whom we see so much these days? |
29581 | But you do n''t know who I am, do you? |
29581 | But, my dear boy,gasped the Judge, thunderstruck at the news,"your commission stolen? |
29581 | By the same power, how can I shut up and tell you at the same time? |
29581 | Can such a thing be possible? |
29581 | Carolina story? |
29581 | Certainly!--and then? |
29581 | Certainly, certainly,agreed Judge Clarkson,"but a search, Kenneth, my boy? |
29581 | Charming-- is it not, Madame McVeigh? 29581 Child, what possessed you to tell to a Southern woman of the States that story reflecting on the most vital of their economic institutions? |
29581 | Clever Englishman; and as he supposed you to be a paid companion, was he, also, some gentleman''s gentleman? |
29581 | Colonel, are you serious in this matter? 29581 Did I not hear you actually praise one of those Yankees?--in fact, assert that he was a very fine fellow?" |
29581 | Did I not tell you? |
29581 | Did he not say anything? |
29581 | Did n''t I hold on to those instructions while that Yankee spy was trying to send me to-- heaven? 29581 Did she divine I would be in evidence this morning?" |
29581 | Did she speak to you? |
29581 | Did the canoe from up the river bring visitors? |
29581 | Did you mean that he was-- well, in love with this magnificent Marquise? |
29581 | Do I know her? 29581 Do n''t I look like a lamb decked for the sacrifice? |
29581 | Do n''t you remember the night run you made on the yacht_ Marquise_, last March? |
29581 | Do n''t you want to go along and study the progress of autumn roses? |
29581 | Do they add''Defender of the Faith''as our cautious English neighbors persist in doing? |
29581 | Do they, now? 29581 Do you feel tired after the ride, Uncle?" |
29581 | Do you forget that he was present when I gave you the papers? |
29581 | Do you know him? |
29581 | Do you know what a parole means? 29581 Do you mean to sing them all to me?" |
29581 | Do you mean your son Steve, or your grandson? |
29581 | Do you mean,he asked, eagerly,"that you could give me some new facts concerning the spy-- Monroe?" |
29581 | Do you observe,queried Madame, slyly,"that while Monsieur Loris does speak of her religion, he avoids enlightening us as to her personality?" |
29581 | Do you realize that all who run may read the subject of your discourse? |
29581 | Do you really mean that you believe fairy stories? |
29581 | Do you, now? 29581 Do you? |
29581 | Doctor Delaven, what are you doing in that uniform? |
29581 | Doctor Delaven, what is in that envelope? |
29581 | Does not the presence of a French Marquise show how Europe sides with us? |
29581 | Dr. Delaven, in the cause of justice, may I ask you to examine the contents of this letter? |
29581 | Enchantment? |
29581 | Entirely too much to announce in one evening,she decided;"do you forget they have had other plans for you? |
29581 | Evilena is at Loringwood, you say? 29581 Evilena?" |
29581 | Fainted? 29581 Faith, now, did you suppose for a minute it was the dowager I meant? |
29581 | First, let me know, Mrs. McVeigh, which you would prefer if you had a choice-- to have me for your family physician, or a physician in your family? |
29581 | For how many seconds did you tremble on the threshold? |
29581 | Forget- me- nots, is it? |
29581 | From-- you? |
29581 | Gertrude''s sake? |
29581 | Gideon Clarkson? 29581 Going to turn me out in a storm like this?" |
29581 | Good settlements? |
29581 | Had he a name? |
29581 | Have they enforced some silent system of existence on you since I have been down at Mobile? 29581 Have you any objection to going back there?" |
29581 | Have you become acquainted with the patriotic ardor of my little sister? |
29581 | Have you ever observed what a paintable view there is from this point? 29581 Have you fled to the shadows to avoid us all?" |
29581 | Have you found something mutually interesting? |
29581 | Have you need to fear any special enemy here? |
29581 | Have you no boyish loves of the past hidden away, each in their separate nook of memory? 29581 He was?" |
29581 | Heavens!--will the man propose to me again before we reach the house or have breakfast? |
29581 | Help whom? |
29581 | Homesick? |
29581 | How am I better than she but by accident? |
29581 | How could I do else? 29581 How did you all excuse his eccentricities before he got sick, Aunt Sajane?" |
29581 | How do we know that? |
29581 | How do you find time to study them all? |
29581 | How good of you to come at once-- and Mrs. Nesbitt, too? 29581 How have you been amused?" |
29581 | How much he give you, Uncle Nelse? |
29581 | How near? |
29581 | How soon will you start? |
29581 | Howdy, Miss Sajane? 29581 I am going now,"she said, steadily as she could;"I ask for no remembrance, no forgiveness; but-- have you no word of good- bye for me?--not one? |
29581 | I am to suppose, then, that you know her-- this Madame Alain? |
29581 | I begged that you make some excuse and leave for your command at once-- today-- do you refuse to heed that? |
29581 | I have an errand in the next street; will you come? |
29581 | I heard of a Jean Larue plantation across in Georgia-- is this it? |
29581 | I know they want him to marry; are you a friend of his family? |
29581 | I never did mean to steal your name, Captain Monroe,she explained,"for you are Captain Monroe?" |
29581 | I shall notify you, General, when my preparations are made; in the meantime here is your rose; and would not my new yacht do for the journey? |
29581 | I un''stan''you to say Mahs Jean Larue promise he keep yo''boy till such time as the money is raised? |
29581 | I wear an American uniform tonight; suppose I am an American? 29581 I, Madame-- I?" |
29581 | If-- if they win,and Pluto looked around nervously as he asked the question,"will it free us, Mahs Captain? |
29581 | In love with the Marquise? 29581 In this particular vicinity?" |
29581 | Indeed, now, would it? |
29581 | Indeed? |
29581 | Insurrection? |
29581 | Is it considered a part of Southern hospitality that the host reserves the right to insult his guests? |
29581 | Is it not true that you were received here as a friend, welcomed as a brother? 29581 Is it on my account?" |
29581 | Is it to separate me from_ him_? |
29581 | Is n''t he delightfully quaint? |
29581 | Is not the veranda more cool than in here? 29581 Is that not Romeo and Juliet under your hand? |
29581 | Is there any objection to Captain Monroe holding converse with other-- guests in the house? |
29581 | It is Madame Alain-- the Marquise de Caron you call the devotee? 29581 It is absurd to call her atheistical,"she insisted;"would I be influenced by such a person? |
29581 | It is that spendthrift-- Trouvelot, you care for? |
29581 | It is time, almost, for the mail up from Pocotaligo today, is it not, Pluto? |
29581 | It was dreadful, the way he led me on to say things, Aunt Sajane, for how was I to guess he was the doctor? 29581 It''s a hard, harsh sort of name, and he''s as-- as--""Soft?" |
29581 | Its contents? |
29581 | Just as she was stepping on ship board:''Your name I''d like to know?'' 29581 Kenneth''s last day home,"she lamented,"and such a celebration of it; is n''t it perfectly awful? |
29581 | Kenneth, you are ill; you--"No; it is really nothing,he said, as he rose,"I am a trifle tired, I believe; absurd, is n''t it? |
29581 | Kill us? 29581 Leave, alone-- without you?" |
29581 | Like that? 29581 Madame Blanc, will you receive the gentleman?" |
29581 | Madame Caron, will you please tell me this man''s name? |
29581 | Madame Caron, you-- you were talking to him,she said, appealingly,"you did not suspect, either?" |
29581 | Madame Caron,and she had never before heard him speak in that tone;"did you ever give Captain Monroe a picture of yourself?" |
29581 | Madame McVeigh!--and why? |
29581 | Margeret''s fit just frightened the plantation away for a minute,resumed Evilena,"but do own up, Madame Caron, is it Loringwood?" |
29581 | Margeret,he said, looking at her, curiously,"have you seen Madame Caron today?" |
29581 | Margeret? 29581 Mastered by myself? |
29581 | Mastered?--you? |
29581 | May I ask if Nelse is one of the five distinguished by your colors? |
29581 | May I ask,said Masterson, with cold courtesy,"why you did not state when taken prisoner that you were paroled?" |
29581 | May I express the hope that you sing the song often? |
29581 | Me of help? |
29581 | Me, is it? 29581 Me, is it?" |
29581 | Miss Loring distinctively heard the rustle of a woman''s dress as her door opened; did you hear that? |
29581 | Must? |
29581 | My-- confederate? |
29581 | Naw!--think me a bawn fool-- you? 29581 Never guessed that you loved me?" |
29581 | No fooling about this business, mind you,he said, briefly;"what has Madame Caron to do with any spy? |
29581 | No, I am not that,and she flashed a quick glance at him,"only I think I comprehend you, and to comprehend is to forgive, is it not? |
29581 | No, I do not; have a cigar? |
29581 | No; are you? |
29581 | Not by a single sentence of protestation? 29581 Not even for me?" |
29581 | Not going to run from the enemy? |
29581 | Not true? |
29581 | Now, Uncle Nelse, you do n''t mean to say it shortens people''s lives to have their picture taken? |
29581 | Now, do you wonder that I adore my Judge? |
29581 | Now, how can you possibly sympathize understandingly with a mother''s feelings, you Irish pretender? |
29581 | Now, in the first place, if there is any objection to answering my question, I expect you to tell me so; you understand? |
29581 | Now, what do you think? |
29581 | Now, will you go? |
29581 | Of course they do, and why should n''t they? |
29581 | Oh, I did not know you had left your room,she remarked, going towards him;"do you think it quite wise? |
29581 | Oh, Kenneth''s sister? |
29581 | Oh, are you in it, Colonel? |
29581 | Oh, it''s you, is it, Colonel? |
29581 | Oh, yes, of course,agreed Gertrude,"but Kenneth, the guard has arrived, and who will they take in his place for court- martial?" |
29581 | One of Miss Loring''s retainers? |
29581 | Poor fellow-- is it a death? |
29581 | Pretty? 29581 Probably both, Marquise; but there was a third meeting?" |
29581 | Promised them all? |
29581 | Really and truly, is that Yankee here? |
29581 | Really? 29581 Really?" |
29581 | Rhoda? |
29581 | Risks? |
29581 | Sad, is n''t it? |
29581 | Send? 29581 Settled by the families?" |
29581 | Shall you always regard marriage as merely an accident? |
29581 | She-- killed her child? |
29581 | Sick? |
29581 | Some one in New Orleans? 29581 Still knitting socks, Mistress Nesbitt?" |
29581 | Suppose it were so-- would that add to the wrongs you speak of? |
29581 | Than to die of love? |
29581 | That held yo''a slave when yo''was promised freedom? 29581 That old man had eyes like augers, and he seemed to look through me-- may I ask if he, also, is of your plantation, Madame?" |
29581 | That? 29581 The Jean Larue estate,"she said, meditatively, seating herself at the table and picking up a pen,"and your wife was named Rosa?" |
29581 | The Judge referred to Captain Monroe, did he not? |
29581 | The Judge? 29581 The Marquise? |
29581 | The very latest? |
29581 | Then why not introduce him to the Marquise? 29581 Then you wo n''t take it?" |
29581 | They were a wild, reckless lot so far back as I can learn, and I-- well, you could n''t call me wild and reckless, could you? |
29581 | Though we never did use to think Loringwood isolated, did we, Gideon? |
29581 | To Colonel-- or, shall we say, General-- McVeigh? |
29581 | To conquer the Yankees? |
29581 | To our family? 29581 To the President of the Southern Confederacy?" |
29581 | Truly? 29581 Uniform, is it? |
29581 | Was it not a rose you wagered me? 29581 Was n''t it clever of me to think of lighting the lamps?" |
29581 | Was n''t she brave? 29581 Was there no one here to introduce you?" |
29581 | We have heretofore had only good fortune; why should we complain because of a few obstacles now? |
29581 | Well, Dr. Delaven, why are you blowing like a bellows? |
29581 | Well, can you surmise the result of that order? |
29581 | Well, do n''t you mean to tell me what it is? |
29581 | Well, my man, what is it? |
29581 | Well, my sweetheart, what is it? |
29581 | Well, well? 29581 Well,"remarked Monroe, as he witnessed this maneuver,"what is it?" |
29581 | Well-- the finale? |
29581 | Well; what is it? |
29581 | Well? |
29581 | Well? |
29581 | Well? |
29581 | Well? |
29581 | Were you actually-- conversing-- with that-- demi- mondaine? |
29581 | Wha-- what you mean-- yo''Pluto? 29581 What about the runaways?" |
29581 | What ails you, Margeret? |
29581 | What became of the man you suspected as a spy this morning? |
29581 | What can one woman do against such a multitude? 29581 What did you say this child was named?" |
29581 | What do you mean by Miss Loring''s statement?--and what is this? |
29581 | What do you mean?--my betrothed? |
29581 | What further recompense to be desired? 29581 What is it you would tell her?" |
29581 | What is it, Margeret? |
29581 | What is it, mother? |
29581 | What is it? |
29581 | What is it? |
29581 | What is she like now? 29581 What is the meaning of this agreement to purchase a girl of color, aged twelve, named Rhoda Larue? |
29581 | What is the meaning of this? |
29581 | What is there concerning me which you both conspire to hide? 29581 What of the English people you asked to bring today?" |
29581 | What other one yo''talken''''bout? |
29581 | What relationship? 29581 What right had you to make any offers of love to me at any time? |
29581 | What right? |
29581 | What sort of stories do you prefer-- love stories? |
29581 | What the matter with yo'', anyway, a pitchen''yo''self''gainst the wheel that- a- way? |
29581 | What then do you expect? |
29581 | What then, of dogs, horses, lions, the many art works in metal or on canvas? |
29581 | What then? 29581 What yo''reckon Madame Caron think o''we all ef she done heah_ that_? |
29581 | What''s all the row about? |
29581 | What, then, is so droll? |
29581 | What, then?--you are only jesting with me? |
29581 | When did you discover the loss, Colonel? |
29581 | When? |
29581 | Where did you get so well acquainted with the scripture, Nelse? |
29581 | Where is he now? |
29581 | Where is this Larue place? |
29581 | Which means,he said, after a pause,"that you are in some danger?" |
29581 | Who are you that their cause should be yours? |
29581 | Who are you? |
29581 | Who is so fit to decide such things for children as their parents and guardians? 29581 Who is that with you, the Judge?" |
29581 | Who is the lady you call Madame Alain? |
29581 | Who is to die? |
29581 | Who was she, during those months of absence? 29581 Who, me? |
29581 | Who-- Cinthy? 29581 Who-- me? |
29581 | Who?--Margeret? 29581 Why did the man assault you?" |
29581 | Why did you leave the place without seeing me again? |
29581 | Why do n''t such men bear faces to suit their deeds, that all people may avoid the evil of them? 29581 Why do you call me English?" |
29581 | Why do you paint pictures like that? |
29581 | Why do you weep? |
29581 | Why not? |
29581 | Why not? |
29581 | Why should you be so curious on a first meeting? |
29581 | Why should you laugh, Monsieur Loris? 29581 Why should you starve yourself as well as me?" |
29581 | Why this desertion from the ranks? |
29581 | Why, honey, how you suppose our soldier boys would be provided for unless some of the representative men devote their time to the work? 29581 Why, mother, what is it, dear? |
29581 | Will Mademoiselle have her fortune told? |
29581 | Will he? 29581 Will you excuse us, doctor? |
29581 | Will you not allow me, Madame, to introduce myself? |
29581 | Would n''t he be a find for those abolitionists? |
29581 | Yes; does your betrothed approve? 29581 Yes; you will forgive me for having my name spoken to you after all? |
29581 | Yet you are in love with him? |
29581 | Yet you came alone? |
29581 | Yo''ai n''t boun''and sot to get run over, are yo''? |
29581 | Yo''mean I''ll have a chance, maybe, to buy him back some day? |
29581 | Yo''mean_ you''ll_ buy him in? |
29581 | Yo''reckon I evah fo''get that ar? 29581 You are actually serious?" |
29581 | You are angry at my presumption-- angry at the advantage I have taken of the situation? |
29581 | You are certain? |
29581 | You are not coquetting with me this time? 29581 You are not trying to play a practical joke, I reckon?" |
29581 | You are? 29581 You come by way of England, I believe; do you prefer the various dialects of that land of fog?" |
29581 | You could not be so hard- hearted as that? |
29581 | You did not complete the letter you were writing? |
29581 | You do not suppose I require proof of your innocence? |
29581 | You doubt even the religion of my people? |
29581 | You doubt the divinity of those laws? |
29581 | You fear the decision? |
29581 | You have met three times a man whose name you do not know? |
29581 | You have met? |
29581 | You have never seen it? |
29581 | You have not met the Marquise de Caron? |
29581 | You have read-- all? |
29581 | You know anything about where Scip and Aleck are gone? |
29581 | You love me-- now? |
29581 | You mean Dr. Delaven; not worthy of me? |
29581 | You mean socially? 29581 You mean to resign your commission for the sake of my society? |
29581 | You mean, then-- to marry him? |
29581 | You reason it out very well-- philosophy is one of your hobbies, is n''t it? 29581 You remember the story you heard here today-- the story of your guest and guardian, who sold the white child of his own brother? |
29581 | You saw no one and heard no one? |
29581 | You say that is the picture of Rhoda''s mother? 29581 You stand up fo''the race that took yo''chile from yo?" |
29581 | You talk of haste, but forget that I have waited three years, Judithe; remember that, wo n''t you? 29581 You two going to stay up all night?" |
29581 | You wild Irishman!--why not emphasize your prejudices by unearthing the Celtic and expressing yourself in that? |
29581 | You will not be so unkind? |
29581 | You would do that, Madame? |
29581 | You-- starving? |
29581 | You-- you heard news from Larue plantation? |
29581 | _ Doctor_? |
29581 | _ Our_ Evilena? |
29581 | ''In time freedom certainly will be arranged for-- but--""But Mahsa Linkum ai n''t done said it yet-- that it, Mahsa?" |
29581 | --was this what she meant? |
29581 | All the rest had''em took an''wheah are they?" |
29581 | Am I so perfect in all ways that I dare preach, even with paint and brush? |
29581 | Am I to commit murders?" |
29581 | An''now what happened? |
29581 | And did you hear about two of their field hands running off? |
29581 | And if she were not in love with him, why ignore their former acquaintance, and why intercede for him so persistently? |
29581 | And if that was not helping the cause and risking my life, well now, what would you call it?" |
29581 | And if there should be only one of us, that remaining one would need some man''s help all the more, and if it were you, who then would the man be? |
29581 | And if you want Dr. Delaven to hear about the old racing days, honey, had n''t you better take him into the library where the portraits are? |
29581 | And my poor friend, Madame McVeigh, you remember her, Judithe? |
29581 | And the storm; is n''t it dreadful?" |
29581 | And to that--?" |
29581 | And what about that boy of yours, Mistress McVeigh? |
29581 | And what has Matthew Loring?" |
29581 | And what''s all this, Gertrude? |
29581 | And you would have me believe that an Englishman could make such speeches? |
29581 | And, look here, Delaven, just get me out of that engagement to look at Dumaresque''s new picture, wo n''t you? |
29581 | Are the brutal possibilities of your social institution so very far in the past?" |
29581 | Are you and the world any the worse for them? |
29581 | Are you aware that the woman was a runaway slave, and liable to recapture in this particular vicinity?" |
29581 | Are you coming up, honey?" |
29581 | Are you displeased about the sale? |
29581 | Are-- are they a necessity to the preservation of life here?" |
29581 | But I have outgrown all that; we always outgrow those things, do we not? |
29581 | But as Monroe stepped out on the veranda she turned impatiently:"The despatch?" |
29581 | But did I not assure you I might never marry? |
29581 | But have you not noticed that each time I am allowed to enter this room I pay my devotions to that particular corner of the mantel?" |
29581 | But he did n''t, did he?" |
29581 | But he received instead a keen glance from the old eyes, and a question:"Loris, who is the man?" |
29581 | But her heart told her--? |
29581 | But you mean to be kind, and I suppose have some reason for asking?" |
29581 | But, how to tell Madame Caron? |
29581 | But, to change the subject, which of the two men have most interest for us tonight, Captain Jack or Dr. Delaven? |
29581 | By the way, have you ever been in Georgia or South Carolina?" |
29581 | By the way, how much time have you?" |
29581 | Can we go in? |
29581 | Can you comprehend that, Monsieur Loring? |
29581 | Captain Jack?" |
29581 | Clarkson has got him pinned down at last, has he?" |
29581 | Delaven?" |
29581 | Did I not prophecy there in the wood that we should meet again? |
29581 | Did I understand you to say the military men have come for your friend, the Federal Captain? |
29581 | Did he fancy she would allow it? |
29581 | Did he not seem at all afraid?" |
29581 | Did it improve her religion or cure her laziness?" |
29581 | Did not the Egyptian say it? |
29581 | Did this have a meaning relating to him? |
29581 | Did you know Loringwood is actually offered for sale? |
29581 | Did you never whistle''Jack Monroe''when you were a boy?" |
29581 | Did you observe the watchfulness of Miss Loring on the lawn? |
29581 | Did you think they would keep silence forever?" |
29581 | Do n''t you consider him very bright, Judge?" |
29581 | Do you entertain your visitors these days by dragging out the old linen for their inspection? |
29581 | Do you forget that? |
29581 | Do you hear me, Judithe? |
29581 | Do you hear that, Gertrude? |
29581 | Do you reckon I''d risk appearing before Gertrude Loring in a draggled gown just when she has returned from the very heart of the civilized world? |
29581 | Do you remember what your last spoken words to me were, three years ago?" |
29581 | Do you remember? |
29581 | Do you select that quality and color for any beauties to be found in them? |
29581 | Do you suppose I will go at once and leave my mother and sister to the danger of your intrigues?" |
29581 | Do you think I shall let you forget it? |
29581 | Do you wish, then, to be presented and-- to follow them?" |
29581 | Doctor, for--""Then that puts the Judge and Col. Kenneth and myself on the outside of your fence, does it? |
29581 | Does she mean to hide it all in some convent at last?" |
29581 | Fo''God''s sake, Mahsa Captain, wo n''t yo''be that man?" |
29581 | Free and alone? |
29581 | Friends or foes?" |
29581 | Gertrude,_ ca n''t_ I have him in here?" |
29581 | Go on, who was accountable?" |
29581 | Go on; what became of the girl?" |
29581 | Governess?" |
29581 | Had she remembered the pupil, but failed to recall the lesson taught? |
29581 | Had you forgotten their prejudices? |
29581 | Has no one seen her?" |
29581 | Has your stranger bewitched her also?" |
29581 | Have n''t I been raving about her for days? |
29581 | Have n''t I had to endure your reflections on my sanity because of the adjectives I''ve employed to describe her attractions? |
29581 | Have n''t you vowed she belonged to the type abhorrent to you? |
29581 | Have you an ideal to which nothing human may reach?" |
29581 | Have you moved so far into the swamp you ca n''t even hear when the family comes home? |
29581 | He arose, pressed her hand to his lips and turned away, when a woman''s voice spoke among the palms:"Did you say in this corner, Madame? |
29581 | He felt it as he neared the steps, but remarked carelessly:"Cloudy, is n''t it? |
29581 | He is the owner of blue eyes, a haunting voice, and-- what else is my rival?" |
29581 | He never after her death was heard to speak her name and did not marry until twenty years later-- what more apt material for a romance? |
29581 | He offered the glass and looked at her, meaningly,"Will you drink?" |
29581 | He shall free you, no matter what the result is to me; did you fancy I should let you go away under suspicion? |
29581 | He was about to go when Monroe asked:"What about that picture you said your wife had of the girl? |
29581 | He was honest, and he was a fighter, but of what use was that since he had blundered? |
29581 | He was the only one who knew; had he, educated by some spirit of jest, been the sender of the blossoms? |
29581 | Her more thoughtful moods demanded: Why not herself? |
29581 | Housekeeper? |
29581 | How could a nigger tell a white lady that story of Rhoda and Rhoda''s mother? |
29581 | How could she have confessed it to him? |
29581 | How dare you use that word?" |
29581 | How far are we from the house now?" |
29581 | How had she ever been led to sympathize with those rabid, mistaken theories of the North? |
29581 | How much did they know or suspect? |
29581 | How much you got paid on yo''little boy, Pluto?" |
29581 | How would they meet if chance should send him there during her stay? |
29581 | How yo''reckon Mrs. McVeigh like to hear such talk?" |
29581 | Howdy, Miss Lena?" |
29581 | However, I am eager for the finale-- the next day?" |
29581 | I ca n''t sing it, ca n''t I? |
29581 | I certainly shall not shake hands with a Northerner who may march with the enemy against our men; how can I?" |
29581 | I gwine take it ovah to Mahs Larue nex''week, sure, an''now-- an''--now--"His words were smothered in a sigh; what use were words, any way? |
29581 | I had no idea they were home, and it is too far to go back I suppose? |
29581 | I hear there are so many of them in Paris now; Comtesse Biron brings one today; there is her message, what is the name?" |
29581 | I like her way best; and Alain? |
29581 | I meant to give him''backsheesh,''as the Orientals call it, so why not select what the fellow most wants-- even though it be a pickaninny?" |
29581 | I say, Miss Evilena, how do you suppose the fellow in the song could be so dead sure of himself, for ever and ever?" |
29581 | I thought it was that Raquel, and I--""Oh, Raquel?" |
29581 | I use to kote that scripper to her many''s the day, but how much good it do to plant cotton seed on stony groun''or sow rice on the high lan''? |
29581 | I was so careless as to blot the paper; do you wish to examine that?" |
29581 | I was the one to do the bouncing out and nabbing you, was n''t I? |
29581 | I wonder-- I wonder if he ever had a sweetheart?" |
29581 | If she_ should_ leave for Savannah in the morning, why not let Matthew Loring hear, first, of the plans for Loringwood''s future? |
29581 | If you remain I shall invite you over; shall you?" |
29581 | In_ there_?" |
29581 | Is it a good likeness?" |
29581 | Is it for the dram? |
29581 | Is it not true that today you managed to divert suspicion from yourself to an innocent lady? |
29581 | Is it true that your picture of the Kora is to be seen at the dowager''s tomorrow?" |
29581 | Is it true the Linkum men are whipped?" |
29581 | Is it true you been took prisoner? |
29581 | Is n''t it a shame? |
29581 | Is she then ugly that she dare be so superior?" |
29581 | Is that another of the free institutions in your land of liberties?" |
29581 | It had to be played any way, so why not double the stakes? |
29581 | It is all because you are just a little theatrical, is it not? |
29581 | It is only a fancy; why should you leave for that? |
29581 | Judge, is n''t it you would lend a boy a hand in a love affair? |
29581 | Judithe looked at her kindly and said:"You have already tried to serve me today, Margeret; I''ve been thinking of it since, and I wonder why?" |
29581 | Judithe, does not this young lady fulfill the foreign idea of the American girl-- a combination of the exclamation and interrogation point?" |
29581 | Ladies maid? |
29581 | Let him remain here under guard until tomorrow?" |
29581 | Love in a woman''s heart should be her religion; what religion could be centered on so vile a creature? |
29581 | Madame Caron, may I ask you if you knew Captain Monroe previous to yesterday?" |
29581 | Maman, what can I say to make you understand that I could never refuse him again? |
29581 | May I ask some one to present me to your notice?" |
29581 | May I call him?" |
29581 | Might I ask how you know?" |
29581 | Miss Sajane? |
29581 | Mother, why not ask the boys of the guard to stop over for your party? |
29581 | My''gatah pasture? |
29581 | No?" |
29581 | Now do you comprehend my assurance that Captain Monroe is innocent? |
29581 | Now was n''t she worth a day''s journey afoot just to look at?" |
29581 | Now, I should say it was Margeret the warning was for; why should the likeness of her come to hint of your death?" |
29581 | Now, I think it''s funny; do n''t you?" |
29581 | Now, Monsieur Loris, would you call that love, or is it a sort of summer- time madness?" |
29581 | Now, dare you contest my statement that one of the Loring family is a Federal agent?" |
29581 | Now, do you comprehend why one woman has crossed the seas to help, if possible, overthrow an institution championed by you? |
29581 | Now, what are you planning for Kenneth''s home coming? |
29581 | Oh, Louise, child, do you fancy, then, that you are the whole world?" |
29581 | Oh, tell me all about her; is she very grand, very pretty?" |
29581 | One word, a look; you believe me?" |
29581 | Perhaps there is a betrothed somewhere to whom he has sworn allegiance in its most rigid form; is that the reason?" |
29581 | Pierson?" |
29581 | Pluto looked at him steadily for an instant, and then asked, cautiously:"Mahs Captain, you a sure enough friend of Madame Caron?" |
29581 | Pluto, what in the world are you doing here?" |
29581 | Reckon that strange gentleman give me dollar for it?--the frame is mighty pretty-- what you think?" |
29581 | Scip and Aleck; is n''t it too bad? |
29581 | She felt at times she would like to get them all under her feet-- trample them down and make room for something better; but for what? |
29581 | She had not the slightest idea of doing it then; but now, why not? |
29581 | She halted at the door and added,"Will you wait?" |
29581 | She has never been to the Terrace before, and she had a lost sort of appearance as she wandered in here, did she not? |
29581 | She heard them say Pierson had escaped, but had he retained the papers? |
29581 | She meant to live to the last minute of her life, and where so well as in the one city inexhaustible? |
29581 | She remembered his words of love-- the adoration in his eye; would that love protect her when he learned she was the traitor to his home and country? |
29581 | She saw Kenneth McVeigh speaking to his mother and glancing around inquiringly; was he looking for her? |
29581 | She wrote a line or two, and then spoke without looking up,"Will you be so kind, Captain Monroe, as to come over to the table?" |
29581 | Should we dare then to judge her by our standards, Maman? |
29581 | Since when are you fond enough of them to claim kindred?" |
29581 | Six weeks?" |
29581 | So, Monsieur, this is how you mean to love, honor and obey me?" |
29581 | So, she was a school friend of the Comtesse Helene, eh? |
29581 | So, why not grant him another day of grace? |
29581 | Somebody''s servants might have helped with that theft, why not his own? |
29581 | Still, since I had to send him away, what matter how? |
29581 | Still, what does it matter?" |
29581 | Suppose I succeed, how shall I communicate with you or with the detachment of Federals?" |
29581 | Talking over that disaster, Judge?" |
29581 | Tell Miss Gertrude I shall drive over soon as I am rested a little-- and Mr. Loring, is he better?" |
29581 | Tell me true, Mahs Captain, will we be free?" |
29581 | That drove yo''wild fo''years with misery? |
29581 | That she had so soon forgotten? |
29581 | That why I know fo''suah she come back fo''some special spy work-- what else that gal run herself in danger fo''nothen''?" |
29581 | That you heard me say they were very important? |
29581 | That you listened this morning when those military dispatches reached me? |
29581 | The Colonel looked steadily at Judithe as he said:"Captain Monroe, did you know Madame Caron before you met her in my house? |
29581 | The hat hid your face, you know, until you turned around, and then--""Well?" |
29581 | The man is in that room who did all that, an''yo''stan''up fo''him along of the rest?" |
29581 | The name-- the name is Loring-- Genevieve? |
29581 | The seal is yet unbroken-- will you read it?" |
29581 | Then McVeigh said:"Where did you get the picture found on your person last night?" |
29581 | Then Miss Loring and her uncle have got over from Charleston?" |
29581 | Then she glanced at Delaven,"did we interrupt a dissertation on your favorite topic, Doctor?" |
29581 | There had been an appointment?" |
29581 | There was conversation I presume?" |
29581 | They are the only absolutely joyous ones, are they not?" |
29581 | They were clear of the steps and of probable listeners before Judithe asked:"Where did you get this information?" |
29581 | Think she''d even cook vittels fo''her own self if she could help it? |
29581 | This is the twenty- second of September, is n''t it? |
29581 | This little woman"--and she nodded towards Louise--"must be treated for homesickness; you observe her depression since we left the cities? |
29581 | This time I''ve caught you, have I? |
29581 | This woman Marg''ret ai n''t Retta; they jest as yo''might say two different women;"then, after a pause,"any othah thing you want ask me, sah? |
29581 | To_ our_ family? |
29581 | WHOSE SOUL HAVE I NOW? |
29581 | Was I now?" |
29581 | Was it a relic of inherited tendencies when all women of whatever complexion were but slaves to their masters-- called husbands? |
29581 | Was it merely an accident that it was the marble on which the fragrant bit of red had been let fall? |
29581 | Was it true that certain slavish natures in women-- whether of Caucasian or African blood-- loved best the men who were tyrants? |
29581 | Well, he''s a lucky fellow; when are we to dance at the wedding?" |
29581 | Well, she had not been able to prevent the same fault, so, how dared she blame him? |
29581 | Well; is my education to be neglected because you fear I shall injure the daintily- bound books in the human library? |
29581 | What became of the forget- me- nots he gathered?" |
29581 | What can you do about an establishment such as mine? |
29581 | What cursed fancy led you to risk life, love, honor, everything worth having, for a fanatical fight against one of two political factions?" |
29581 | What do you think of him-- or of his motives?" |
29581 | What do you think of it?" |
29581 | What else were we to think of a bride who chooses a convent in preference to society?" |
29581 | What fo''you hide theah an''listen?" |
29581 | What good was freedom to me without her? |
29581 | What has inspired this fury in you? |
29581 | What has moved you to contemplate such sacrifices?" |
29581 | What is he like, nice?" |
29581 | What is he that any one should be exalted by his favor? |
29581 | What is the matter tonight?" |
29581 | What other woman would have dared question her like that? |
29581 | What particular Marquise?" |
29581 | What right have you now?" |
29581 | What right have you to tell me now? |
29581 | What star of the heavens dare twinkle beside her?" |
29581 | What then would you call lively if this has been dull? |
29581 | What was it the Judge was saying about emancipation last evening? |
29581 | What, child? |
29581 | When do we start? |
29581 | When do you expect him home?" |
29581 | Where could we begin?" |
29581 | Where have you gained it all? |
29581 | Where in all this wide world would I go with my freedom if I had it? |
29581 | Where is the justice you used to gauge every one by? |
29581 | Where the mercy to others weaker than yourself?" |
29581 | Where would you find a landlord of England or Ireland who would make a free gift of three thousand dollars to a servant? |
29581 | Who but the Federals would want them? |
29581 | Who could be oppressed with political schemes in this delightful life of the plantation? |
29581 | Who is the man?" |
29581 | Who opens the next scene?" |
29581 | Who the devil are you talking about?" |
29581 | Who was that man?" |
29581 | Why are you dallying with the servants''tasks?" |
29581 | Why did you weep at their words?" |
29581 | Why had she wept at his confession of love for her? |
29581 | Why must the very respectable world see only the sins of the unfortunate, and save all their charity for the heads with coronets? |
29581 | Why should she remember his words, or forget for one instant that infamy with which his name was connected? |
29581 | Why, what is wrong?" |
29581 | Why?" |
29581 | Will he, then, be interested in such small things as pickaninnies?" |
29581 | Wo n''t he be surprised to see you all?" |
29581 | Would the words be of no use? |
29581 | Yet I have seen eyes that were as honest looking, cover a vile soul, so why not this one?" |
29581 | Yet who among them could have access to the rooms of the family? |
29581 | Yo''all hear tell how one o''Cynthy''s boys done run away, too? |
29581 | You actually mean to let Captain Monroe go free?" |
29581 | You are curious as to her-- and you wish me to answer questions?" |
29581 | You are waiting for Colonel McVeigh? |
29581 | You ask me?" |
29581 | You have grief-- some sad misfortune?" |
29581 | You have the sorrow today-- what is it?" |
29581 | You know those last cookies I baked? |
29581 | You mean beautiful?" |
29581 | You mean it?" |
29581 | You saw how he could make me cry? |
29581 | You startled me into forgetting--""_ I_ startled_ you_? |
29581 | You think I keep time on all the runaway boys these days? |
29581 | You think me, then, too cold or too philosophic, in spite of what I have just told you?" |
29581 | You to command a brigade?" |
29581 | You will honor me by accepting them?" |
29581 | You''ll like that, wo n''t you?" |
29581 | You''re not at all sick, my man; what in the wide world are you shamming for? |
29581 | Your English people always do that, eh? |
29581 | Your words, your manner; what do they mean? |
29581 | _ Now_, will you take me away?" |
29581 | a creole? |
29581 | a tryst at mid- day?" |
29581 | affirmed the practical damsel;"do you want to hear the second?" |
29581 | and Dumaresque''s exclamation had a note of hope;"he had been a bore after all?" |
29581 | and Mrs. McVeigh raised her brows inquiringly--"then you have proposed?" |
29581 | and she laughed heartily;"am I grown such a thing of terror that I dare not enter a door lest danger follow? |
29581 | and she looked quite relieved at finding a companion in iniquity;"but you did shake hands?" |
29581 | and the Marquise raised her brows;"could we be more happy than we are?" |
29581 | and there''s many a one of us travels longer and finds less, and never gets a song made about him, either; so, that''s your first reason, is it?" |
29581 | and what is that but a mood, too?" |
29581 | and what word do you covet?" |
29581 | and you, Captain Masterson?" |
29581 | asked Evilena in frank self- laudation,"just listen how that rain beats; and did you see the hail? |
29581 | asked a voice beside them, and the beringed Egyptian pushed aside the palms,"or Monsieur, perhaps?" |
29581 | cried Madame Ampere, who had not yet spoken, but who expressed horror by her eyes,"where then do you find your standards for such judgment?" |
29581 | he demanded, stopping short,"my Mistress McVeigh?" |
29581 | he said, sharply,"if the old man recognized the likeness, how comes it that the mother herself did not see it?" |
29581 | he ventured, trying to see her face as he drew a chair closer;"longing for that twelve- year- old baby of yours? |
29581 | or was it only chance? |
29581 | said Evilena, triumphantly,"is n''t that as interesting as your Irish romances? |
29581 | said Judithe, with a little gesture of horror,"and what do they do with them-- those dangerous serpents of Eden?" |
29581 | say this to comfort me; why?" |
29581 | she asked, kindly,"looking for Miss Gertrude?" |
29581 | she demanded,"right here in the house? |
29581 | she persisted;"surely you will not counsel haste in deciding so serious a matter?" |
29581 | she repeated, bitterly,"and in your own age all that is changed?" |
29581 | then there_ is_ some further use you have for my house as a rendezvous? |
29581 | was that why she had consented to the hurried marriage?--to shield herself under his name, and to influence his favor for her lover? |
29581 | what sort of man would he be, any way?" |
29581 | you are not ill?" |