Questions

This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.

identifier question
35015The main switches are not yet turned on, so there is no current going through the leads as yet; what then is being done?
35015what is up with this one?
33098The further question presents itself, What meaning is intended to be conveyed by the terms which we translate as ships of many banks?
33098The question arises, What purpose could it have been intended to serve?
33098The question, however, arises, Can a botanist be accepted as an accurate witness in matters relating to shipbuilding?
46731In the English_ News Letter_ of March 12, 1666, was carried an encouraging news item:"A frigate of between thirty and forty[ tuns?
46731On March 31, 1626, Thomas Munn(?)
46731Plantation of John Hereford in[ Doegs?]
46731What shall I say?
45157What is she doing?
45157And the serious question arises, how is the British merchant service to be built up again?
45157How could a State department administer the shipping industry of this country in competition with foreign private enterprise?
45157What is this"riddle of the sands"they asked?
45157Will she carry them?
21745A dead what?
21745Do you mean the truck?
21745Do you see that little thing on top of the mainmast like a button?
21745Have you had breakfast, youngster?
21745Is it fine weather, Ben?
21745Oh, you know its name, do you? 21745 D''ye understand?
21745Davy stood beside him, and looking up in his face, said,"Please, sir, could we not make a raft?"
21745Do you think we shall be lost?"
21745Now, lad, what d''ye think of it?"
21745Now, when the steward saw Davy with a pale face, and red eyes, and awfully seasick, he went up to him with a smile, and said,"Sick, my lad?
21745dear me,"sighed the sick man,"where are we now?"
21745well, do you think you could climb up to it?"
21749What are you firing for?
21749What_ is_ the compass?
21749And if you lay it on the table the wrong end to the north, will it turn round of its own accord?"
21749And which end points to the north-- the eye or the point?
21749Can a_ Devastation_ or a_ Glatton_ ever inspire poetic thoughts and images?
21749Does not the epigram on our war- ships-- our"sub- marine fleet"--owe its point and sting, in a measure, to its truth?
21749If we were a maker of riddles, we would ask our reader,"Why is a ship like a human being?"
21749Is it a darning needle, or a knitting needle, or a drawing- through needle?
21749It may occur to the reader to ask, Why not have sea- going masted vessels at once?
21749The new sea- monster looks formidable enough in all conscience; but the question that arises the instant she quits the dock is, Is she sea- worthy?
21749The question, then, that immediately suggests itself is,_ Can_ a vessel be constructed to carry much heavier armour- plating than this?
21749What could such a crew do in a little open boat in so wild a sea?
21749What further evidence need we that the lifeboat is almost, if not altogether, indestructible?
21749What is now the state of matters?
21749Will a Dibdin ever arise to sing a_ Devastation_ or a_ Glatton_?
21749_ Why_ is it that the magnetising of the needle causes it to turn to the north?"
21749and having added,"D''ye give it up?"
43739And then I hear them calling, As slowly, slowly crawling They come working in from seaward With their whistles crying_ where_?
43739Are their souls at rest?
43739Are they here, the ones so dear?
43739Came she never back again to that port?
43739Deep, deep they quaffed, and quaffing, Struck the board with tankard chine--"Now in what port, to East or West, Dwells this true love of thine?"
43739Do their dead hearts know hopes and fears?
43739Do they wait, and list for the din Of the cheers and the bells to welcome them in-- For the cheers and the bells to welcome them in?
43739Has she no plume to wing a thought-- No spark to fire a mind?
43739Is she less holy than the spot That drank a hero''s blood?
43739My carrack rides the wave below, The castle glooms above--"Now who will sail the sea with me, To find the man I love?"
43739Oh, what comes flowing over the sea In the hush of the evening''s cool?
43739Oh, what comes flowing over the sea In the hush of the evening''s cool?
43739Oh, where are they who left thy port In strength of youth, in pride of love?
43739Sails she, perhaps, a ghostly, gliding form, That silent sea where ships are never spoken?
43739Then why neglect-- why give to rot This victor of the flood?
43739There is no beauty in her form; But when has simple beauty paid In vessel destined to perform As Cinderella to the trade?
43739Where does she lie, rig- tangled and hull- broken?
43739Who saw her sink that midnight in the storm?
23385Are all saved, father?
23385Did you hear a gun, Nancy?
23385Did you think you were going to be drowned, dear?
23385Has the agent for the underwriters visited her?
23385Hold on a minute, lads,cried Harry to the men in the boat;"are the pumps working free,--is your ground tackle good?"
23385How can I remember it if I am not helped? 23385 How many saved?"
23385How much water in the hold?
23385I spoke audibly, did I not?
23385Now, sir,he said, eagerly,"are you ready to start?
23385Oh, no; they all refused to move till we were put into it, and some of them ran to help us, and were very very kind?
23385Then you may be quite sure they were not afraid, however pale their faces were; but what of yourself, Annie-- were you afraid?
23385What is a lifeboat? 23385 Whereaway is''t, lad?"
23385Why do n''t you help me?
23385Why, what are you staring at, Mr Grinder?
23385Are any of our vessels getting ready for sea just now?"
23385Are men ever afraid, papa?"
23385Are you ready, Grinder?"
23385Did any of them refuse to obey orders?"
23385Do you know, reader, what such sums represent?
23385How has business been going on in my absence?
23385It was fully insured, I believe?"
23385Need we tell you, good reader, that Mr Webster and his daughter, and Mrs Niven, spent that night under the roof of hospitable Mrs Boyns?
23385What mattered his death or life to him?
23385Wherein does it differ from other boats?"
23385Why do n''t you take it away from me?"
23385Why, wot''s the use o''callin''it a lifeboat if it ca n''t do more than other boats?"
23385ai n''t that it again?"
23385cried Mr Webster, seizing Harry wildly by the sleeve and whispering to him in quick earnest tones,"Can nothing be done to save the ship?
23385exclaimed Mrs Boyns, when her son burst into the house,"is your father safe?"
23385he cried,"a letter-- about the wreck-- the_ Water Lily_--to the owners-- not too late, I hope?"
23385is that her coming off?"
61371And the gliders?
61371And they would try it at night?
61371And what would they still be doing at anchor?
61371Are they returned? 61371 But our-- uh-- tactics, is it?
61371But_ we_ whip them, ho?
61371Can they come through the Break?
61371Fighting?
61371How many corvettes?
61371How many corvettes?
61371How many?
61371How slow?
61371May I light the lamp?
61371Not to go in?
61371Sharks?
61371Then we wait?
61371There is a way?
61371We fool them, ho? 61371 We hit them?"
61371We made it, ho?
61371We wait like before?
61371Why?
61371You tell when?
61371Age?
61371And what about this thing of being afraid?
61371And what was he doing here with these strange, alien Kali?
61371Future?
61371Hobby?
61371How do you go about explaining caution to a people like that?
61371How''ll we do it, John?
61371Present Occupation?
61371Probably meaning how the hell should I know?
61371Reading?
61371Reasons?
61371So who had it, the head or the heart?
61371Specialty?
61371Tahn coughed and leaned his head sideways, fairly equivalent to a casual''so what?''
61371The humid, hot salty flavor of a strange sea blanketed the cabin, and sparked a sudden thought:"What the hell am I doing here?"
61371They are to keep out of the Passage?"
61371What did they call it?
61371Where are the rest?"
61371You know how it will be?
18062All ready?
18062And if he ai n''t?
18062And you refuse to take me out?
18062But if we have n''t done anything wrong, they ca n''t do anything to us, can they?
18062Did you want to cross?
18062How are they to know?
18062If I take myself out, everybody''s satisfied and no harm done?
18062The sampan men refuse to take me out?
18062Well, then, it''s not in the rules and regulations that you can prevent my taking myself out?
18062What you doin''here by your lonesome?
18062Where''s Hall?
18062Where''s he gone?
18062Where''s the sailing- master?
18062Wot''s salivated?
18062''Tis when that order comes on cold, blustering nights that"Jack"grimly mutters:"Who would not sell a farm and go to sea?"
18062Ai n''t he just as liable to lose his wages as the rest of us?"
18062And as for Uncle Sam, why, what''s he to know about it?
18062Chris, mine boy, I haf ben a sailorman for twenty- two years, und do you t''ink you are so good as me?
18062Did I ever shirk?
18062Did you or any other man ever have to take a wheel for me?
18062Eh?
18062Have n''t I always done my work?
18062He was not ashore?
18062How do they know but what we came here of our own accord?
18062How do they know whether we got them in open water or in the closed sea?
18062How was he to get aboard ship?
18062It was their right to collect fares in advance, and who was he to command them to take a passenger and collect fare at the journey''s end?
18062Or a lookout?
18062Or go aloft?"
18062Spillane shook his head, and demanded,"Where''s your father?"
18062Then what was the matter?
18062Vot vas dot?"
18062What had happened?
18062What if it should break under his weight and the pressure of the wind?
18062What was happening on the_ Mary Thomas_?
18062What?
18062Where was the hitch?
18062Why do n''t you become a boat- steerer?"
18062Will you run it for us?"
18062Would she clear the crest of the gigantic wave?
28748And what is it for?
28748And will you heave the lead now?
28748Are you all ready?
28748Are-- are there things to see that I could n''t see from here?
28748Because it''s fun?
28748But are n''t they pretty colors, Sol?
28748Ca n''t you hear?
28748Did he thrash you, Sol?
28748Do n''t you think so?
28748Ever get a thrashing, Jake?
28748For_ me_?
28748Got a shark hook?
28748He does n''t have to race through his breakfast,he said,"does he, Sol?
28748Is it grease?
28748Is that his back fin?
28748Is this for me?
28748My south meadow?
28748Now, what do you see there?
28748Oh, is it?
28748Oh,he cried,"what is that star?
28748See that land?
28748So that the fish would n''t see him coming?
28748So?
28748That please you?
28748Want to go ashore with me?
28748Well, Jacob,he said, at last,"what are you thinking about?
28748What are you laughing at?
28748What are you thinking about, Sol?
28748What is that?
28748What makes you think that you could see Java from up there?
28748What shall we do with a drunken sailor?
28748What you trying to do?
28748What, sir?
28748What-- you-- trying-- to-- do?
28748Where is it, Sol?
28748Where, Sol?
28748Who are you, and where did you come from?
28748Why do the men want to catch so many of them?
28748Why do you suppose he follows the ship that way? 28748 Will you let me do that?
28748Will you? 28748 _ Are n''t_ they pretty?
28748_ Did n''t_ he, though?
28748And are n''t they small?
28748And do n''t they fly fast?"
28748But-- but how shall I put down all those numbers that show how the ship goes?"
28748Did you see that his underneath parts were white?
28748It''s queer ground, Jacob, is n''t it, to be waving around so?
28748Steele?"
28748Steele?"
28748That light is a long way off, is n''t it?"
28748We were very lucky, were n''t we, to be just in time for an earthquake?"
28748Were n''t you?"
28748What does he care about models?"
28748What is it?"
28748When shall we get there?"
28748Why does n''t it get all tangled like ropes, so that it stops the ship?"
28748You know the time I fell overboard?"
28748[ Illustration:"HE WAS IN THE HOLD OF THE SHIP"]"Who is that man and where did he come from?"
28748asked little Jacob,"that three- cornered thing?
40689A nabob? 40689 All hands into the boats?"
40689All hands on deck?
40689And who are you, young gentleman?
40689And, papa, we must not forget this old boatman, too, who pulled the boy and me-- what''s your name? 40689 Are there any more of you stowed away?"
40689Are you much hurt, sir?
40689But suppose it came on thick weather, and you lost sight of us?
40689Can I remain in command of her, sir?
40689Come on, my lads?
40689Do n''t give in, Mason?
40689Fire, and then charge?
40689Good- bye, Jack?
40689Here, Jack?
40689Hold on, whatever you do?
40689I suspect the_ Fawn_ will outsail the junk, and then what will you do?
40689I wish to show my gratitude, but how can I do so?
40689If you so think fit, my friend,answered Mrs. Brigadier;"and if the boy-- by- the- by, what is your name?"
40689Is it? 40689 Jack Junker?
40689Jack, are you prepared to die?
40689Jack, were you ever sea- sick?
40689Oh, but that may not be for a long time, father; and what should I do with myself till then?
40689Remember my directions?
40689Rouse up, every one of you; rouse up, you young villains, and go to your duty?
40689Shall I take Jack with me? 40689 Then I suppose you are the young Brigadier?"
40689Then you will let me go, will you not, father?
40689They say your father is a nabob; is he?
40689Very jolly, eh?
40689Well done, Rawlings?
40689Well, Jack, what do you think of it?
40689Well, lads,he said,"are you ready to put on your clothes, and come along to young master''s friends?
40689Well, old man,again asked the young gentleman,"are you going after my boat?"
40689Well, what mischief have you been after?
40689Well, you do look like two drownded rats?
40689What are all you boys idling here for?
40689What are we to do with these black fellows, I wonder?
40689What are you sodgers doing there?
40689What business had you to be tumbling into the water?
40689What''s the odds?
40689Who am I? 40689 Who are you, my men?"
40689Who is that growling out?
40689Why, Jack, shall I have to do this sort of work?
40689Why, Mr. Plumb, what amount of navigation do you possess?
40689Will one or two do?
40689Yes; never say Die?
40689You have heard of good service stripes, may- be, Jack?
40689You think so?
40689A favourite song of his, which he used to hum, was--"What''s the use of sighing, While time is on the wing?
40689Do you happen to know your mother''s maiden name?"
40689Do you know what a brigadier is, you young jackanapes, eh?"
40689Farewell?"
40689It would be great fun going away by ourselves to look after prizes, would it not?"
40689Jack?"
40689Plumb?"
40689Suddenly, a loud voice was heard, shouting,"On deck, lads, for your lives?"
40689We there had to answer to our number, and then came the pipe--"Watch and idlers, holystone decks?"
40689Were you?"
40689Where is my papa?
40689Who is it?"
40689You do n''t want to get drowned, do you?"
40689but are you to be a midshipman?"
40689he exclaimed in a sharp, querulous tone,"where have you been all this time?
40689he exclaimed,"where are you going?
40689he shouted again,"what will become of the boat?
40689she said turning round sharply,"without consulting me?"
40689we will sell our lives dearly?"
40689what do you mean by that?"
40689what is that buoy floating there?"
40689what is this?"
40689what will become of the boat?"
40689what''s the use of crying?
40689you want to know who I am?"
34489And you heard the whole of this, and were not dreaming, boy?
34489Are we all agreed, mates?
34489Are you ready to go, Lizard?
34489Brave Englishman, can you tell me any thing of my daughter? 34489 But if we do n''t heave them overboard or run them up to the yard- arm, what are we to do with them?"
34489But now that I have told you somewhat about my worthless self, let me ask you how you have passed the last few years of your mortal existence?
34489But what fortune hast thou, coz, to support a wife? 34489 But what is it you would have us do?"
34489But with whom did you sail to those far- distant realms? 34489 But you would not have us tow the useless hulls round the world, Master Walker, would you?"
34489But, see, what flags are those? 34489 Can it be that any on board are treacherous, and wish thus to gain our favour?"
34489Didst ever gain further tidings of the Lion?
34489Do the anchors hold?
34489Do ye see that there are more women and children to go first? 34489 Do you call this hot?"
34489How fares it with the good ship, Dick?
34489If they were ever to come back without a stiver in their pockets, who would take their word against ours, when we are rolling in wealth?
34489My daughter?
34489See, Dick, did I not say right when I told thee that we should do our duty, and leave the consequences to Providence?
34489Shall we once more tempt fortune?
34489Stranger, could you guide a ship in the direction in which you think they were driven? 34489 To us it might be precious if combined with charcoal and sulphur; but whence is the latter to be procured?"
34489To which class does the noble senhor belong, I wonder?
34489We are in the power of Providence, and if it is thought fit that we die on some foreign strand why should we complain? 34489 We have been protected hitherto: why not to the end?
34489We wo n''t despair, Dick; are you armed?
34489Were those showers sent without design?
34489What ails it with thee?
34489What is it?
34489What is it?
34489What is your pleasure with me, knaves?
34489What now, Oliver?
34489What say you, Ap Reece? 34489 What think you, Carlingford?"
34489What took you to those foreign lands?
34489Whence come you, stranger, and what brings you into these parts?
34489Where are his strong boxes? 34489 Where have your excellency''s eyes been of late?"
34489Where''s the odds? 34489 Who can he be?"
34489Who can those be? 34489 Who has gone to- night?"
34489Who is this?
34489Why should we be alarmed?
34489As they went, the idea occurred to him,"What could be Donna Isabel''s intentions?
34489But where were the women and children?
34489By what possibility could they escape falling on the spot where Edward was endeavouring to hide?
34489Can not they be made to produce as good timbers and planks as those that are rotten, think ye?"
34489Could he do better than risk it in so promising an adventure, and in three short years come back and marry his beloved Beatrice?
34489Could she be taken through?
34489Did she propose flying with him?"
34489Do not you see that we are victorious?"
34489Edward gasped for breath-- such bitter, taunting, cruel words, how could he abide them?
34489Have you no idea who were the speakers?"
34489How could he withstand such an appeal?
34489How is it that he is not with you?"
34489Is it the Inquisition, with a turn at the thumb- screws, the rack, and the stake, or liberty and Old England, you look for, my brave lads?''
34489It may take time, but what matters that, provided we succeed in the end?"
34489Maybe in your own land there is some fair young dame from whom you would not willingly be parted, eh?
34489No more to come the double- shuffle and hear the merry clapping of the old people''s hands?
34489Now came the perplexing point, what would she do?
34489Now d''ye see?
34489Now, old gentleman, you follows your daughter, I suppose?"
34489Should he ever again see his beloved Beatrice?
34489Should he ever be united to her he loved?
34489Should he ever return there?
34489Should she cast anchor there?
34489Still, how could he hear of him, and how rescue him if he was a prisoner?
34489Surely you went not alone?"
34489Tell me, do I know her?"
34489Was he on board any of the prizes?
34489Was it fancy?
34489Was mercy to be shown to those who never showed it to others?
34489Was the foundered ship a friend or foe?
34489Watchwords:` if God be with us;''answer,` Who shall be against us?''
34489We can but die once, whether with a Portugal''s bullet through us, or by the_ vomito preito_ or under yonder foaming seas-- what matters it?
34489Were all their hopes to be disappointed?
34489What are they about now?
34489What can it ever advantage you?
34489What can we do to help the officers?
34489What could he say?
34489What had become of them?
34489What is thy name, friend?
34489What probability was there of a ship visiting that island?
34489What prospect that the life of any one of them would be saved?
34489What say you, Master Walker?
34489What were the Portugals about to do?
34489What''s the odds?
34489What, prithee, is to be gained by it?"
34489Where would you find a more humble Christian man than good Master Walker, our minister?
34489Who could tell at what moment the good ship might be cast on some coral reef or on some desert shore, and be dashed to fragments?
34489Who could this weather- beaten stranger be?
34489Who has the first watch?"
34489Why should a man sigh and groan if he can laugh?
34489Would she desire to accompany him?
34489Would the savages pluck up courage and return to the attack?
34489Would their crazy, battered bark float as long?
34489Would their provisions and water hold out till they could reach some hospitable shore?
34489Yet could this be possible?
34489Yet what could he say?
34489are you about to slaughter those who so gallantly risked their lives to save ours?
34489cried Don Lobo, giving a furious pull at his beard,"that Englishman?"
34489disconsolate, Ned?
34489dost seek to give a wide berth to an old friend?
34489how come you to know that, boy?"
34489is that so, Senhor Don?
34489never again to dance a hornpipe on Deerbrook Green among the lassies of our village?
34489why should he cry and moan if he can sing?
34489will you come?"
60796All is arranged?
60796All ready? 60796 And the woman, his wife?"
60796Any idea where we are, John?
60796Are n''t you just a trifle independent with your superior officers, Mr. Barnes? 60796 Are we beating them?"
60796Are we going anywhere? 60796 Are you all ready to get off?"
60796Are you joking about getting the ship afire?
60796Awake?
60796But the steward''s coming now----"You''re in earnest?
60796But what are we to do?
60796But who else?
60796By chiminy,he said,"d''you refuse to opey orders, huh?"
60796Can either of you men steer with the oar?
60796Controleur Opdyke? 60796 Did you find out why the captain changed the course?"
60796Diss iss Mynheer Parnes? 60796 Do what?"
60796Do you girls remember that morning you came into the consul''s office in Hong Kong?
60796Drunk, eh? 60796 Dutch posts?"
60796Fire under?
60796Going to make the river, John?
60796Got your pistol? 60796 Head in for Sesajap, eh?
60796How did you and Li Fu know so much about this mutiny?
60796How do we get upstairs?
60796How have we lost?
60796How many are in it, Gajah?
60796How''s the wind?
60796How?
60796I did n''t send her out to China, did I? 60796 Is it for the children that you''re doing it?"
60796Is it-- us? 60796 Is n''t it mutiny to refuse to obey orders?"
60796Is there such a man?
60796Just where do you want us to come, please? 60796 Leave her?"
60796Me? 60796 Missee, I think mebbeso you can row plenty good?"
60796Missionary at the post, eh? 60796 Oh, me and Van?
60796Perhaps you know my father there, Mr. Barnes-- the physician, Doctor Sayers?
60796The other children? 60796 Then-- then you do n''t believe that-- we can reach the post in time?"
60796They''re bound to silence us at all costs, are n''t they? 60796 Two bells evening watch?"
60796We ca n''t get out, then?
60796We can depend on him?
60796We did n''t see you?.
60796We might run into that junk, eh? 60796 We''ve won?
60796Well, ladies,said Barnes,"how do you find yourselves this morning?
60796Well, when is this to take place?
60796Were you there?
60796What do you mean?
60796What happened?
60796What has that to do with our present situation?
60796What is it, men? 60796 What is it?"
60796What''s that?
60796What''s this mean?
60796Where is Hi John?
60796Where is the chief? 60796 Where''s Li Fu?"
60796Who to, me?
60796Why are you doing this? 60796 Why did n''t you let me do it?
60796Why has the course been changed?
60796Why not? 60796 Why, what have you found now to keep you occupied?"
60796Why?
60796Ye drunken scut, can ye not bear your liquor like a man? 60796 You agree to take the white women off our hands?"
60796You are sure of the men?
60796You ca n''t say that you''ve enjoyed yourselves so far, can you?
60796You get in that boat and row, d''you understand?
60796You mean,questioned the girl,"that they can row so much faster than we can?"
60796You see that point dead ahead, with what seems to be a river- mouth on the other side? 60796 You think this ship worth dying for?
60796You told him, Li?
60796You''re hurt?
60796_ Mejuffvrouw_, shall I make you happy, yes? 60796 All ready, men? 60796 And their mother?
60796Any chance?"
60796Anybody hurt?"
60796Are there any savages around?"
60796Are they gaining on us, or holding steady?"
60796Barnes?"
60796Barnes?"
60796Comfortable?"
60796Did your fan work all right?"
60796Do you know that it''s nearly noon?
60796Do you really want it-- and a husband who''s a sailor and has n''t a lot o''money?
60796Does either of you girls know anything about surgery?"
60796Eh, John?"
60796Ellen waked up yet?"
60796Ever been there, Miss Maggs?"
60796Get me?"
60796Have n''t you seen already what sort o''swine the others are?
60796Have you been with her long?"
60796Have you got the boat ready?"
60796Have you seen any ship, or will any see us?"
60796He would n''t bring Nora, and he was n''t going to bring me----""What was the lie?"
60796Heading in for Borneo-- the skipper changed the course, did he?
60796Hear that so- called wireless officer scream?
60796Hope you girls wo n''t lose your jobs if you do n''t get back to China on schedule?"
60796How badly did you smash those engines?
60796How do you like Borneo?"
60796I guess you ladies are disappointed that you did n''t find another queer duck in the second officer''s shoes, eh?
60796I''ll be in the chart- house----""You mean that little coop up above the bridge, with the awning?"
60796III"What part are you from?"
60796Is it for her?
60796Is it set for two bells?"
60796Is that an engagement ring you''re wearing, Miss Sayers?
60796It means you must row most of the night, understand?
60796Make believe we''re on a desert isle, ca n''t you?"
60796Miss Sayers, keep your eye on the kids, will you?
60796Miss-- er-- Ellen, will you take this stuff as I hand it out?
60796Nora, pass up that little black medicine chest, will you?
60796Notice anything funny about it?"
60796Now what brought you on that ship?"
60796Now, I want you to get off before Ellen wakes up, see?
60796Now, do you understand?"
60796Or am I queer, too?"
60796Or those white women beautiful enough to die for?"
60796Or would you sooner go back to China?"
60796Remember that bungalow on the hill above Sausalito that I told you about?
60796Revolvers loaded, men?"
60796Ripped through her sheathing, eh?
60796Savvy that?"
60796Savvy?
60796Savvy?
60796Savvy?"
60796See?
60796Shall a white man be braver than we?"
60796So you like the Eurasians, do you?"
60796Surely they are not to be killed?"
60796That why we''re turning?"
60796Then, do you think she''d want to leave you?
60796Told him you were my wife, eh?
60796Trouble coming this afternoon, is it?
60796Understand Malay, do you?
60796Well, you will be as quick as it can be managed-- won''t you?
60796Were you ever there?"
60796What answer shall we make to Lim Tock when the time comes?"
60796What did you do to them?"
60796What is it?"
60796What news?
60796What reason have they to mutiny?"
60796Where''s your pistol, Ellen?
60796Who is to command, after that?"
60796Why do n''t you leave one of those Chinese here, and go with us?"
60796Why worry?
60796Will you forgive her?"
60796You beat them off?"
60796You must not deliberately sacrifice yourself----""Cut it out, will you?"
60796You savvy that?
60796You savvy?
62176Anything doing in the tow- boat line?
62176Are you going to sit here all day and let those_ Henry Fosters_ laugh at you, Captain?
62176But what are they doing together in Pensacola harbor?
62176But where is the money coming from? 62176 But why and what for?"
62176Ca n''t I go in her, mother?
62176Captain Bruce been here? 62176 Do the cowards want to abandon ship while we are trying to work her off?"
62176Do you think I cooked up that yarn to get a reward out of the insurance companies? 62176 Going to push Pringle out of the way?"
62176Have you heard anything ashore here about her going on the Reef?
62176How about Captain Bruce?
62176How about salvage? 62176 How''s the boy?"
62176I want to know all about everything, do n''t I, mother? 62176 Is he sober?
62176No hurry, is there? 62176 The boilers will be as good as new,"grunted McKnight,"but how about my bronchial tubes, Captain?
62176Well, we can get all the tow- boats we need and good ones, ca n''t we?
62176Were all hands saved from the wreck?
62176What are you going to do about it? 62176 What are you holding back?"
62176What did he say?
62176What does he say about it?
62176What has he got to say for himself?
62176What on earth does he want now? 62176 What steamer is that?"
62176Where does Captain Bruce come in?
62176Where, oh where, is Uncle Jim?
62176Who said he was master of the_ Kenilworth_?
62176Who told it to you?
62176Why do n''t you get busy? 62176 Why do n''t you tackle Captain Bruce and make him tell what he knows?"
62176Will he be on the_ Kenilworth_, too?
62176Y- you asked your f- father about it?
62176You and I will back old Prentice into a corner first chance we get and make him apologize-- won''t we?
62176_ If you do n''t, the underwriters will know the reason why._ Shall I tell_ you_ why?
62176Ai n''t I wrecked plenty vessels?
62176An''if we do n''t work quick an''soon them Key Westers''ll be a- scatterin''down an''run us back home-- you heah me?
62176And do you think_ we_ had anything to do with the stranding of Captain Bruce''s steamer?
62176And was he, Malcolm Bruce, ship- master, willing to let this Jim Wetherly stand accused of the crime planned in Pensacola harbor?
62176And we_ Resolutes_ propose to be first on hand to pull her off and disappoint certain enterprising persons?"
62176And you tell me old man Prentice has copies of the cable messages that prove Captain Jim was waiting for the_ Kenilworth_?
62176Anything exciting happen?"
62176Anything new ashore?"
62176Are you coming off?"
62176Are you going back to England to face the music?"
62176Are you resting easy as you are?"
62176Ask him to- night what_ he_ thinks about it, but do n''t breathe a word to anybody else, will you?"
62176Birds and flowers and how''s the weather, eh?
62176But how about you?"
62176But supposing Pringle offers him the ten thousand dollars anyhow to saddle the job on us_ Resolutes_?
62176Can you coax old Bill McKnight to come along for ballast?"
62176Captain Jim soothed Dan as best he could and whispered to his cousin:"Did you get that?
62176Captain Wetherly finally growled to the mate:"He does n''t seem to have very good manners, does he?
62176Cleared for Vera Cruz, has she?
62176Come aboard my ship before sailing and let me thank you, wo n''t you?
62176Could it be the_ Three Sisters_ of Jacksonville, the big wrecking tug of which Captain Jim''s cousin was master?
62176Dan raised his voice in most lugubrious accents:"But wo n''t there be any salvage for me after all I went through in this beastly ship?
62176Did you fish in the water amidships for a sack of powder?
62176Did you know that the cook and the galley boy quit the_ Resolute_ last week and went up the Gulf to ship on a Central American fruiter?
62176Do n''t I come in on that?"
62176Do n''t I know?"
62176Do you know that I am suspected of plotting with you to put this ship on the Reef, Captain Bruce?
62176Do you know when?"
62176Do you mean to say you have listened to such infernal lies about a man like Captain Jim Wetherly?
62176Do you suppose his father is really going to sea at daylight, or is he just using Bart to fool us?"
62176Do you want to be run under?"
62176Do you want to know the truth?
62176Does he beat him to death, same as I figured on doing sooner or later?
62176Ever see him before?"
62176Has the_ Sombrero_ been beaten while I was laid up?
62176Have you bent the new main- sail on the_ Sombrero_?"
62176Hide behind women and children, eh?
62176His manner was so glum, in fact, that Dan spoke up rather sharply:"What in the world has happened to you?
62176How about it, Mr. McKnight?
62176How did Bart explain the smash- up?"
62176How in the--, of all the-- Whew, what are you doing here anyhow, Dan?"
62176How is Bart Pringle?
62176How long had he been unconscious?
62176How much is it worth, Pringle?
62176How''s everything with you?
62176I ca n''t spare anybody else, and you will be my agent, understand?
62176I did n''t bring you into it, did I?
62176I kept my mouth shut to shield some innocent people, women and children, friends and kinfolk of mine-- do you see?
62176I ought not to forget you, had I?
62176I suppose if you could go North to school, you and your mother would feel that you had your share of salvage, would n''t you?"
62176I told him all I knew about his being suspected of the crooked job, and what does our busy skipper do then?
62176I wish----""And you listened to such stuff?"
62176I''se wreckin''marster-- yo''heah me?
62176If dem tow- boat folks tries to come aboard, keep''em busy wid dem belaying- pins yondah an''yo''knives-- yo''heah me?"
62176Is Dan aboard?"
62176Is anybody killed?"
62176Is he all broken up?
62176Is it true that Bill McKnight clamped the safety- valve down and said it was up to Providence to see that his boilers did n''t blow up?"
62176Is she really going to come off?"
62176Jeremiah Pringle was off here, also, the night the_ Kenilworth_ went ashore, was he not?
62176Keep it dark?_''"Dan looked bewildered for a moment and stared at Mr. Prentice who seemed to be talking the sheerest nonsense.
62176Let_ me_ be accused of helping to wreck your steamer?"
62176Now he has to do the job_ my_ way-- understand?
62176Now that his plot to lose the_ Kenilworth_ is spoiled, why should n''t he win a nice pot of money by helping save her?
62176Now, where did he get those?"
62176Presently Captain Jim sung out:"What are you Bahama niggers doing aboard that steamer?
62176Pringle muttered with a sneer:"Who is master of this steamer, anyhow?"
62176Shall we stand by?"
62176So you like him, too, do you?"
62176Sure enough, I''ve robbed you of your rights, have n''t I?
62176Talking behind my back, is he?
62176The boys laughed as they gazed after him, and Barton said:"Filibustering must keep your hair standing on end, eh, Dan?
62176The captain is sorry he did it._''What did you mean, Mr. Frazier?
62176The new tubes are most all in, are n''t they?"
62176Their faces were very solemn and they spoke with evident effort:"Were-- were you too late, Uncle Jim?"
62176There was nothing said about the_ Kenilworth''s_ next voyage, was there?"
62176There would be rich salvage and loot in a general cargo, would n''t there?
62176There''s nothing leaked out, has there?
62176They may be interested in losing her, do you see?
62176To Dan he replied airily:"Caught afire, has she?
62176To put a stopper on my tongue, was n''t it?
62176Tow you to Key West?
62176Want to come, Dan?
62176Want to run down to the fort and back?"
62176We''ll say nothing at all about wrecks, riots, and revolutions, will we, Mrs. Frazier?
62176Well, I''m in charge of wrecking this steamer, understand?
62176Well, we''ll say no more about it;_ nothing at all about it, understand_?"
62176Were you coming ashore from his ship when you ran under my bows?"
62176What could he say?
62176What did you mean by''_ Do n''t let them know?
62176What else has happened?"
62176What in the world is he doing so far from Key West, and how did he happen to be run down in a boat at night in Pensacola harbor?
62176What is he planning to do now?"
62176What the dickens are you driving at anyhow?"
62176What were you doing out here, boy?"
62176What''s the news from Captain Jim?"
62176What_ can_ I do?
62176When Mr. McKnight became quieter for lack of breath, Dan spoke up with a sudden shock of unhappy recollection:"But how about Captain Bruce, Uncle Jim?
62176Where are our witnesses, eh?
62176Where is the_ Resolute_?
62176Who are you?"
62176Who is the other fellow?
62176Who knew Jerry Pringle was aboard the_ Resolute_ that night in Pensacola harbor?
62176Why do you think he will be interested, Dan?"
62176Why?
62176Will you really forgive me?"
62176Wonder if there''s anything doing so soon?
62176You and Bart as busy as ever?
62176You believe it all, do n''t you, Bart?
62176You ca n''t charge it up against the_ Kenilworth''s_ owners, can you?"
62176You can stow these trifles away as a deck- load, ca n''t you?"
62176You have n''t heard it from Mr. Prentice?
62176You want to find out what I think of to- night''s business, do n''t you?
62176You will be good enough to sit down aft with me for a few minutes?
62176You wo n''t hold it out against me any more, will you, honest?"
23773Afraid-- I? 23773 Ah, how do you do, Squire Wormbury?"
23773Am I sure that I am a living man at this moment?
23773And for that reason you modestly ask for one half?
23773And to keep the secret?
23773Are Mrs. Hamilton and your daughter on board?
23773Are n''t you going to divy?
23773Are you afraid, Charley?
23773Are you sure that you put it there?
23773Are you sure this is the room that Harvey Barth had?
23773Are you sure?
23773Buried?
23773But how came he in Havana?
23773But how came it in the chimney?
23773But how happened you to find it?
23773But how long will it be before you find out whether this man had any heirs?
23773But how much money will there be?
23773But suppose I ca n''t pay it; you wo n''t be hard with me-- will you?
23773But what in the world were you doing on the beach with the lantern and the shovel?
23773But where did you get the diary, Leopold?
23773But where on earth did the money come from? 23773 But who owns the money?"
23773But whom was Squire Moses talking to?
23773Ca n''t I help you, Leopold?
23773Ca n''t something be done, father?
23773Ca n''t we tow the old boat?
23773Ca n''t you do it down by the boat?
23773Ca n''t you wait till next week? 23773 Can I do anything more for you?"
23773Can I do anything, Captain''Siah?
23773Can you keep a secret, Stumpy?
23773Can you make out what she is, Leopold?
23773Can you take the yacht into the harbor, Leopold?
23773Can you? 23773 Come, Stumpy, ai n''t you going down to the boat?"
23773Das is nicht enough, Leopold-- eh?
23773Did Harvey Barth tell you just where the money was buried?
23773Did any one know about the secrets written down in it?
23773Did n''t he take the Orion into the river in the fog?
23773Did n''t you find it?
23773Did they ask you at the fish market where you got them?
23773Did you hear it?
23773Did you know him?
23773Did you want to see me about this business?
23773Discount it?
23773Do n''t you know my boat, sir?
23773Do n''t you see it? 23773 Do you know where we are, young man?"
23773Do you mean to tell me that an old salt thought of drinking water? 23773 Do you say you are not?"
23773Do you think I could help you out?
23773Do you think he went home for the Bible before he left?
23773Do you think so?
23773Do you think there is any danger?
23773Doctor,called Mr. Hamilton,"where are you going?"
23773Ethan Wormbury you mean?
23773Fooling with me-- were you?
23773Fun alive-- isn''t it?
23773Harvey could n''t have been engaged to her, or anything of that sort-- could he?
23773How can that be?
23773How long are they going to stay up there, Le?
23773How many more you want of dollars?
23773How much do you owe, father?
23773How much have I now?
23773How much is there? 23773 How much money have I now?"
23773How much money is there in the bag?
23773How old do you think she is, father?
23773I say, Le, ca n''t we get up a clam- bake for the girls?
23773I wonder what she is driving at?
23773If I do n''t furnish it, my son will be-- Did you hear the rest?
23773If they wo n''t bring any more than that, what are you going to do about it?
23773In the Rosabel?
23773In the first place do you know whatever became of Harvey Barth''s diary?
23773Is he dead?
23773Island Hotel, sir?
23773Making a what?
23773May I borrow a coal of fire from the stove, doctor?
23773Must we drown here?
23773No hurry-- is there? 23773 No?
23773No? 23773 No?
23773Not much; but do you think we can get off in the whale- boat?
23773Not your money? 23773 Now, where you was get him?"
23773O, that was it-- was it? 23773 O, that''s it-- was it?"
23773O, you want me to keep the secret-- do you?
23773See here, Leopold; do I understand you to say that you are going to keep the whole?
23773Shall I put it away for you?
23773Shall we find a good fire in the parlor?
23773Stumpy, what''s this story about the money found on the beach?
23773Stumpy?
23773That fellow was scared-- wasn''t he, Le?
23773That''s easy enough to understand-- isn''t it?
23773Then how did you know he had a good- looking son, familiar with the poets?
23773This is delicious-- isn''t it?
23773Tinkers?
23773Was he lost?
23773Was he? 23773 Was it Harvey Barth?"
23773Well, Leopold, what luck had you to- day?
23773Well, what do you suppose has become of it?
23773Well, what else?
23773Well, where is he now?
23773Well, who was he, then?
23773Were there any other boats near you?
23773What are you doing here in the dark?
23773What are you going to call this boat?
23773What are you going to do out there, Leopold?
23773What are you going to do with the book, then?
23773What are you going to do with the gold, Stumpy?
23773What did he put it in there for?
23773What did you get?
23773What do you ask apiece for two or three of them?
23773What do you ask for them?
23773What do you know about him?
23773What do you mean by friends? 23773 What do you mean, my son?"
23773What do you mean?
23773What do you mean?
23773What for you want him?
23773What for?
23773What for?
23773What has he done?
23773What have you got?
23773What in the world were you doing here, Le?
23773What is it? 23773 What is it?
23773What is it?
23773What is the use of going there, if you do n''t know where the money is hidden?
23773What luck to- day, Le?
23773What old hunks?
23773What schooner is that?
23773What shall I do?
23773What shall we do?
23773What under the sun are you doing, Leopold?
23773What were you digging for, Le?
23773What were you doing with that book, doctor? 23773 What were you doing with that shovel?"
23773What''s her name?
23773What''s that?
23773What''s that?
23773What''s that?
23773What''s the matter now?
23773What''s the matter of him?
23773What''s the reason it wo n''t?
23773What?
23773When did you leave New York, Captain Bounce?
23773Where are we?
23773Where did he get the Bible, then?
23773Where did you come from? 23773 Where did you get the money, Stumpy?"
23773Where did you get the money?
23773Where did you learn to cook, if you were a schoolmaster?
23773Where did you put it?
23773Where is it buried?
23773Where is it now?
23773Where is it?
23773Where is she from?
23773Where you bound?
23773Which was the pun?
23773Who are all these people, Leopold?
23773Who did bury it, then? 23773 Who is going to take any of it?"
23773Who is he, anyhow?
23773Who said I did?
23773Who said so?
23773Who says we are?
23773Who was he?
23773Who was he?
23773Who was the feller that buried the money?
23773Who''s there?
23773Whom does she belong to?
23773Why Stumpfield, what do you mean?
23773Why do n''t you go in the Rosabel, and tell them yourself?
23773Why not? 23773 Why should he change his name, then?"
23773Why should he share the money with you, Charley?
23773Why should he take it?
23773Why so?
23773Why, sir?
23773Will you come on board?
23773Will you promise me solemnly not to tell any one, not even your father, what I say to you?
23773Will you promise to keep the secret?
23773Wo n''t your father?
23773You agree to take this as your share?
23773You have brought us in-- have you, Leopold?
23773You have n''t been introduced to him?
23773You heard the clock on the Methodist church strike-- didn''t you?
23773_ Wie viel geld haben sie? 23773 Barth?
23773Barth?"
23773But what brought you down here in the darkness, Stumpy?"
23773But what has all this to do with your mother''s case, or my father''s?"
23773But where did you get them?"
23773But where in the world did they come from in this fog?"
23773But who hid the money there?"
23773Ca n''t we go by land?"
23773Carboy?"
23773Cruel-- wasn''t it?
23773Did he tell you about her?"
23773Did n''t I say he was dead and gone?"
23773Did n''t we invite you to come?"
23773Do you keep a log of the voyage?"
23773Do you know, Belle, he speaks German?"
23773Do you know?"
23773Doubtless she would claim the diary, if it was found; but had she any better right to it than its present possessor?
23773Hamilton?"
23773How happened that piece of a boat- hook, to be a foot under ground?
23773How is that, my boy?"
23773How much is there in the bag?"
23773If she is not a relation of Harvey, what is she, and why did she want his room?"
23773If you pick up a pocket- book in the street of New York, does it belong to you, or to the one that lost it?"
23773Is n''t it strange how these girls will sometimes give up all their joys for a feller?"
23773Is that you?"
23773Not bad-- eh?
23773Now, can you keep a secret?"
23773Redmond?"
23773Redmond?"
23773Redmond?"
23773Shall you be satisfied with this?"
23773The great question now was, What would the mackerel bring in the market?
23773Was Captain Barnwood in her?"
23773Was Harvey Barth a relation of yours?"
23773Was the brig struck by lightning?"
23773We will bring the boat down now.--Will you go with me, Stumpy?"
23773What does that prove?
23773What for you want him not to be open?"
23773What has that to do with this matter?"
23773What would you say, Leopold, if your governor should tell you you were intoxicated?"
23773What''s her name Le?"
23773Who buried it in the sand?"
23773Why do n''t you lower one of the sails, Leopold?"
23773Why should he take so much pains to hide it, if it was not?
23773Will any one hear us?"
23773Wormbury?"
23773You were placed in my care--""Were we?
23773_"Was haben sie, hier, Leopold?
23773exclaimed Isabel;"is n''t it, Rose?"
23773how was that?"
23773where so much money haf you found, Leopold?"
23773you see?
52548''And are you in London for any time?''
52548''And his father?''
52548''And if not?''
52548''And when did it happen-- yesterday, or a week ago?
52548''Are the hatches grated?''
52548''Are they reconciled?''
52548''Bombay, eh?
52548''But how did you come into the dhow you were found in?''
52548''But how?
52548''But the dhow we found you in-- how did she escape, and why did n''t the_ Briseus_ capture her?''
52548''Do not all wrecks,''he muttered,''send forth around them countless articles of débris, countless portions of the raffle that encumbers their decks?
52548''Do you see that lightning down there in the south?
52548''Do you think,''she asked, standing there gazing down on him once more--''do you think any who were in the ship when we escaped can be still alive?
52548''Gilbert,''she shrieked now to her lover,''Gilbert, can nothing be done; nothing to save him?
52548''Going out to be married, eh?
52548''Have they been kept in the dark, think you, and is the sun dazzling them now?''
52548''Have you searched further?''
52548''His Name is-- What?''
52548''How has the room been made so beautiful?''
52548''How should it be aboard any ship?''
52548''I mean that flag- lieutenant talking to the young lady in the white dress?''
52548''I wonder if he was ever in love with you?''
52548''Indeed, what was that purpose?''
52548''Is he mad-- or dead?''
52548''Is he really gone mad, do you think?''
52548''Oh, Gilbert,''Bella exclaimed piteously, as she clung to him,''what is going to happen?
52548''Perhaps you think I have behaved indiscreetly?''
52548''Shall I go back,''he mused,''and begin again on the other side?
52548''Shall I go with you?''
52548''Suppose that had happened?''
52548''Suppose your uncle, Lord D''Abernon, had objected?''
52548''Surely, you, a sailor, have not come back from the sea unwell?
52548''Thank God for what?''
52548''Thank God?''
52548''That?''
52548''The woman he had hoped to win?''
52548''Was he the sailor you once told me of who wanted your love?''
52548''Was he, Bella?''
52548''Was not her own life, also, of little enough use,''she asked herself as he spoke,''to make her sympathise with his remark?
52548''Was that here, on this spot where we are now?''
52548''What are you doing to the creature?''
52548''What do you make it out to be?''
52548''What do you make of it?''
52548''What do you mean, George?''
52548''What does that mean?''
52548''What in God''s name is it?''
52548''What is to become of us all?''
52548''What''s that commotion forward?''
52548''What''s the matter with the men, and why are those three holding Wilks up like that?''
52548''What, then?''
52548''What?
52548''What?
52548''What?''
52548''Where are you staying?''
52548''Where will it blow us to now?''
52548''Whereaway?''
52548''Who takes tigers or panthers for passengers?''
52548''Who''s that?''
52548''Whoever is he, uncle?''
52548''Why?
52548''Why?''
52548''You are better?''
52548''You are not ill?''
52548''You do not object to my presence, I hope?''
52548''You will not mind,''he said, as he did so,''being left alone for half an hour?
52548--to one who muttered something--''tired-- been working all day?
52548A hope of what?
52548And again she cried:''Bertie, what is it?
52548And have you seen nothing pass at sea, either near or far off?''
52548And in lodgings, Bella-- oh those lodgings and that cooking!--you remember, darling?
52548And this here Navy lieutenant what''s to marry her is a lord, ai n''t he, Bill?''
52548And where was the whaler, and the sailors, and the_ Briseus_?
52548And why did they all desert you?
52548And,''he said, addressing the two mates who were standing near him,''we have seen such stars hereabouts before, eh?
52548Are those the tidings?''
52548Are you going on this voyage?''
52548Are you still in pain?''
52548Are,''he added hoarsely,''any others saved besides yourself?
52548Are-- are-- any more saved from that?''
52548Ay, but did it?
52548But what could that avail, since, by the time the_ Emperor_ could be brought to the wind and a life- buoy thrown overboard, he was half a mile astern?
52548But, even then, of what use are five to fist all the canvas she can carry?''
52548CHAPTER VIII''HIS NAME IS-- WHAT?''
52548CHAPTER XVIII''SHE WILL NEVER KNOW''''How in Heaven''s name has she ever done it?''
52548Can I see her at once, now?
52548Can he speak anything but English, child?''
52548Can it be a dog?''
52548Can we do nothing?''
52548Can you guess?''
52548Charke?''
52548Did the cub land here or hereabouts?
52548Do you know that, besides any desire to call and see you, I came for another purpose?''
52548Do you think I would go to Bombay to marry the heir to a title or a possible admiral if I did not love him?''
52548Do you think,''he went on, addressing Charke, lowering his voice a little,''it is one of those?''
52548Do you want the ship to be blown over and go to the bottom in her?
52548For is not my Gilbert the handsomest, bravest sailor that ever wore the Queen''s uniform?
52548Had, they reflected, this insidious horror been, therefore, brought into a ship full of white men?
52548Have they murdered one of their companions, or what?''
52548Have you ever been to a naval ball?''
52548Have you had time to discover?''
52548Her uncle, she understood, could of course still issue orders, but-- how was it to be known that those orders were being obeyed?
52548His name is-- is----''''What?''
52548How are the sails to be attended to?''
52548How could he?
52548How could she hope to ever see me in life again, how await my coming?
52548How had she done it?
52548How has he broken away from the cable?
52548How is the child to go alone, in a great liner, with two or three hundred passengers, all the way to Bombay?
52548How was it to be, how could it ever be, done?
52548How was she saved?''
52548How was she to go out to Bombay alone and unprotected?
52548How-- how could I endure that?''
52548How?
52548How?''
52548I hope, Miss Waldron,''he added,''that you have an invitation for the ball?''
52548I presume I had best leave him to go down with the dhow?''
52548I suppose the lieutenant has not been able to tell you much about the dhow yet, Miss Waldron?''
52548I''m certain to be reported lost when the ship goes into either Zanzibar or Aden, and---- What''s that?''
52548In fact, we must reach them, or some other place, or----''''Or what?''
52548Is that it?
52548Is there any hope of that?''
52548May I show you, sir?''
52548Mr. Charke, can you bring her to me?''
52548Mr. Charke, do you think there is any hope?''
52548Only what?
52548Shall I?''
52548Shall we not make sail?''
52548She said, therefore, now, as she turned towards the ladder:''Then you wo n''t punish it, Mr. Charke, will you?
52548Should you not rather say you risked your life for hers?
52548Soon?''
52548Supposing-- supposing----''''What, darling?''
52548Surely-- surely-- it is not a drowned man?
52548That is, I understand, how the voyage is to be made?''
52548That''s not one of Her Majesty''s ships?''
52548That''s strange, is n''t it?''
52548The Mozambique Channel is full of ships on their way to India during the time of the southwest monsoon-- you will let me make signals, will you not?''
52548The glass low, you say?
52548Then he said:''Where is she?
52548Then those wretched slaves-- even they will eat and drink, wo n''t they, Fagg?''
52548Then, after a moment or so of silence, he said:''Do you know how long we have been here?
52548Then, before he could reply, she suddenly exclaimed, as her glance fell on the sea,''What is that out there?
52548Was he wrong in the surmise, wrong in his deduction?
52548Was she beginning now-- now that she had none other in the world to watch for-- to desire to have him always near her?
52548We could not escape from this place in that, could we?''
52548Well, he wo n''t get you, anyway, will he?
52548Were they bearing up bravely?
52548What about the others?''
52548What are these feelings you speak of, Charke?''
52548What can a blind, stricken man do?''
52548What do you say, Fagg?''
52548What do you say?''
52548What do you think?''
52548What do you think?''
52548What does it mean?''
52548What dreamt of?
52548What had he hoped?
52548What happens?
52548What has happened?
52548What horrible disease that blinds them to commence with, and then kills-- and kills not only negro, but Arab-- captured and captor?
52548What is hanging over us?
52548What is it he is saying?''
52548What is it?''
52548What is the matter?
52548What is the matter?''
52548What is there to hurt me here?''
52548What more likely than that a sailor''s jacket and a cap should have floated ashore?''
52548What new horror was this that approached them in the night, that crept in ambush towards them as though intent on secret murder and attack?
52548What on earth''s the matter?''
52548What shall I tell her, over and above the greatest news of all, that you are restored to her?''
52548What should they be doing here?''
52548What then would happen, even if it were not followed by death?
52548What was there to stand between those loving hearts?
52548What was this sentiment?
52548What was to be done?
52548What''s the matter with that man?''
52548What, therefore, could he have died of?''
52548What?
52548Where do you think we are?''
52548Where is the lieutenant?
52548Where?
52548Who are you?''
52548Who-- which-- will be the next?''
52548Why should I think of the position?''
52548Why should I?
52548Why was this, he asked himself?
52548Why?
52548Would they also fall victims to that which had killed the others?
52548Yet, clever as they are, you would n''t like to back them for much to furl those sails again if the breeze freshened into a strong wind, would you?''
52548Yet, who can foretell the future-- even so much as what to- morrow may bring forth?
52548Yet-- why does he not come to me?''
52548Yet-- yet-- how else to kill it?
52548You are not afraid-- of that?''
52548You do not desire to make me unhappy?''
52548You think there is no likelihood of any others being saved from the wreck?''
52548You wo n''t let it be thrown overboard in any circumstances, will you?''
52548_ Who_ would be the next?
52548could there be aught to make our bitterness-- our lot-- more terrible?''
52548exclaimed Pooley,''what is to happen next?
52548he found himself asking: what, in these last few days?
52548how can I part from you?''
52548she asked, as, taking up the cocoanut shell, she turned to go towards the rivulet that ran at her feet,''or is it better for me to remain here?
52548she broke off, still uttering her meditations to her own heart alone--''why do him such injustice even in my thoughts?
52548she exclaimed, putting her hand on his sleeve,''what does it all mean?
52548she screamed to Fagg, who was about to descend again to the boat to fetch off the others still in the dhow,''where is he wounded?
52548what has happened now?
50598''A lobcock''? 50598 ''Who is Sir John?''"
50598A barren voyage, think''st thou? 50598 A great will, sayest thou?"
50598A thief, you say?
50598Ah, two honest men? 50598 Ah,"said the Old One,"what is this tale I have heard news of?"
50598An it please you, sir,said he,"have I the honour to address Captain Candle of the Rose of Devon frigate?"
50598And have never seen Devon? 50598 And have we, then,"asked he,"but three barrels of good powder?"
50598And if I have no money?
50598And if we go south? 50598 And is it to be fetched out of her unharmed?"
50598And now, brave lads, let us have our heads together: though we lie but a hundred leagues off these banks of Newfoundland, what say you? 50598 And now, you old witch, who''s in port and where shall we find the softest berths?
50598And seemeth she staunch to one in the hold?
50598And shall we knock out the ports and loose the tacklings?
50598And that the fellow hath a liking for our boatswain, think you?
50598And that?
50598And what did they say?
50598And what have you heard of him?
50598And what meanest thou by saying thou would''st have speech of Mistress Nell Entick?
50598And what say you? 50598 And whence does good Captain Candle expect his men?"
50598And whence is yours?
50598And who were the other Englishmen?
50598And whom,asked the lad,"do you serve now?"
50598And why, perdy, did''st thou jam thy foot on mine till the bones crunched? 50598 And yours?"
50598Art thou called before the mast?
50598Art''ee addled?
50598Back again, John? 50598 Boatswain--""Yea?"
50598But hast thou plumbed his inclination with thy sounding lead?
50598But sure he could not mean it?
50598Cam''ye far?
50598Came you in search of this ship?
50598Can''st arrange it?
50598Come, now, on such a day, did not a certain man come to your house in Bideford and abide there the night?
50598Did not my brother go thither, years and years agone, for the company of Dorchester merchants? 50598 Did you ever hear of Dr. Marsham of Little Grimsby?"
50598Did''st thou not once cry the whole ship''s company out of sleep to see a mermaid that would entice thee to thy peril? 50598 Dost laugh at a tale so sad as mine?
50598Dost think my wits are wandering, Martin? 50598 For a keeper?
50598Goest far?
50598Gone?
50598Gone?
50598Hast been long away?
50598Hast come far?
50598Hast come for more fish?
50598Hast forgot the tale of calamities and wrecks and sharks?
50598Hast money?
50598Hast never heard of Sir John Bristol? 50598 Have the two guests who came tonight in a coach gone yet to bed?"
50598Have you done as you said?
50598Have you tuppence?
50598His name?
50598Holla, is all laid ready below?
50598How did he go?
50598How now?
50598How should I know that?
50598How stands she?
50598If I may add a word, my lord? 50598 Is this the woman?"
50598It is not to count against me, my lord? 50598 Mind you, Ned,"or"Mind you, Hal, the night we landed on Hispaniola?"
50598Mother Taylor has no wine? 50598 Nay, my lord, how should I know this man?
50598No wine?
50598Not Rab, you say?
50598Not one will venture back? 50598 Now, sirrah,"quoth he,"of whom mak''st thou this squalling and squealing?
50598Now,said the thin man, his face by this time fully as red as his fellow''s,"where''s thy store of silver?
50598Old frog, is it?
50598One of us, say''st thou? 50598 Philip Marsham?"
50598Reason? 50598 Said he aught of hanging?"
50598Saw you your brother?
50598Sir John Bristol? 50598 Sir John?
50598Tell me,said he,"what happened on shore?"
50598The Old One?
50598The horses stood the day''s travel well?
50598Think you all this is worth a second thought? 50598 Thou yerking, firking, jerking tinker,"said he,"dost hear the cry?
50598Thou? 50598 Thou?"
50598To the colonies?
50598True, old mother witch, who knows?
50598Well,cried Phil,"would you charge me with theft?"
50598Well,cried the Old One in a voice that seemed as full of wonder as of wrath,--they heard him plainly,--"what in the Devil''s name mean ye by this?"
50598Well?
50598What are they doing to him?
50598What can a woman do when her beauty''s gone but hold a man by the food she sets before him? 50598 What has a poor devil in stocks to do with the hangman, prithee?
50598What in the fiend''s name hast thou been up to, this night?
50598What in the fiend''s name hath befallen us?
50598What ship is that,said Captain Marsham,"which lies yonder, in line with the house on the farther shore to the right of the three trees?"
50598What then?
50598What was that he said of hanging?
50598What''s afoot?
50598When did he go?
50598Whence and for what have you come?
50598Whence and for what have you come?
50598Whence came you, my gay young gallant, and what are you doing here?
50598Where hast thou hid it?
50598Where is this Doctor Marsham''s home?
50598Where?
50598Who hath gone?
50598Who in the Devil''s name art thou,he roared,"that comes ranting into an honest house and bawls out thus the name of Mistress Nell Entick?"
50598Who is that?
50598Who knocks?
50598Who of us hath got to sea to escape the law?
50598Who''s to this gun? 50598 Who,"he said at last,"is this Sir John?"
50598Why in so great haste?
50598Why then, in God''s name, did ye not rake them with a broadside or twain?
50598With what and whom would''st thou have nought to do?
50598Would''st see us in pillory, egged, turnipped, nay, beaten at the post?
50598Ye''ll spell it out for me?
50598Yea, master,he cried,"for thee and for Mate Malcolm?"
50598You ask me, then, to join you?
50598You have chalked down the score against us?
50598You have reached with due and faithful care a verdict in this matter?
50598You will wait for me?
50598You?
50598Young man,said the gentleman who had first seized him,"who and what are you, and from whence have you come?"
50598Your father''s name?
50598''A lapwing''?"
50598''If any chuff,''say I,''can buy good wine for a half crown the jug and sell it at profit for tuppence the can, why can not we?''
50598''Twill not undo the King''s pardon?"
50598A hundred pounds, sayest thou?
50598A mere gooseling?
50598After working a while longer he said as if in afterthought,"Ye''ll bide wi''me a while?"
50598And did you never see a man dance on air?
50598And does this Master Stephen Gangley in all truth dwell in Liverpool?"
50598And shall I bring thee ale?
50598And that we must go south to find prey for eagles?
50598And the Old One said to Harry Malcolm,"Saw you not how deftly the fellow twisted out of the corner, and with a sly remark that no one can take amiss?
50598And the men are aloft?
50598And then a high voice cried,"Who called my name?"
50598And then it came upon me and I cried in English,''Who of us knew the dog, Will Canty, could talk Spanish?''
50598And understand you the business?
50598And was not a Spanish ship fair prey for the most law- abiding of English mariners?
50598And what could a man do but slide with the others down into the boat and rest on the loom of an oar?
50598And what could a man do to save him?
50598And what now, lad?
50598And what, prithee, are two honest men doing here?"
50598And who is there will grudge labour in such a cause?"
50598And who to this?
50598And why this fierce haste?"
50598And you have taken the inn?"
50598Are there any there whom you have seen elsewhere?"
50598Art deaf?
50598But three men came into the cabin by way of the gallery while I was there--""Three men, say you?
50598But what gentlemen of the sea have not?
50598But who''s thy fellow?"
50598Can you navigate a ship?"
50598Devil take the wench, is she deaf as an adder?
50598Did you hear him slopping at the butt the first time passing?
50598Did''st ever see a Roundhead knave would brave the wild lions of America unless he thought there was gold in''t?"
50598Do you recall to mind the thin man I quarrelled with, that first day?"
50598Does not a man looking out of a corner, with a wall on two sides of him and no one behind him, see more than another?
50598Doubtless you have kept the day in mind?"
50598Fiend take the wench-- where''s Nell Entick?"
50598Fish, sayest thou?
50598For a moment the servant hesitated, then from within a great voice cried,"Come, Cobden, what''s afoot?"
50598Had he but stayed in school, as his father had desired, and gone back to Little Grimsby, who knew what might have come of it?
50598Had the manners of a country vicarage so stifled him that he became desperate?
50598Hast ever been at Little Grimsby?"
50598Hast never considered the pains of hanging?
50598Hast no tongue between thy teeth?"
50598Hast thou prepared the way for us?"
50598Hath all this been made plain and clear to her?"
50598Have I not placed thee right?"
50598Have I not seen thee before?"
50598Have you mastered the theory?"
50598He stopped and again looked at his guest, ran his fingers through his beard and demanded suddenly,"Thy name, laddie?"
50598He will not come, though by his speech he is a bold man?"
50598Hear you not the sound of axes?
50598Hear you not the uproar?
50598Heavy steps then approached, and a gruff voice cried,"What devilish sort of game is this?"
50598How came you bedfellows?"
50598How else could they do their business but for good Mother Taylor?"
50598How stands he?"
50598Indeed, who knew but some day he might keep the inn himself-- or do better?
50598Is it murder or theft?"
50598Is it thine, Jacob, or mine?"
50598Is there no one of ye?"
50598Is''t a bargain?''
50598Laying hands on his dirk, he said in a voice that slightly trembled,"And now?"
50598Leaning over the table, the Old One said in a low, taunting voice,"And did you never see a man dance on air?
50598Must I split thy head to let in knowledge?
50598Nay, fellow, th''art mad?
50598Nay, what''s that?
50598Nay?
50598Now, my man, how go you to work?"
50598One of us?
50598Or sack?
50598Or was it more than a mere mad prank?
50598Over the rumble of voices the Old One''s voice rose loudest:"See you, then, religious cobblers or preaching button- makers among us?"
50598Passage?
50598Said I not that these northern fisheries were meat for crows?
50598Saw you ever a finer coffin than the one I have ordered made for him?"
50598Shall we go north or shall we go south?
50598Shall we go on or shall we go back?
50598Shall we turn our backs on them and take a fling at a braver trade?
50598So far is well enough, but what came next?"
50598So what would a sailor do, think you, orphaned and penniless and cut off from the sea, but set himself up for a farmer?
50598Tell me, will he turn his hand to help his brother?"
50598Th''art a Devon man?"
50598Then, becoming wider awake, he asked,"What is all this talk of''the gentlemen''and who, prithee, is the Old One?"
50598Then, of a sudden,"Come, Will,"the Old One cried, singling out his man from all the rest,"what say you?"
50598There came over the water a voice distinctly calling,"Whence your ship?"
50598There came voices and a hoarse laugh from the stranger, then,"Are you merchants or men of war?"
50598There was a great concourse of people, for who would not seize upon the chance to see a band of pirates?
50598Think you that such are the manners of gentlemen mariners?
50598Think you to cozzen us?"
50598Thou old shrew, dost bar the door to Martin Barwick?"
50598Were not husbandmen all fond fellows whom a lively sailor man might fleer as he pleased?
50598What could a man reply?
50598What could a young man say?
50598What did''st thou ever know of beauty?
50598What do you want?"
50598What hath brought thee hither?"
50598What is this talk of the hangman''s budget?"
50598What madness-- he wondered as he looked at the kindly face of the drowsy old man-- had led Tom Marsham away from his home?
50598What say ye, my baw- cocks, shall we venture back for our shipmates?"
50598What say you?"
50598What think you?"
50598What voyage does she make?"
50598What''s that thou sayest?
50598Where are thy wits?
50598Where art thou?
50598Where have I heard that voice?''
50598Where''s Nell Entick?
50598Who art thou?"
50598Who could say?
50598Who is he?
50598Who knew what might have happened had he spoken?
50598Who knew?
50598Who knows but that we can then take them by assault?
50598Who knows but we''ll swing by sundown?
50598Who knows?"
50598Who says_ Amen_?
50598Who, pray, would accept for sober truth such a tale as any scoundrel would make out of whole cloth to save himself from hanging?
50598Why does''ee look so queer, sir?"
50598Wouldst thou stay for sugared pills of pleasure with the hangman at thy heels?"
50598Yea, my lord.--And have I met with them?
50598Yea, though the cook labour in the very bowels of the ship, is it not a proverb that he alone knows all that goes on?"
50598You there, who are playing the part of gunner, have you ever heard these bulldogs bark?
50598and for a week kept clean the beakhead and chains?
21072''Arthquake, eh? 21072 A perfect palace of the gnomes, darling, is it not?"
21072And I presume you intend us to accept these remarks of yours in the light of a threat of some kind?
21072And I s''pose she was tol''able weatherly?
21072And did you ever try to find his relatives?
21072And how long is it since the wreck happened?
21072And how long shall we be detained at that wretched hole?
21072And how long will it take you to refit?
21072And now comes the wedging- up, I s''pose, sir?
21072And now tell me how you managed to get the pinnace stove?
21072And pray, what is it, Mr Evelin?
21072And shall I see my papa?
21072And what about materials?
21072And what about the rest of my people-- those of them who were sent forward to the forecastle?
21072And where is the wounded man?
21072And yet you do n''t take much account of the brig, stranger?
21072Are we all clear fore and aft?
21072Are we to consider ourselves as prisoners then, and to look upon the hold there as our jail?
21072Are we, darling?
21072Are you ready with the axe forward there, Kit?
21072Are you sure, Bob? 21072 But can nothing be done to make this fellow mend his behaviour?"
21072But what makes you think we have an idea of effecting our escape? 21072 But why do you wish for such a thing?
21072By the bye, have you made any arrangements for letting us have the arms you promised? 21072 Cash down?"
21072Certainly I shall,answered her lover,"why not?
21072Do n''t you think we''d better run back to the Tyne, afore we drops too far to leeward to fetch it?
21072Do you hear, there? 21072 Do you know that your friend yonder is fated never to return?"
21072Do you really think it is gold?
21072Do you think Ralli would give us a bandage or two and a little lint from one of his medicine- chests?
21072Do you think now, colonel, you could recollect enough to design another yacht just like your own schooner?
21072Do you think, now, that the captain of that man- o''-war astern is of the same opinion as you and I are about the weather?
21072Do you think,said he,"it looks any lighter ahead?
21072Does it not strike you, Bowles, that there is something rather peculiar about the craft, and her crew?
21072Does it?
21072Have you, indeed?
21072Have you?
21072Here, you young cub, what''s the pass- word? 21072 His leg broken?
21072How do you mean?
21072How far is it? 21072 How is that?
21072How many of you are there?
21072I say, Bill, you wo n''t take Bob, will you, on an errand like this here?
21072I say, gen''lemen, did you hear anything_ pecoolyer_ a few minutes ago?
21072I suppose, as she''s such a flyer, that one of the crack English builders put her together?
21072Is Dickinson here?
21072Is it actually true, Lance, that that absurd creature is really going to let us have one?
21072Is it likely that there may be a snake or something of the sort there?
21072Jolly craft this, is n''t she, Brook?
21072No, we must be getting pretty close to it,said Lance;"but surely you are not feeling frightened, little woman?"
21072Now, lads,said Dickinson,"are yer all ready?
21072Now, sweetheart,he said briskly,"do you feel better, and fit to go on?"
21072Now, what,he continued,"what do you think was the last thing the skipper of that frigate did before the darkness closed down?"
21072Of course he made every possible inquiry respecting their fate?
21072Oh, Mr Evelin, tell me:--What has led you to think so?
21072She is_ not_ with me, Miss Dudley,answered Lance;"what led you to suppose she would be?"
21072Stop,gasped Ralli,"what is it you mean?
21072Supposin''he''d done what I''ve done and lived the life I''ve lived, what would he do? 21072 The ship ca n''t sail all the way to England with only one mast, can she, captain?"
21072The weather?
21072Then I presume you have established a sort of depot there?
21072There,he said,"what do you think of that, Blanche?
21072Waal, about this schooner of yours, is she a pretty sea- boat?
21072Was it?
21072Was that all he said, Robert?
21072Wedging- up?
21072Well, Bob, what''s the news?
21072Well, Bowles,he exclaimed, as the worthy"chief"made his appearance,"you want me, eh?
21072Well, Mr Bowles,said the captain, as he rose to his feet,"what weather have you had?
21072Well, Mr Carter,at last exclaimed Captain Staunton,"have you nothing to say by way of explanation of this extraordinary scene?
21072Well, captain,exclaimed Dale upon their entrance,"what news have you for us?
21072Well, matey, what is it?
21072Well, this here''s a pretty go, ai n''t it?
21072Well, you do n''t want to swing a cat in them, do you?
21072Well,shouted Johnson,"what news of the stranger aloft there?"
21072What about the arms and ammunition which I asked for to- day?
21072What are we wanted for?
21072What can they do?
21072What do you think, Violet?
21072What is it like?
21072What is it?
21072What is the meaning of this?
21072What ridiculous story is this which my husband has been telling us, Mr Evelin?
21072Where are you bound, captain?
21072Where would you like me to begin, Mr Evelin?
21072Where?
21072Who wants me?
21072Why not retire from them altogether, then?
21072Why should there be trouble, or with whom? 21072 Why should you presume any such thing, eh, you sare?"
21072Why, what is it, Bowles? 21072 Will you allow me, Captain Staunton?"
21072Would n''t he?
21072Would you mind walking a little way up the valley, gentlemen, before we go inside?
21072Yes,said Rex;"did you?
21072You are an American cruiser, I presume?
21072You are_ not_?
21072You will of course refuse; you will never trust yourself alone among all those men?
21072You would, eh?
21072Your staying perched up there, like an owl in an ivy bush, wo n''t help us any; come down and make yourself useful, d''ye hear?
21072_ What_, in Heaven''s name, can it be?
21072About this yacht of yours, colonel; where is she now?"
21072Am I unpardonably inquisitive?"
21072And as we are too weak to escape by force, we must do so by craft; I can see no other way for it, can you?"
21072And do you not think it possible that Johnson, in revenge for your plot against him, may find means to direct some cruiser to your hiding- place?
21072And even if she had still been alongside, do you think my men would let you go now that you have been aboard of us and seen our strength?
21072And how many others of you have the same opinion?"
21072And if he left the cabin to obtain a breath of fresh air was he not likely to go astray again, and lose still more precious time?
21072And if one of the boats did so, why not the other?
21072And look at the hoist of her topsails; do n''t you think there is a man- o''-war- ish appearance about the cut and set of them sails, sir?"
21072And so you''re a yachtsman, eh?
21072And the beautiful face of which you spoke-- is your impression of it clear enough to enable you to describe it?
21072And what a splendid fellow he is, is n''t he, Miss Lascelles?"
21072And why should they not both be safely scudding before it at this moment, some ten miles or so ahead of us?"
21072Are there any more volunteers?"
21072Are we hurting you, my lad?"
21072Are yer all ready wi''the anchor?"
21072Are you forgetful of the fact, Mr Dale, that it is to your greed and clumsiness we are indebted for the greatly increased hardships of our situation?
21072Are you ready?
21072But I have n''t time even to be civil just now, so just take a look round the ship by yourselves, will you?
21072But about this ship- building and fortification business, do I understand that you regard Johnson''s plans in that respect as favourable to us?
21072But do you mean to say that you know how to thump music out of them things as well as how to build batteries and ships and so forth?"
21072But if so, why not steer directly for it?"
21072But what do you propose that we should do?"
21072But what would you be able to do single- handed, no matter how rich you might be?"
21072But what''s them Handles we''re to explore, Mr Fortescue?
21072But where were her crew?
21072But would the spending of the rest of your lives on this island be in accordance with your plans and wishes?
21072By the time I get back I reckon you''ll have the schooner pretty nigh ready for launching, eh?"
21072Can anyone suggest anything better?"
21072Captain Staunton glanced, with an amused twinkle in his eye, at his over- confident passenger, as much as to say,"What do you think of that?"
21072D''ye hear?"
21072D''ye want these poor souls to be_ quite_ froze to death before you lets''em in?
21072Did the fishermen who saved his life never make any inquiries?"
21072Did you stay at home on purpose to play with me?"
21072Did you strike it against the timber when you jumped overboard, or how was it?"
21072Do n''t know?
21072Do n''t you think so, Evelin?"
21072Do n''t you think so, Staunton?"
21072Do you remember being found on board the wreck?"
21072Do you see the boats coming?"
21072Do you see these two pieces of wood here in each keel- block?
21072Do you think it is either of the other boats?"
21072Do you think we might venture?"
21072Do you think you''ve seen anything?"
21072Do you think, Evelin, the pirates have any knowledge of the existence of this cave of yours?"
21072Do you think, now, colonel, you could build a schooner that would have walked away from that frigate?"
21072Fine ship, ai n''t she?"
21072Guess what is his latest request, or command, I scarcely know which to call it?"
21072Have you made arrangements for our conveyance to Valparaiso?
21072He is my enemy, and his friends are therefore my enemies also;_ and they will be treated as such_; do you understand me?"
21072He sha''n''t lay a hand upon you while me and my mates can pervent it-- shall he, mates?"
21072How dare you raise your hands against one of your officers?"
21072How do they think we are going to get it away from the island without discovery?
21072How do you propose to overcome this difficulty?"
21072How fast, now, do you calculate a yacht would sail in this breeze?"
21072How is it?"
21072I am_ so_ glad you are come; I was beginning to feel quite anxious about Blanche-- but where is she; I do not see her with you?"
21072I daresay Evelin will join me-- or us rather-- for I suppose you will go as well, wo n''t you, Brook?"
21072I guess you ai n''t a sailor, are you?"
21072I have not enjoyed the luxury of a pipe for the last fortnight; have you any tobacco to spare?"
21072I presume it is unnecessary for me to say that we should only use the weapons in a case of absolute necessity?"
21072I say, mates, I s''pose there''s somebody on the look- out?"
21072Is it true that your leg is broken?"
21072Is not that your opinion, gentlemen?"
21072Is that plain?"
21072Is there any wind at all?"
21072Jeosh-- I say, stranger, how many knots do you reckon we are making just now?"
21072Mr Brook differed from both his employers-- where indeed will you meet with two men exactly alike?
21072Mr Carter, what is the meaning of this?
21072Mr Dale''ll come with us too, I''m sure; he''s fond of sleeping in a tent, ai n''t you, sir?"
21072No; I am going to papa presently-- and would you like to come with me, May, in a nice little boat?"
21072Nothing else gone wrong, I hope?"
21072Now I s''pose, sir, we''re all ready?"
21072Now where are we to find it?"
21072Now, have you a tight hold?
21072Now, what d''ye say to a trip or two in a collier brig, just to larn the ropes like, eh?"
21072Now, which of these boxes of music will you have?"
21072Oh, Mr Evelin,_ where_ is she, then?
21072Or, supposing it possible for you to see a picture of the original, do you think you would recognise it?--Do you mind my asking these questions?
21072Perhaps the harbour lies somewhere beyond that low rocky point which forms the western extremity of the island?
21072Reader, have_ you_ ever experienced the torment of thirst while exposed in an open boat to the blazing rays of the pitiless sun?
21072Robert of course told you that we have decided to accept the assistance of yourself and such of your shipmates as are to be thoroughly relied upon?"
21072See them beams?
21072See them clouds gathering, away there to the nor''ard?
21072She has n''t a pennant aloft, though-- wonder how that is?
21072She will be a whaler, of course, but she is a long way north of the usual fishing- grounds, is n''t she?"
21072Should he at once prosecute his search further?
21072That fellow Ralli, as you have remarked--""The arms?
21072The anchor was scarcely let go when three or four boats dashed alongside, and"Well, Bill, old man, what luck?"
21072The captain looked at him in his characteristic fashion for a full minute; inquired,"Are_ you_ the cap''n of this ship?"
21072The money only changes hands, I know; but what good does it do?
21072The question is-- In which direction will it be most advisable for us to proceed?
21072Then came the question, How were they to get out of the cavern, now that they had reached its mouth?
21072Then, suddenly changing his manner as his naturally suspicious nature asserted itself, he demanded:"What were you talking about?
21072There''s stone in the island, and I guess you can make lime from the coral, ca n''t you?
21072We have thrown off our-- what do you term it?
21072We might possibly be able to--""Take the brig?"
21072We want to give the world another trial, and see if we ca n''t end our days as honest men; ai n''t that it, mates?"
21072Well, Robert, what is this, my boy?
21072What are we to do in the matter?
21072What do you think, Evelin?"
21072What does it mean?"
21072What have you been doing?"
21072What is the matter, Mr Dale?"
21072What say you?
21072What ship is this, may I ask, and by what name shall we call the gentleman who has given us so kind a reception?"
21072What was it?
21072What''s the nature of the case?"
21072Where is May?"
21072Where is the seat of the injury?
21072Where then could Blanche be?
21072Why should n''t you give''em-- give us all-- a concert to- night, to- day being a holiday?"
21072Will you do me a favour, Miss Lascelles?"
21072Would he stop short at the humiliation of imprisonment and fetters?
21072Would our sails show against that cloud- bank in the wake of the fore- mast?"
21072Would you like to rest a little longer, or shall we make the attempt at once?"
21072Would you like to take to the sea as a profession?
21072You have not?
21072You mean those, do you not?"
21072You men are working-- after a very lazy fashion it is the truth-- for your living, and from now I intend that the women-- oh?
21072You understand?"
21072You want to make a laugh at me, is it not?
21072You were about to explain the meaning of an obscure remark you made a minute or two ago?"
21072You will surely not venture, after what you have already told us, to visit a civilised port and order a vessel to be built?"
21072_ that''s_ what you say, is it, my fine fellows?
21072` Do you see anythink, sir?''
21072can it be possible?"
21072do you mean to say that you''ll let me in, and them women- folks there too?"
21072exclaimed Blanche, turning with white quivering lips to Evelin, as the skipper disappeared below;"do you think there really_ is_ fire, Mr Evelin?"
21072going below already?
21072he ejaculated,"how came you to know that?"
21072he exclaimed,"What''s wrong with the pinnace?
21072is there anyone below?"
21072my fine fellow,"he remarked sneeringly,"so you have made up your mind to go to work at last, have you?
21072our--""Allegiance?"
21072she exclaimed,"what geese we are?"
21072what do you think?
21072what is that?"
21072what is this you say?"
21072what is this?
21072what now?"
21072what was that?"
21072where a way''s the wrack?"
21072whispered Blanche at last,"was ever anything so lovely seen before?"
21072you there, Robert?
15920A better what?
15920A watch chain?
15920After all, Shuffles, do you really think we intended to take the ship?
15920All hands, sir?
15920Am I in any danger now?
15920Am I?
15920And Captain Gordon?
15920And Shuffles was chosen?
15920And shove me out?
15920And this game was played while the voting was going on?
15920And yet what can I do with him?
15920And you gave him all the wine?
15920And you induced the others to join you?
15920Are we to stay on board the ship, and mope all day?
15920Are you going to turn in, Shuffles?
15920Are you in the habit of taking intoxicating drinks?
15920Are you satisfied, Pelham?
15920Are you still of the same mind as when I saw you last evening?
15920Are you such a fellow as that?
15920Are you willing to stay on board and study, and do ship''s duty, on the Fourth of July?
15920Are you?
15920Back out?
15920But do you intend to use the advantage you gained by this trick?
15920But do you really think of getting up a mutiny?
15920But how shall it be conducted?
15920But must the neighborhood suffer from his depredations?
15920But what are you going to do, Shuffles? 15920 But what did you do?
15920But what was the voting for?
15920But where did you get your liquor to- day?
15920But who are my superiors?
15920But who shall that one be?
15920But will you interfere with them?
15920By whose order?
15920Ca n''t we speak to them?
15920Can either of you change me a half sovereign?
15920Can you swim?
15920Can you tell a pea from a bean by the feeling?
15920Can you tell me where the forty- one votes came from, Shuffles?
15920Captain Gordon, has the first master given the quartermaster the course yet?
15920Catch what?
15920Come along, then? 15920 Come here, Wilton-- will you?"
15920Did Pelham do it?
15920Did any one ever hear of such a thing as keeping the fellows on board on the Fourth of July? 15920 Did he fall overboard accidentally?"
15920Did he hurt you much, Harry?
15920Did he, indeed?
15920Did he, indeed?
15920Did he? 15920 Did my vote count?"
15920Did n''t he ask you?
15920Did n''t you give the signs to Paul Kendall, the captain, and half a dozen others?
15920Did n''t you hear what Lowington said when he wound up his speech?
15920Did n''t you say we were going to sea to- morrow, Shuffles?
15920Did n''t you tell him anything?
15920Did n''t you tell the captain beforehand?
15920Did they?
15920Did you give up your money?
15920Did you really mean to drown me?
15920Did you see them when they came into the garden?
15920Did you speak to me?
15920Did you take the captain into the Chain, Shuffles?
15920Did you tell him that?
15920Did you think I was going to have him captain, after I had got up the Chain, and done all the work?
15920Did you?
15920Do n''t you know how the politicians manage these things?
15920Do n''t you know?
15920Do n''t you see it is only a form?
15920Do n''t you see what I''m doing?
15920Do n''t you think he would veto you?
15920Do n''t you think it will be better for the fellows to be without money than with it?
15920Do n''t you think they will join the League now?
15920Do n''t you think you shall get into the cabin next term?
15920Do n''t you? 15920 Do you at any time?"
15920Do you expect every fellow to vote for himself?
15920Do you know how to play''Do n''t know Beans''?
15920Do you know how you stand on marks, Wilton?
15920Do you know of any fellow that would make a better captain than I should?
15920Do you know the reason why I would n''t shake props this evening?
15920Do you make her out, Captain Gordon?
15920Do you mean Captain Gordon, McKeon?
15920Do you mean Mr. Shuffles, sir?
15920Do you mean a mutiny?
15920Do you mean to drown me?
15920Do you mean to get up the mutiny?
15920Do you mean to insult me?
15920Do you mean to say you will stop me, Shuffles, if you see me going?
15920Do you propose to play off any of these tricks on Lowington?
15920Do you really mean to get up a mutiny?
15920Do you suppose the fellows who do the burden of the work are going to be shut out of the cabin? 15920 Do you think they will be sick, sir?"
15920Do you think you could make the fellows stand round as I can? 15920 Exactly so,"added Shuffles;"for orator of the day?
15920Fairly? 15920 For the fellow who is to present the pitcher and make the speech?"
15920For whom shall you vote, Wilton?
15920For whom?
15920For whom?
15920From whom did you win it?
15920Give what to me?
15920Gordon?
15920Got a piece of paper?
15920Has Lowington sent you to torment me?
15920Have I been toggled?
15920Have I?
15920Have a game, Shuffles?
15920Have all the students voted?
15920Have n''t you forgotten that?
15920Have n''t you heard of the new game?
15920Have you any idea what the result will be?
15920Have you appointed the rest of your officers yet?
15920Have you given Gordon anything?
15920Have you no faith in your map?
15920Have you seen any gambling since?
15920Have you spoken to the captain about our affairs?
15920Have you tried him by the signs?
15920Have you? 15920 Have you?"
15920He did? 15920 How about the Chain, Shuffles?
15920How about the mutiny?
15920How are you going to vote for captain, Kendall?
15920How are you, Beans?
15920How are you, Peas?
15920How can a parent permit his son to drink wine, when he knows that more men are killed by intemperance than by war and pestilence? 15920 How can we go to sea to- morrow?
15920How can we? 15920 How could I be mistaken, when I have seen, at one time and another, a dozen fellows engaged in gambling?
15920How could they vote-- how could the captain vote-- without understanding the whole thing?
15920How did he know?
15920How did the captain vote?
15920How did you get out?
15920How did you know anything about it beforehand?
15920How do you know you have?
15920How do you know?
15920How do you like the new regulation?
15920How far south of it?
15920How happens it that you are all boys?
15920How long do you suppose it would take them to break down the bulkhead between the cabin and the steerage, or to climb up through the skylight?
15920How many do you suppose we can muster now?
15920How many fellows can we muster?
15920How many have you aboard?
15920How many more times will you say that?
15920How much have you made?
15920How old are you, Shuffles?
15920How shall I change it?
15920How should I know? 15920 How was I sold?
15920How was it?
15920How was that?
15920How will it be when we have rough weather?
15920How? 15920 How?"
15920How?
15920How?
15920I beg your pardon, sir, but are we to stay on board all day to- morrow?
15920I do n''t intend that he shall find it out? 15920 I do n''t know?
15920I do n''t know? 15920 I do n''t know?
15920I do n''t know? 15920 I might, but what''s the use of talking when we shall know all about it in ten or fifteen minutes?"
15920I suppose you think we have too many members-- don''t you?
15920I think they have found out now, I say, Shuffles, was this the row you spoke about last night?
15920I understand the plan now; but where are the fellows to deposit their vegetable ballots?
15920I wish to change my vote? 15920 I?"
15920If you had understood the matter, for whom should you have voted?
15920Is Paul Kendall one of them?
15920Is it possible the life you saved was imperilled by your own violent passions?
15920Is it, really?
15920It was a fair thing-- wasn''t it?
15920It''s a hard case; but what can we do about it?
15920Let me see; where did I leave off?
15920Lose them?
15920Making a what?
15920May I ask why not?
15920Mr. Fluxion, may I trouble you to bring up the irons?
15920Mr. Kendall, may I ask what you now suppose you were voting for?
15920My dear sir, what can I do?
15920Neither do I? 15920 No, sir?
15920No; return to your room?
15920No? 15920 Not a word?
15920Not say anything? 15920 Now, Wilton, what do you say?"
15920Now, what about the mutiny?
15920Now, what land lies south- east of Brockway Harbor?
15920O, you do-- do you?
15920Of course not, but you might have some idea of the way the thing is going?
15920On penalty of what?
15920P.P.? 15920 Peaks told you this-- did he?"
15920Peaks?
15920Perhaps not? 15920 Shaky?"
15920Shall I run towards them?
15920Shall I speak to Mr. Lowington first, sir?
15920Shall this boy steal my fruit and burn my buildings with impunity?
15920Shall we go to sea then?
15920Shuffles, do you suppose Captain Gordon knows the signs?
15920Suppose he should lose some of them?
15920Suppose we get possession of the ship-- what then?
15920Suppose your uncle, or somebody else, should die to- day, and leave you fifty thousand dollars: would n''t you have a good time with it?
15920Take him out?
15920That was only because we had just come on board? 15920 That will do, Wilton?
15920That''s it-- is it?
15920That''s what you mean-- isn''t it? 15920 The captain, the second lieutenant, and all the flunkies, voted for you?
15920The question is settled; what''s the use of raking up every thing that may seem to be strange?
15920The what?
15920The what?
15920Then what''s the use of having such a penalty?
15920Then you mean to shoot them?
15920Then you think he burned my stable?
15920They are not? 15920 They ca n''t help themselves; they are mad enough to do anything; but what''s the use?"
15920This is n''t bad-- is it, Shuffles?
15920To find me?
15920To which watch do you belong?
15920Toggled?
15920Very true, my dear fellow? 15920 Very well; why did n''t you say that at first?
15920Want to go ashore, Shuffles?
15920Was it right for you, Shuffles, to refuse obedience to the principal, when he told you to go aft?
15920Was it? 15920 Well, Shuffles, what is it?"
15920Well, Wilton, how do you like the inside of the brig?
15920Well, how did he tell you to serve out the officers?
15920Well, was it any stranger that the officers of the first part of the port watch voted, than it was that those of the second part did so?
15920Well, what are you going to do about it?
15920Well, what do you think now?
15920Well, what is your method?
15920Well, what is your plan? 15920 Well, what is your ticket?"
15920Well, what was it?
15920Well, would n''t the law have just as much right to take off a fellow''s head, as to take his money?
15920Well, you do see me-- don''t you?
15920Well; what of it?
15920What are our fellows going to do? 15920 What are the offices, sir?"
15920What are they to do?
15920What are we coming to?
15920What are we going to do?
15920What are we going to do?
15920What are we to do, sir?
15920What are you doing here, sir?
15920What are you doing in the top so long?
15920What are you doing, Bob Shuffles?
15920What are you doing, Pelham?
15920What are you doing?
15920What are you going to do with it?
15920What are you going to do, Pelham?
15920What are you going to do, Shuffles?
15920What are you going to do?
15920What are you going to do?
15920What are you going to do?
15920What are you laughing at?
15920What are you talking about, fellows?
15920What can I be if I join now?
15920What can we do now, when Kendall and the captain know all about it?
15920What can we do?
15920What can we do?
15920What could we do with her?
15920What did he do?
15920What did you mean by commanding the ship, Shuffles?
15920What did you want to make them mad for?
15920What do n''t you understand?
15920What do they do with them?
15920What do you care for that? 15920 What do you expect to do, locked up in that place?"
15920What do you know?
15920What do you mean by making a chain?
15920What do you mean by that?
15920What do you mean by that?
15920What do you mean by your ticket?
15920What do you mean, Harry Martyn?
15920What do you mean, you little bantam? 15920 What do you mean?"
15920What do you mean?
15920What do you mean?
15920What do you mean?
15920What do you think of Shuffles''case?
15920What do you think of the weather?
15920What do you want of me?
15920What do you want to get up a mutiny for, then?
15920What do you want?
15920What does all this mean?
15920What for? 15920 What for?"
15920What good will that do?
15920What have you got to say about it, Ike Monroe? 15920 What is it, Wilton?"
15920What is it? 15920 What is it?"
15920What is it?
15920What is the cat- head, sir?
15920What is the matter with your head, Harry?
15920What is the root of the evil?
15920What is the ship''s course now?
15920What is?
15920What made you mad?
15920What makes you think so? 15920 What new game?"
15920What odds does it make how I know?
15920What odds does that make? 15920 What of it?"
15920What purpose?
15920What row?
15920What shall I call it?
15920What shall I say to him?
15920What shall we do with the Chain now?
15920What shall we do?
15920What then?
15920What trick?
15920What was it that took you aback, McKeon?
15920What was it?
15920What was the expression you used?
15920What was the position? 15920 What was the position?"
15920What will Baird say if he finds it out?
15920What will he say when he finds out that the King of the Tonga Islands picks his teeth with a pitchfork?
15920What will that be?
15920What will you do with the principal and the professors?
15920What would Lowington say if he knew the third lieutenant talked of getting up a mutiny on board?
15920What would he say?
15920What would you do with him, sir?
15920What would you do without me in getting up a mutiny?
15920What would you do? 15920 What''s that, young gentleman?"
15920What''s that?
15920What''s that?
15920What''s the league?
15920What''s the mark?
15920What''s the matter, Harry?
15920What''s the matter, Pelham? 15920 What''s the matter, my dear fellow?
15920What''s the use of a fellow doing as he has done?
15920What''s the use of doing that? 15920 What''s the use of mincing the matter?
15920What''s the use of talking about such a thing?
15920What''s the use of talking to me about him now that we are on the very point of accomplishing our purpose?
15920What''s the use of that? 15920 What''s up, Shuffles?"
15920What''s up, Wilton?
15920What''s up?
15920What''s up?
15920What?
15920What?
15920When shall he be chosen?
15920When shall the fellows vote?
15920When shall we be able to go to sea?
15920Where are you hurt?
15920Where away?
15920Where away?
15920Where did you get it?
15920Where did you put the votes, Grossbeck?
15920Where do all these beans come from?
15920Where is it?
15920Where is the captain of the ship?
15920Where is the rest of it?
15920Where will Grossbeck stand when he receives the ballots?
15920Who appointed you?
15920Who insulted you?
15920Who opened that binnacle?
15920Who proposed the plan?
15920Who said anything about a mutiny?
15920Who said anything was up?
15920Who says so?
15920Who shall be the other receiver?
15920Who stole them, Harry?
15920Who would appoint your guardian?
15920Whom are you going for, then?
15920Whom are you going to run for captain?
15920Why did n''t you say so then?
15920Why did n''t you say what I told you?
15920Why did n''t you tell of it?
15920Why do you wish to vote for Pelham?
15920Why not? 15920 Why not?
15920Why not?
15920Why not?
15920Why not?
15920Why not?
15920Why not?
15920Why not?
15920Why not?
15920Why not?
15920Why not?
15920Why so?
15920Why so?
15920Why so?
15920Why, are you not satisfied with what has been done?
15920Why, do n''t you know?
15920Why, what do you mean, Shuffles?
15920Will the loss of the twenty marks throw you over?
15920Will you forgive me, Pelham? 15920 Will you forgive me?"
15920Will you go back to the ship, or not?
15920Will you meet me on the top- gallant forecastle, where we shall not be disturbed?
15920Will you post him up in what I have told you?
15920Wilton, how much money have you lost at play?
15920Wo n''t you?
15920Would you say anything to Shuffles?
15920Yes, I shall? 15920 Yes; what would he say if I should tell him of it?"
15920Yes? 15920 Yes?
15920Yes? 15920 Yes?
15920You did not think I was joking about so serious a matter-- did you?
15920You do n''t mean any such thing?
15920You do n''t mean to say you broke jail?
15920You mean that no one but subscribers ought to have voted?
15920You remember when I told you about the gambling in the steerage?
15920You see Grossbeck and McKeon?
15920_ Is_ that so?
15920_ Is_ that so?
159208, this forenoon?"
159208?"
15920Are there any of our fellows below?"
15920Are you not satisfied?"
15920Are you sure nothing has leaked out?"
15920Are you willing to do so?"
15920But I can tell you this, my dear fellow?
15920But had n''t we better wait till the instructors turn in?"
15920By the way, had you noticed that Queenstown is not in the Navigator, or on the older maps?"
15920Ca n''t we have liberty?"
15920Ca n''t you understand that?"
15920Can I do any more?"
15920Can we raise as many as that?"
15920Did n''t they know beans?"
15920Did n''t they vote for you?
15920Did n''t you tell Kendall, the captain, and seven or eight others, how to play''Do n''t know Beans''?"
15920Did you drink the two bottles?"
15920Did you ever know Augustus Pelham to violate his obligations?"
15920Did you ever know me to make a failure of anything that I attempted?"
15920Do n''t you know what it is?"
15920Do n''t you know?"
15920Do they mean to stand this thing?"
15920Do you believe it yet?"
15920Do you expect me to get up this thing, and then take a subordinate position?"
15920Do you expect us to go for you?"
15920Do you know what an awful habit you are contracting, my dear young friend?"
15920Do you suppose, if I were an officer, I would throw myself in your way when you were up to anything?"
15920Do you think Lowington really intends to go to sea with the ship?"
15920Do you think Pelham would make a better captain than I should?"
15920Do you think a fellow seventeen years old is going to be put up or put down by marks?"
15920Do you think he had any right to do that?"
15920Do you think we shall go to sea to- morrow?"
15920Do you think you can whip Bob Shuffles?"
15920Do you understand it?"
15920Do you understand me?"
15920Do you understand?"
15920Do you want to get the fellows into a scrape for nothing?"
15920Does any fellow suppose he has joined the Chain?"
15920Does he belong?"
15920Fluxion?"
15920For instance, who will be captain?"
15920Had you any idea that forty- one fellows belonged to the Chain?"
15920Has there ever been any gambling among the officers in the after cabin?"
15920Have you anything to say?"
15920Have you heard anything?"
15920He then commenced kicking the pales of the partition?
15920He was too much of a politician to be idle while any voting was going on?
15920How are our fellows now?"
15920How does that idea strike you?"
15920How happened you to discover it?"
15920How many fellows can we muster?"
15920How?"
15920I say, Kendall, are you up for any office?"
15920I''m going to be captain; can you tell me of any better fellow for the place?"
15920Is it so?"
15920Is n''t it a little strange that I have not lived in the steerage since the ship''s company were organized?"
15920Kendall?"
15920Kendall?"
15920Kendall?"
15920Kendall?"
15920Kendall?"
15920Lowington?"
15920Lowington?"
15920Lowington?"
15920Lowington?"
15920Lowington?"
15920Peaks, who has been a sailor all his lifetime, use such language?"
15920Pelham, do you know this is very shaky business?"
15920Pelham?"
15920Pelham?"
15920Pelham?"
15920Shall I tell Mr. Lowington what you have said?"
15920Shuffles?"
15920Suppose we get the ship, Shuffles, who are to be the officers?"
15920That''s fair-- isn''t it?"
15920The chaplain took him to his state room in the main cabin?
15920Then he will have no chance to object, on the suspicion that the gift is intended for him-- don''t you see?"
15920Voting for what, or whom?"
15920What ails you?
15920What are you about?"
15920What are you afraid of?"
15920What are you going to do?"
15920What can a fellow do here?
15920What did Lowington say?"
15920What do you mean by that?"
15920What do you say to shaking a little?"
15920What do you say to that, fellows?"
15920What does that mean?"
15920What good will this trick do?"
15920What is it?"
15920What is the variation?"
15920What shall I say to him?"
15920What were you and Ike Monroe talking about just now?"
15920What''s the use of being captain if the officers do n''t obey you?"
15920What''s the use of blundering into an enterprise, and making a failure of it?"
15920What''s the use of talking about such a thing?"
15920What''s to be done?
15920When you have made the signs, and he has answered them, he will say,''_ Is_ that so?''
15920Where is he now?"
15920Who is the fellow that has boldness enough to do this thing?"
15920Who is to decide whether it is fairly done or not?"
15920Who took him in?"
15920Who will vouch for the captain?
15920Whom will you send in the gig?"
15920Why do n''t you go to Captain Carnes, and done with it?"
15920Why not make a law, if a man gambles, that all his money shall be taken from him?"
15920Why not?"
15920Why, do you think the present captain of the ship will be content to go into the steerage under the new arrangement?"
15920Will you join, or not?"
15920Will you oblige me by telling the chaplain that I would like to see him?"
15920Will you take us off?"
15920Would n''t you like a room in the after cabin?"
15920You asked me what you should do?
15920Your neighbor might be a better man if he were poor than if he were rich: does that make it that you have any right to take his property from him?"
15920asked Kendall"Do you wish to go to sea without knowing what the cat- head is?"
15920demanded Mr. Lowington, who happened to be within hearing;"what did you say?"
15920have I?"
15920laughed Pelham?
15920who is that?"
15920whom do you go for?"
15920why not?