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 |
---|---|
36014 | But do n''t your father and mother sleep on the bed? |
36014 | Do you put anything on? |
36014 | Do you think the missionary would dare to mock me by telling me of God''s love? 36014 Have you got work here?" |
36014 | In your clothes? |
36014 | What are you going to do, then? |
36014 | What can I hope for my bairns,he added,"when they ca n''t get a breath of fresh air without seeing such as yon?" |
36014 | Where are you from? |
36014 | Will the father of your child marry you? |
36014 | Are such woes as these, such absolute savage degradation, the inevitable deposit of the highest Christian civilisation? |
36014 | Are the rich and godly to send missionaries and Bible- women among these masses, and save their own souls by giving the necessary funds? |
36014 | Can nothing be done, shall nothing be done, to wipe out such foul blots from the face of our fair city? |
36014 | Can we wonder? |
36014 | Could he have the face to do it_ here_?" |
36014 | Did the Master declare of these, and the legion of these,"of such is the kingdom of heaven?" |
36014 | How can our sad and sorely- tempted ones escape the snare? |
36014 | Is it greater than the risks people have contentedly run for years in railroads, mines, and cotton? |
36014 | Is it the curse of God''s indignation, or the curse of man''s selfishness, avarice, and neglect, under which those thousands are lying? |
36014 | Is there, indeed, no balm in Gilead-- is there no physician there? |
36014 | Is this the"good ground"on which the gospel seed is to spring up and bear fruit one hundredfold? |
36014 | It is disgraceful, degrading, shameful; and who is to blame? |
36014 | Notes from Paris; or, Why are Frenchmen and Englishmen different? |
36014 | Was ever a more vivid picture of more revolting scenes offered to the reader''s eye than that which the following pages present? |
36014 | What then? |
36014 | Where is this"lapsing"to end? |
38821 | And how about the schools for the good boys in your town? |
38821 | And you allow it to stay, and let this thing go on? |
38821 | Are not we young enough to work for him? |
38821 | Are they anything to be proud of? |
38821 | But why? |
38821 | But, my dear sir,he coughed diplomatically,"is n''t it rather unusual? |
38821 | Did you see the sink in that hall? |
38821 | Does it never come here? |
38821 | Vat means dot''cheese it''? |
38821 | Well,she said, when her inspection was finished,"he knocked her down, did n''t he?" |
38821 | What does he work at? |
38821 | Why, is it to- day? |
38821 | And how are we to go about solving his problem? |
38821 | And is there not proof of it? |
38821 | And upon this showing, who ought to be excluded, when it comes to that? |
38821 | As to this boss, of whom we hear so much, what manner of man is he? |
38821 | Avail? |
38821 | But suppose it had been, how much would it have appealed to them? |
38821 | But what was the use? |
38821 | D''ye think it is made to walk on?" |
38821 | Do you not fear danger from it in this country?" |
38821 | How did you see it?" |
38821 | How much of a problem is he? |
38821 | How much stock might he and his fellows be supposed to take in a movement that had such champions? |
38821 | If he accepted the standard, whose fault was it? |
38821 | If he had next been found ranting with anarchists against the social order, would you have blamed him? |
38821 | If it pleases the other man, what is it to him for whom he votes? |
38821 | If this one went astray with so much to pull him the right way, and but the single strand broken, what then of the other? |
38821 | In his life he supplied the answer to the sigh of dreamers in all days: when will the millennium come? |
38821 | It has made him happy, has it not? |
38821 | Just now the cashier of---- Bank told me that two other gentlemen-- gamblers? |
38821 | Nice friendly turn, was n''t it? |
38821 | Now if you ask me:"And what of it all? |
38821 | Or the boy, who may buy fireworks on the Fourth of July, but not set them off? |
38821 | Out of the debate of the question, Do we want boys who swear, steal, gamble, and smoke cigarettes? |
38821 | That is good enough reason for you, is n''t it?" |
38821 | The boy who is learning such lessons,--how is it with him? |
38821 | The eager haste, the frantic rush to see,--what does it not tell of these starved lives, of the quality of their aims and ambitions? |
38821 | The others got out; why not they? |
38821 | Was he not told by the agitators whom the police jailed at home that in a republic all men are made happy by means of the vote? |
38821 | Well, then? |
38821 | What does it avail?" |
38821 | What was it? |
38821 | What worker among the poor has not heard it? |
38821 | What, indeed, was there to say? |
38821 | Where were the Seven Dials of that day, and the men who gave it its bad name? |
38821 | Why do I tell you these things? |
38821 | Why not license the whole tenement, and with the money collected in the way of fees pay for the supervision of them by night and day? |
38821 | Why should it? |
38821 | Will it be on Pietro? |
38821 | With this bitter mockery of it that makes the slum, can it be that the warning is indeed for us? |
38821 | Would I shut out the newcomers? |
38821 | Would it seem to them common sense, or ca nt and humbug? |
38821 | Yes, the flat was to let; had she any children? |
38821 | Yet would you fear especial danger to our institutions, to our citizenship, from these four? |
38821 | You will go no further unless I leave it out? |
447 | Ah, what deh hell, Mag? 447 Ah, what deh hell?" |
447 | Ah, what deh hell? |
447 | Ah, what deh hell? |
447 | Ah, where deh hell was yeh when I was doin''all deh fightin? |
447 | An''what in the devil are you stickin''your nose for? |
447 | An''wid all deh bringin''up she had, how could she? |
447 | Are yehs hurted much, Jimmie? |
447 | Come, now, old lady,he said,"you do n''t mean to tel me that you sized me up for a farmer?" |
447 | Deh hell yeh say? |
447 | Did you note the expression of her eyes? 447 Din''he insul''me?" |
447 | Do dose little men talk? |
447 | Eh, Gawd, child, what is it dis time? 447 Eh, what? |
447 | Eh? 447 Eh? |
447 | Eh? |
447 | Girlsh,said the man, beseechingly,"I allus trea''s yehs ri'', didn''I? |
447 | Hah,she snorted, sitting up suddenly,"where deh hell yeh been? |
447 | He''s a dindy masher, ai n''t he, by Gawd? |
447 | I beg pardon, did hear say home? |
447 | I on''y says it''ud be better if we keep dis t''ing dark, see? 447 Nell, I allus trea''s yeh shquare, din''I? |
447 | Oh, she''s jes''dessame as she ever was, ain''she? 447 Say, Jimmie,"demanded he,"what deh hell is dat behind deh bar?" |
447 | Say, Mag,said Pete,"give us a kiss for takin''yeh teh deh show, will yer?" |
447 | Say, what deh hell? 447 Shay, Nell, damn it, I allus trea''s yehs shquare, didn''I? |
447 | So,she cried,"''ere yehs are back again, are yehs? |
447 | Stop that, Jim, d''yeh hear? 447 Sure he didn''insul''me?" |
447 | We''ll have many a good time together again, eh? |
447 | Well, now, yer a hell of a t''ing, ain''yeh? |
447 | Well, what deh hell yer goin''teh do? |
447 | Well, what deh hell yer goin''teh do? |
447 | Well, what if we does? 447 Well, whata dat?" |
447 | Well, why deh hell don''yeh try teh t''row us out? |
447 | Well,he growled,"what''s eatin''yehs?" |
447 | What deh hell ails yeh? 447 What deh hell do dey wanna raise such a smoke about it fer?" |
447 | What deh hell do yeh wanna hang aroun''here fer? 447 What deh hell is dat talkin''?" |
447 | What deh hell''s deh matter wid yeh? |
447 | What deh hell''s deh matter wid yeh? |
447 | What deh hell''s wrong? |
447 | What deh hell, Jimmie? |
447 | What deh hell? |
447 | What deh hell? |
447 | What deh hell? |
447 | What een hell do you sink I pie fife dolla a week for? 447 What een hell do you sink I pie fife dolla a week for? |
447 | What''s up? 447 What?" |
447 | When did yeh git back? 447 Why deh blazes don''chere try teh keep Jim from fightin''? |
447 | Wid all deh talkin''wid her I did an''deh t''ings I tol''her to remember? 447 Will I wash deh blood?" |
447 | Yeh knows I''m stuck on yehs, don''yehs, Nell? |
447 | ''Disturbance''? |
447 | Ai n''t dat right, Billie?" |
447 | Ain''she a beaut''? |
447 | Ain''she a dindy? |
447 | Ain''she a dindy? |
447 | Ain''she purty? |
447 | Ain''she sweet, deh beast? |
447 | All her t''ankless behavior to her mudder an''all her badness? |
447 | An''dey''ve kicked yehs out? |
447 | An''who deh hell are yehs? |
447 | And the reader of sounds might have seen the reply go forth from the ragged people:"Where''s our soup?" |
447 | Are yehs deaf?" |
447 | Are yehs dere?" |
447 | Come on, will yer?" |
447 | Dat Johnson party on anudder tear?" |
447 | Dear, dear, my cloud- compelling Pete, what are you coming to?" |
447 | Den deh mug he squared off an''said he was fine as silk wid his dukes( See?) |
447 | Do yeh wanna git me inteh trouble?" |
447 | Do yehs want people teh get onto me? |
447 | Don''che see?" |
447 | Finally she asked in a low voice:"But where kin I go?" |
447 | For how was he to know that there was a soul before him that needed saving? |
447 | Give me a minute''s res'', ca n''t yehs? |
447 | He turned about and bellowed at his wife:"Let the damned kid alone for a minute, will yeh, Mary? |
447 | He''s the right kind an''we stay by him, do n''t we, girls?" |
447 | Her life was a curse an''her days were black an''yeh''ll fergive yer bad girl? |
447 | How did dat Buff''lo bus''ness turn out?" |
447 | I ain''lookin''for no scrap,''he says( See? |
447 | I allus been goo''f''ler wi''yehs, ai n''t I, Nell?" |
447 | I''ll let''er in den, won''I?" |
447 | I''m goo''f''ler, ain''I, girlsh?" |
447 | I''m goo''f''ler?" |
447 | Is yer fader beatin''yer mudder, or yer mudder beatin''yer fader?" |
447 | Let up, d''yeh hear? |
447 | Nevertheless, he had, on a certain star- lit evening, said wonderingly and quite reverently:"Deh moon looks like hell, do n''t it?" |
447 | Oh, yes, I will, wo n''t I? |
447 | Play? |
447 | Play? |
447 | Play? |
447 | See? |
447 | See? |
447 | See? |
447 | See? |
447 | See? |
447 | See? |
447 | See? |
447 | See? |
447 | See? |
447 | See? |
447 | See? |
447 | See? |
447 | See? |
447 | See? |
447 | See? |
447 | See? |
447 | See? |
447 | See? |
447 | See? |
447 | See? |
447 | See? |
447 | See?" |
447 | See?" |
447 | See?" |
447 | See?" |
447 | See?" |
447 | See?" |
447 | See?" |
447 | See?" |
447 | See?" |
447 | See?" |
447 | See?" |
447 | See?" |
447 | See?" |
447 | See?" |
447 | See?" |
447 | See?" |
447 | See?" |
447 | See?" |
447 | See?" |
447 | See?" |
447 | She stopped once and asked aloud a question of herself:"Who?" |
447 | She thought of the collar and cuff manufactory and the eternal moan of the proprietor:"What een hell do you sink I pie fife dolla a week for? |
447 | She''s her mudder''s purty darlin''yit, ain''she? |
447 | Sure? |
447 | That is a peculiar way the left corner of her mouth has of twitching, is n''t it? |
447 | They invariably grinned and cried out:"Hello, Mary, you here again?" |
447 | To her remarks, he replied,"It''s a fine evenin'', ai n''t it?" |
447 | Two more beehs, d''yeh hear?" |
447 | Understand? |
447 | Unnerstan''?" |
447 | W''a''s odds? |
447 | Wha''makes kick?" |
447 | What deh blazes use is dem?" |
447 | What deh hell deh yeh wanna tag aroun''atter me fer? |
447 | What deh hell use is dat pony?" |
447 | What deh hell yehs lookin''at? |
447 | What in hell yeh been up to?" |
447 | What makes yeh be allus fixin''and fussin''? |
447 | What yeh goin''to buy this time, dear?" |
447 | What''ill yehs have, girls? |
447 | What''ll you take, Nell? |
447 | What? |
447 | What? |
447 | When a girl is bringed up deh way I bringed up Maggie, how kin she go teh deh devil?" |
447 | When women came in, and in the course of their conversation casually asked,"Where''s Maggie dese days?" |
447 | Who? |
447 | Why deh hell don''yeh come home earlier? |
447 | Why do I come an''drin''whisk''here thish way? |
447 | Why should I be concerned about it?" |
447 | Yeh likes me, don''yehs, Nell? |
447 | Yeh''ll fergive her now, Mary, wo n''t yehs, dear, all her disobed''ence? |
447 | You are n''t goin''to leave me and go off with that duffer, are you? |
36958 | ''''I m? |
36958 | ''''Oo done it then? |
36958 | ''''Oo toldjer?'' |
36958 | ''''Ow much did''e tell ye t''ask for it?'' |
36958 | ''''Ow''s that strike ye, ole cock?'' |
36958 | ''''Spose the mob''ll git up a break for''i m,''he said;''but''e''ll''ave a bit o''gilt from stir as well, wo n''t''e? |
36958 | ''Ah, it''s a good joke, Dicky, ai n''t it?'' |
36958 | ''Ah, there''s a deal of good in a blister sometimes, is n''t there, Josh? |
36958 | ''Ah,''replied Mr Weech,''it''s fearful the wickedness there is about, ai n''t it? |
36958 | ''Ai n''t the man give''is wife a''idin''yut?'' |
36958 | ''Ain''cher goin''to let''s''ave a look at it?'' |
36958 | ''Aincher goin''to look, mother?'' |
36958 | ''An''''ow jer find jerself, sir?'' |
36958 | ''An''doncher?'' |
36958 | ''And is that the verdict of you all?'' |
36958 | ''And the other with the brimmy tall hat, and the red face, and the umbrella?'' |
36958 | ''And what have you been doing just lately?'' |
36958 | ''And whose are they?'' |
36958 | ''Are ye balmy?'' |
36958 | ''Are you on for a job?'' |
36958 | ''Bin in our room? |
36958 | ''Brass roastin''-jacks at a shillin''?'' |
36958 | ''But it''ud frighten''i m pretty well, would n''t it? |
36958 | ''But there, wot''ll you''ave, Mr Perrott? |
36958 | ''Call that goin''quiet?'' |
36958 | ''Comin''back soon?'' |
36958 | ''D''jer want to wake''i m?'' |
36958 | ''D''ye want another five stretch?'' |
36958 | ''Dear, dear,''said the Bishop, glancing down suddenly,''why-- what''s become of my watch?'' |
36958 | ''Did''e run after ye?'' |
36958 | ''Do you find the prisoner at the bar guilty, or not guilty?'' |
36958 | ''Done?'' |
36958 | ''E ai n''t''ad a job for munse and munse: where''s the yannups come from wot''s bin for to pay the rent, an''git the toke, an''milk for Looey? |
36958 | ''Ear that? |
36958 | ''Eh? |
36958 | ''Eh? |
36958 | ''Eh?'' |
36958 | ''Fourpence? |
36958 | ''Gentlemen of the jury, have you agreed upon your verdict?'' |
36958 | ''Goes down awright, do n''t it?'' |
36958 | ''Good Gawd, Dicky,''cried Poll, tearing her way to the shutter as it stopped at the surgery door,''wot''s this?'' |
36958 | ''Got any water up''ere? |
36958 | ''Got anythink to eat?'' |
36958 | ''Got the tools?'' |
36958 | ''Hof''ly shockin''these''ere lower classes, ai n''t they? |
36958 | ''I said''e''d''ave a bob or two for you, did n''t I?'' |
36958 | ''I''m in business meself, over in Meakin Street-- name of Weech: p''r''aps you know the shop? |
36958 | ''Is it''cos o''the letters on the back? |
36958 | ''Jist like ole times, ai n''t it?'' |
36958 | ''Lor'', Josh Perrott,''she said,''wot''a''ye bin up to now? |
36958 | ''Lor, Josh, where ye bin?'' |
36958 | ''Me? |
36958 | ''Mean''i m in the ice- cream coat, smokin''a cigar? |
36958 | ''My poor Dicky,''he said,''who did this?'' |
36958 | ''Naa then, any more''fore they begin?'' |
36958 | ''Nice sort o''thing, ai n''t it?'' |
36958 | ''Nobody''s none the wuss for me knowin''about''em.... Well, we was a- talkin''about the watch, was n''t we? |
36958 | ''Nor doormats at fourpence?'' |
36958 | ''Nor yut seven- poun''jars o''jam an''pickles at sixpence?'' |
36958 | ''Nor yut the boy--''umpty- backed''un?'' |
36958 | ''Not quite such odd jobs as usual, I hope, Josh, eh?'' |
36958 | ''Not wot? |
36958 | ''Ol''man out to- day, ai n''t''e?'' |
36958 | ''Ole Weech narked ye? |
36958 | ''Oo narked?'' |
36958 | ''Oo?'' |
36958 | ''Ow much didjer say''e said?'' |
36958 | ''Ow would you like me to go an''ask yer father for that thrippence a''peny you owe me? |
36958 | ''Owjer know that?'' |
36958 | ''Prisoner at the bar, have you anything to say why sentence of death should not be passed on you according to law?'' |
36958 | ''Rush bags, eh?'' |
36958 | ''Sleep out in the street like them low Ranns an''Learys? |
36958 | ''Tell me? |
36958 | ''Tell me?'' |
36958 | ''Then wotcher got yer apron on now for?'' |
36958 | ''There-- he''s very bashful for a sportsman, is n''t he, Josh?'' |
36958 | ''Think I got yer bloomin''bedstead?'' |
36958 | ''Told me?'' |
36958 | ''Trouble? |
36958 | ''Vot is i d?'' |
36958 | ''W-- w-- wot for, sir?'' |
36958 | ''Want somethink to eat, doncher?'' |
36958 | ''Was it a parcel like this''ere?'' |
36958 | ''What are they?'' |
36958 | ''What is all this?'' |
36958 | ''What is this?'' |
36958 | ''What was that you found the other day an''did n''t bring to me?'' |
36958 | ''What?'' |
36958 | ''Where d''je get that, ye young devel?'' |
36958 | ''Where''a''you bin, Dicky?'' |
36958 | ''Where''a''you bin?'' |
36958 | ''Wo n''t sing yer hymn? |
36958 | ''Wontcher''old up Looey?'' |
36958 | ''Wot about you? |
36958 | ''Wot fence?'' |
36958 | ''Wot sort o''job''s this?'' |
36958 | ''Wot''s the matter with the chain, then?'' |
36958 | ''Wot''s the matter?'' |
36958 | ''Wot''s the matter?'' |
36958 | ''Wot, that?'' |
36958 | ''Wot--''im?'' |
36958 | ''Wot? |
36958 | ''Wot?'' |
36958 | ''Wot?'' |
36958 | ''Wotcher mean?'' |
36958 | ''Wotjer think,''he pursued, suddenly serious,''wotjer think o''screwin''a fence?'' |
36958 | ''Would n''t it?'' |
36958 | ''Wy, wot''s up?'' |
36958 | ''Yes, my boy?'' |
36958 | ''You ai n''t bin boozin'',''ave ye?'' |
36958 | ''You''ll put down somethin''''an''some at my break, will ye? |
36958 | ''You''ll witness I know nothing of it, wo n''t you? |
36958 | ''You-- you wo n''t let Weech''ave it, will ye, Josh? |
36958 | A lank, elderly man, who sat with his back to the wall, pushed up a battered tall hat from his eyes, and, producing a box of matches, exclaimed''Hell? |
36958 | A street more-- half a street-- ten yards? |
36958 | After a time he asked:''Mother, why do n''t you come to bed?'' |
36958 | Ai n''t satisfied with breakin''up the''ouse an''ruinin''a pore widder that way, ai n''t ye? |
36958 | Ai n''t you''eard me say so? |
36958 | Also, he felt that the missis should have some part in the celebration, for was it not her injury that he had avenged on Sally Green''s brother? |
36958 | And did you shoot the label at the same time, Sam? |
36958 | And how far''s that? |
36958 | And the big sword-- what did they have a big sword for, stuck up there, over the red cushions, and what was the use of a sword six foot long? |
36958 | And was it not he who had pursued him with malice on every occasion, in school and out? |
36958 | And where are his moors? |
36958 | And why do it, in any case? |
36958 | But does a day pass without bringing you just such a parishioner? |
36958 | But how? |
36958 | But then, what did any windfall of shillings bring in the Jago? |
36958 | But what was this-- all this? |
36958 | But who could the mischief- maker be? |
36958 | But who''ll listen, if you shout it from the housetops? |
36958 | By what mysterious means was this new- found friend so well informed? |
36958 | Ca n''t you''ear? |
36958 | Can you wait? |
36958 | Click? |
36958 | Could it possibly be a dead''un after all? |
36958 | Could they have missed any hiding place in the shop parlour? |
36958 | D''y''''ear, me lord''--leaning toward the dozing neighbour--''got a match?'' |
36958 | Did he suspect a police trick to entrap him? |
36958 | Don''cher want it?'' |
36958 | Each for himself? |
36958 | Eh, Josh?'' |
36958 | Eh? |
36958 | Eh?'' |
36958 | Else why did they live the wretched Jago life instead of take the pleasanter time of the decent labourer? |
36958 | Er-- might I-- er-- prepose-- er-- a little refreshment? |
36958 | Er-- r wot''ll ye take?'' |
36958 | Far better to have struck out boldly across the streets by Columbia Market to the canal: who could have seen the smears in the darkness? |
36958 | Father Sturt talked of work, but who would give_ him_ work? |
36958 | For if this were what came of the promising among his flock, what of the others? |
36958 | For was there not full a stone and a half between their weights? |
36958 | For what toff would come and live in the Jago except for a consideration of solid gain? |
36958 | Fourpence?'' |
36958 | Gawblimy, not what? |
36958 | Gawd-- wotcher up to? |
36958 | Had not Bobby Roper this very trick of lying tales? |
36958 | He felt the sobs coming, but he turned at the threshold and said with tremulous lips:--''Woncher gimme a chance, sir? |
36958 | He had acquired a clock in the morning; why not another in the afternoon? |
36958 | He had been a fool to think of the cellar: why not any corner among the walls above? |
36958 | He hauled Dicky to his side, and, pointing with his pipe, said:--''See that man with the furs?'' |
36958 | He might have crawled up the steps on hands and knees, but what was the use of that? |
36958 | He stopped abruptly at sight of Dicky, stooped, and said:--''Dicky Perrott? |
36958 | How did Mr Weech learn about the watch? |
36958 | How long had he been talking? |
36958 | How should this strange parson know him, and know his name? |
36958 | How soon would he give in, and drop? |
36958 | Hum-- hum-- hey?'' |
36958 | I hope you have n''t been knocking long? |
36958 | If a man fights, you''re got to fight back, ain''cher? |
36958 | In Luck Row he came on Josh Perrott, making for home with something under the skirt of his coat''How d''ye do, Josh?'' |
36958 | Is there a child in all this place that would n''t be better dead-- still better unborn? |
36958 | It is not that these good people wish me to write''even weeping'': for how do they know whether I weep or not? |
36958 | It must be got off; but how? |
36958 | It was the tall black figure again.... What, this was the chap, was it? |
36958 | Jerry Gullen glanced at him furtively once or twice, and then said:''Good ole moke for wear, ai n''t''e?'' |
36958 | Might you be thinkin''o''sellin''it?'' |
36958 | Not another odd job, eh?'' |
36958 | Not-- not-- not that?'' |
36958 | Now that he was gone, she said, with some hesitation:''''Adn''t you better take it out at once, Josh?'' |
36958 | Nowhere about the Bethnal Green Road, I suppose, by the goods depot? |
36958 | People are so very genteel, are n''t they?'' |
36958 | Pigeony Poll? |
36958 | Pity you could n''t stay there, is n''t it? |
36958 | See?'' |
36958 | Shall we say four pound for the little lot?'' |
36958 | Sneaked? |
36958 | So he shuffled through Jago Row, when a hand came on his shoulder and a hoarse voice said:--''Wot''s the matter, Dicky?'' |
36958 | So that gifts were scarce and hard to come by-- indeed, were apt to be thought unnecessary, for was not misery to be destroyed out of hand? |
36958 | Stand there? |
36958 | Then he said:''I do n''t s''pose father''s''avin''a sleep outside, eh?'' |
36958 | Then why should he stop now? |
36958 | Then, after a pause, he turned and added suddenly:''S''pose father''ll be smugged some day, eh, mother?'' |
36958 | Then, looking keenly in Dicky''s face, he suddenly asked,--''''Oo toldjer to bring that''ere?'' |
36958 | They called themselves''clever''and''wide;''''but,''said Father Sturt,''is there one of them that can deceive me?'' |
36958 | They were new- comers: why not venture over? |
36958 | Think I dunno? |
36958 | Think they''ll make it Parkhurst?'' |
36958 | This way? |
36958 | Unnerstand that? |
36958 | Unnerstand? |
36958 | W''y should n''t we wake up Mr Weech very quiet an''respeckful, an''ask''i m t''''elp us? |
36958 | Want some dinner?'' |
36958 | Want to git me lagged now, do ye? |
36958 | Was he not capable of something better than other Jago boys? |
36958 | Was he not hanging about the shop, staring and sneering, but a day or two back? |
36958 | Was it swelling? |
36958 | Was n''t it plain enough? |
36958 | Was that Hannah sobbing? |
36958 | Was there a general reclamation of fences? |
36958 | What a capital thing a holiday is, is n''t it-- a good long one?'' |
36958 | What but a drunk? |
36958 | What came of it before? |
36958 | What could come of it but defeat and bitterness? |
36958 | What did he want? |
36958 | What did it mean? |
36958 | What of Mr Grinder? |
36958 | What other possible motive could there be, indeed? |
36958 | What right had she in the room? |
36958 | What should he do now? |
36958 | What was that? |
36958 | What was the good of it all? |
36958 | What was the good of it? |
36958 | What was this unendurable stupor that clung about him like a net? |
36958 | What was wrong with Cohen? |
36958 | What would Dicky do? |
36958 | What would become of the Jago without Jago Court? |
36958 | What you got there?'' |
36958 | What''s that I see-- a clock? |
36958 | What? |
36958 | When Father Sturt returned from his errand,''Have you heard anything?'' |
36958 | When they come for it you''ll bear me out, sir, wo n''t you? |
36958 | Where was the gratuitous injury in all these four years that had not been Bobby Roper''s work? |
36958 | Where would Sunday morning be spent? |
36958 | Where would the fights come off, and where was so convenient a place for pitch and toss? |
36958 | Where''s your boy?'' |
36958 | Where''s''e gawn?'' |
36958 | While his wife did little more than look dolefully through the wires, and pipe:--''Oh, Josh, wotever shall I do?'' |
36958 | Who calls these painters realists now? |
36958 | Who else? |
36958 | Who was he, Dicky Perrott, that he should break away from the Jago habit, and strain after another nature? |
36958 | Who would bring in things from the outer world for mother and Em then? |
36958 | Why did he sit at the end of the bench, instead of in the middle, under the long sword? |
36958 | Why did they let him in? |
36958 | Why not?'' |
36958 | Why should he fight against the inevitable, and bruise himself? |
36958 | Why should he not earn regular wages, and live comfortably, well fed and clothed, with no fear of the police, and no shame for what he did? |
36958 | Why? |
36958 | Why? |
36958 | Wo n''t you never come to me no more?'' |
36958 | Wot did''e sack ye for?'' |
36958 | Wot did''e tell ye to do if I would n''t''ave that doormat?'' |
36958 | Wot does yer father do? |
36958 | Wot for?'' |
36958 | Wot''s a click? |
36958 | Wot''s that? |
36958 | Wot''s the good o''livin''''ere now? |
36958 | Wotcher goin''to gimme for this mat? |
36958 | Wotjer mean? |
36958 | Would not Dicky like to work regularly every day, asked Father Sturt, and earn wages? |
36958 | Wy, is the good noos right wot I''ear, about yer father a- comin''''ome from-- from the country?'' |
36958 | Wy, where did''e git that? |
36958 | Ye wo n''t forgit that, will ye? |
36958 | You ai n''t seen''i m outside,''ave ye?'' |
36958 | You ai n''t,''ave ye? |
36958 | You can easy send it to church, ca n''t ye?'' |
36958 | You did n''t get any shooting in your little holiday, did you, Josh?'' |
36958 | You''ll cheat me when ye can, an''when ye ca n''t you''ll put me five year in stir, eh? |
36958 | Your boy ai n''t back, is''e?'' |
36958 | _ Could_ it be drink? |
36958 | _''Oo_ said fourpence for doormats?'' |
36958 | _''Oo_ was goin''to bring round pickles after the shop was shut? |
36958 | ai n''t that rasher done yut?'' |
36958 | and had Billy not four or five inches the better in height and a commensurate advantage in reach? |
36958 | answered Bill,''narkin''dues is it?'' |
36958 | eh?'' |
36958 | said Bill Rann;''an''so it was''i m, was it? |
10025 | ''Grounds''? 10025 A touch of the old trouble, Hanna?" |
10025 | A what, then? |
10025 | Ai n''t it cranberry between Ruby and Vetsburg? |
10025 | Ai n''t it fair, Lenie, in love and war and business a man has got to scheme for what he wants out of life? 10025 Ai n''t it me that''s got life before me? |
10025 | Ai n''t the missis in on this killin''? |
10025 | Ai n''t this war just terrible, Lew? |
10025 | Ai n''t you ashamed, a big boy like you, and Mrs. Suss with her neuralgia? |
10025 | Ai n''t you taking the car? |
10025 | Am I right, Mrs. Finshriber? 10025 And you?" |
10025 | Any more cotton goods? 10025 Anything new, ma?" |
10025 | Anything new? |
10025 | Are you all right? |
10025 | Are you, mommy? |
10025 | Ask what? |
10025 | Asleep yet, baby? |
10025 | Aw, now, Hanna, what''s the use puttin''it that way? 10025 Aw, now, sweetness, what''s the idea? |
10025 | Aw, say now, what''s the use digging up ancient history? |
10025 | Blutch darlin'', you mean it? |
10025 | Blutch, how much? |
10025 | Blutch, how-- how much did you drop to- day? 10025 Burkhardt?" |
10025 | Bust? |
10025 | But not-- the crowd, Charley; just you-- and--"How''re we going to get the license, honey, this time of night without Jess? 10025 But, mama--""Is it natural, Mr. Vetsburg, I should want to work off my hands my daughter should escape that? |
10025 | Ca n''t I jig? |
10025 | Ca n''t tempt you with them wash silks, Mrs. C.? 10025 Ca n''t you see they''re half- dead now? |
10025 | Can we break the receiving- line now, Lester honey, and go down with everybody? 10025 Can you blame her? |
10025 | Charley, Charley, ai n''t there just no limit to your wildness? |
10025 | Charley, Charley, ca n''t you understand? 10025 Charley, are n''t you tired painting this old town yet? |
10025 | Charley, ca n''t you understand? 10025 Charley, has n''t that gang got you into enough mix- ups?" |
10025 | Charley, you-- you have n''t run through those thousands and thousands and thousands the papers said you got from your granny that time? |
10025 | Charley-- Charley--"Why, girl, what? |
10025 | Comin''better, honeybunch? |
10025 | Could you, Kit? 10025 Could-- you help me-- your little lawyer-- your--""Remember, I ai n''t advising--""Could you, Kit, and to-- to get a start?" |
10025 | Credit? 10025 Cut cards?" |
10025 | Did I scare you, sweetness? 10025 Did he-- did he see the morning papers? |
10025 | Did mama''s girl have a good time? 10025 Did n''t Lester want to-- to come in for a while, Selene, to-- to see-- me?" |
10025 | Did she? 10025 Did yuh, Edwin?" |
10025 | Did-- did he hear about last night, Charley? 10025 Do you like it, Charley? |
10025 | Do you like it, Mrs. Suss? 10025 Do you-- honest, Lew-- like me?" |
10025 | Doctor-- quick-- God!--What? |
10025 | Eh, Jimmie? |
10025 | Eh? |
10025 | Eh? |
10025 | Eh? |
10025 | For the love of Mike-- you want somebody to kiss it and make it well? 10025 For why yet he should wait till he''s got better prospects, so his mother- in- law can hang on? |
10025 | France? |
10025 | From your wife? 10025 Get me?" |
10025 | Go where? |
10025 | Goin''where, Hanna? |
10025 | Got any my special Gold Top on ice for me, George? 10025 Gramaw''s an old--""Is it any wonder I''m down at Amy''s half the time? |
10025 | Had your supper-- dinner, Harry? |
10025 | Harry, I-- oh, Harry--"Why, mother, what''s the matter? 10025 Harry, what-- what would you say if I could let you have nearly all of that three thousand?" |
10025 | Harry-- Alma Zitelle-- you mean-- Harry? |
10025 | Have n''t you got your Loo? 10025 He did it? |
10025 | He do n''t, do n''t he? 10025 He''s been made deacon-- not?" |
10025 | He-- he--"Why, you think, Ruby, I been making out of myself a servant like you call it all these years except for your future? 10025 He?" |
10025 | Hello-- Charley? 10025 Honest, Harry?" |
10025 | Honest, ca n''t a girl go home from work in this town without one of you fellows getting fresh with her? |
10025 | Honey, you want to go, do n''t you? 10025 How''s Burkhardt?" |
10025 | How-- many dollars, Harry? |
10025 | Huh? |
10025 | Huh? |
10025 | Huh? |
10025 | Huh? |
10025 | Huh? |
10025 | Huh? |
10025 | I am, am I? |
10025 | I should n''t be grand yet to my-- Let''s see-- what relation is it I am to you? |
10025 | I''ll get you out of--"Have I ever lived anywheres except in a dirty little North St. Louis flat with us three girls in a bed? 10025 I''m a bad egg, girl, and what you going to do about it? |
10025 | I-- er--"Is there somebody else you got on your mind, baby? |
10025 | I-- wi- ish--"What do you wi- ish? |
10025 | I--"Go on-- you hear? |
10025 | I--"You ai n''t fool enough to think I''m what you''d call a free man? 10025 If I could let you have twenty- six hundred seventeen dollars and about fifty cents of it?" |
10025 | If there was a chance, you think I''d be spoiling things for gramaw? 10025 If you-- you--""Why, honey, what''s eatin''you? |
10025 | If-- if you ai n''t sleepy awhile yet, Hanna, why not run over to Widow Dinninger''s to pass the time of evenin''? 10025 If-- if you like my company so much, ca n''t you just take a walk with me or come out and sit on our steps awhile?" |
10025 | Is Habana in the war, Lew? |
10025 | Is Mr.--Burkhardt-- home? |
10025 | Is it right extras should be allowed to be brought on a table like this where fourteen other boarders got to let their mouth water and look at it? |
10025 | Is my babe disappointed I did n''t dig her coat and earrings out of hock? |
10025 | Is that meant to be an in- sinuating remark, Josie? |
10025 | Is the rabbit''s foot still kicking my boy? |
10025 | Is there? |
10025 | It is, is it? 10025 It was Edwin coming in from school and getting me worked up with his talk about-- about--""What?" |
10025 | It''s a faint, ai n''t it, Mr. Haas? 10025 It-- it ai n''t that, Blutch; but-- but where''s it comin''from?" |
10025 | Jimmie-- would you-- had you ever thought about being a soldier? |
10025 | Kit-- when you goin''back? |
10025 | Kitchen what? |
10025 | Know what, baby? |
10025 | Lew-- will you-- are you-- you ai n''t kiddin''me all these weeks? 10025 Lo- o, that you?" |
10025 | Love me? |
10025 | Ma, are you going to stand there and let her talk to me thataway? 10025 Ma, what you mean?" |
10025 | Ma, why did n''t you rap for Katie to come up and light the gas? 10025 Made what, honey? |
10025 | Mama, you got enough? 10025 Mama? |
10025 | Miss Arndt, little more? 10025 Miss Flora looked right nice in that pink waist to- night-- not? |
10025 | Mommy, you mean it? |
10025 | Mother,he said, pulling at his coat lapels with a squaring of shoulders,"you-- you going to be a dead game little sport?" |
10025 | Must n''t? |
10025 | Nice? |
10025 | No high jinks to- night, though, Charley? |
10025 | No kidding? |
10025 | No, no, Blutch; only--"What, Babe? |
10025 | Not let a fellow even spin you home? |
10025 | Now that''s a fine question for a ten- hours''wifey to ask her hubby, ai n''t it? 10025 Now what''s the use going into all that, Millie? |
10025 | Now, Shila''s little mama want to sleep? |
10025 | Now, now, baby, is it wrong a mother should talk to her own baby about what is closest in both their hearts? |
10025 | Now, you''re sure, honey? 10025 Of course I ai n''t, honey; only, with you and him goin''right over to Al''s afterward, what''s the sense of me goin''? |
10025 | Oh, Blutch-- honey-- if only-- if only--"If only what, Babe? |
10025 | Only my boy''s got a wife-- a brand- new wifie to support,''ai n''t he? |
10025 | Out of what, Babe? |
10025 | Remember the run of rotten luck you had that year in Cincinnati, when the ponies was runnin''at Latonia? |
10025 | Ruby, are n''t you ashamed to talk like that? |
10025 | Ruby, is-- is it something you ai n''t telling mama? |
10025 | Ruby, should you be afraid to talk to mama, who do n''t want nothing but her child''s happiness? |
10025 | Say, Mother Coblenz, ai n''t it about time this little girl of mine was resting her pink- satin double A''s? 10025 Say, bo, what''s one of them chicks worth?" |
10025 | Say, have you heard the news? |
10025 | Saying what? |
10025 | Selene, Selene, can we keep it from her? |
10025 | Snowing? |
10025 | Sorry? 10025 Stag?... |
10025 | Sure, baby? 10025 Sure?" |
10025 | The wife ai n''t so short on looks, is she? |
10025 | Then, mama, please-- you will-- you will-- darling? |
10025 | Thought I was kidding you last night-- didn''t you-- about wedding- bells? |
10025 | Tired, mommy? |
10025 | Wanna bite? |
10025 | Was what? |
10025 | Was-- was your papa around, Charley? |
10025 | Well, Jimmie? |
10025 | Well, what? |
10025 | Well, whatta you know about that? 10025 Well, why-- why do n''t you ask me something?" |
10025 | What ai n''t? |
10025 | What bells? |
10025 | What do you mean? |
10025 | What in-- What''s this thing that scratched me? |
10025 | What is it, mother? 10025 What time is it, Burkhardt? |
10025 | What ud you bring us, honey? |
10025 | What you going to do with it-- buy us a round of fizz? |
10025 | What you spittin''fire for? 10025 What''ll you give me, Ruby, if I tell you whose favorite color is pink?" |
10025 | What''ll you take for one, bo? |
10025 | What''s ailing her, Mrs. C.? 10025 What''s all this junk in this barrel?" |
10025 | What''s new in Deadtown, Han? |
10025 | What''s the difference, honey? 10025 What''s the idea of the comedy?" |
10025 | What''s the idea-- chicken broth? 10025 What''s this?" |
10025 | What''s your capital? |
10025 | What''s your hurry, honey? |
10025 | What-- does a person do that''s smotherin''? |
10025 | What? |
10025 | What? |
10025 | What? |
10025 | What? |
10025 | What? |
10025 | Whatta you know about--"What kind of a job you think you''re gon na get? 10025 Where you goin'', Hanna?" |
10025 | Where''s my batteries? |
10025 | Where''s my stamp- book? |
10025 | Where? |
10025 | Where? |
10025 | Who cares? 10025 Who''s he?" |
10025 | Who? |
10025 | Who? |
10025 | Why not, Babe-- seein''you want it? 10025 Why, Babe-- Babe, what is it? |
10025 | Why, Hanna, what you been doin''to yourself? |
10025 | Why, Mrs. Kaufman, do n''t you and Ruby come down by Atlantic City with me to- morrow over Easter? 10025 Why, mama-- why, mama, what is Meyer Vetsburg to-- to me? |
10025 | Why, mommy, what-- what you crying for, dearie? 10025 Why-- why, we-- we''d just love it, would n''t we, ma? |
10025 | Will you, Mrs. Kaufman, come or wo n''t you? 10025 Wo n''t you please? |
10025 | Would n''t I be better off out of it? 10025 Yes, Hanna?" |
10025 | Yes; with a husband at home in bed, I''d be a fine one chasin''around this town alone, would n''t I? 10025 Yes?" |
10025 | You ai n''t mad at mama, baby? 10025 You ai n''t sore because I asked Joe? |
10025 | You all right, baby? |
10025 | You did n''t mean it, Ruby, did you? 10025 You do n''t feel like sitting with Jess and the crowd, Loo?" |
10025 | You game, girl? |
10025 | You hear me? |
10025 | You know it all, do n''t you? |
10025 | You know yourself, Ruby, how always on Annie''s Sunday out--"Well, what of it? 10025 You mean it, boy? |
10025 | You mean that? |
10025 | You mean you got cold feet? |
10025 | You mean_ you_ never thought about it? |
10025 | You there? |
10025 | You was n''t expecting me, Jimmie? |
10025 | You would n''t be afraid, would you, Jimmie? |
10025 | You''ll play safe, Blutch? 10025 You''re willin'', then?" |
10025 | You''re-- talkin''weddin''-bells, Lew? |
10025 | You-- got faith in this Goldfinch& Goetz failure like you had in''Pan- America''and''The Chaperon,''Harry? |
10025 | You-- you ai n''t mad at mama? |
10025 | You-- you see for yourself, Millie, what''s dead ca n''t be made alive-- now, can it? |
10025 | ''"Ai n''t I told you? |
10025 | ''Ai n''t got the nerve to answer, have you?" |
10025 | ''Ai n''t took cold, have you, with your fur coat in hock?" |
10025 | ''Ai n''t we got just lots to be thankful for-- the business growing and the bank- book growing, and our Selene on top? |
10025 | ''Ai n''t you got everything your little heart desires? |
10025 | ''Ai n''t you men got no sense for seein''things? |
10025 | ''Go''way,''she said;''on my grandchild''s engagement day anything should be too much?'' |
10025 | A faint?" |
10025 | A fellow ca n''t do any more, honey, to show a girl where she stands with him than ask her to marry him-- now can he? |
10025 | Adviser to a corporation lawyer? |
10025 | Ai n''t I the one with life before me-- ain''t I, mama?" |
10025 | Ai n''t it a shame, Mr. Vetsburg, a girl should be so dainty?" |
10025 | Ai n''t it cute?" |
10025 | Ai n''t it like a dream, mama-- your little Selene all of a sudden in with-- the somebodies?" |
10025 | Ai n''t it, girl-- ain''t it?" |
10025 | Ai n''t it? |
10025 | Ai n''t it?" |
10025 | Ai n''t it?... |
10025 | Ai n''t lit up, are you, honey?... |
10025 | Ai n''t she entitled to die with that off her poor old mind? |
10025 | Ai n''t she-- ain''t she just the limit? |
10025 | Ai n''t that something? |
10025 | Ai n''t there just nothing will bring you to your senses? |
10025 | Ai n''t there no way to satisfy you?" |
10025 | Ai n''t they, Vetsy?" |
10025 | Ai n''t we going down to Sheepshead when the first thaw sets in? |
10025 | Ai n''t we just a pair of love- birds that''s as happy as if we had our right senses? |
10025 | Anyways, when happiness comes to you with a man like Meyer Vetsburg, don''t-- don''t it come to me, too, baby?" |
10025 | Are you crazy?" |
10025 | Are you deaf, honey? |
10025 | Are you game, girl? |
10025 | At first, Ruby, ai n''t it natural it should come like a shock that you and that rascal Leo got all of a sudden so-- so thick? |
10025 | Baby, you ai n''t blind, are you?" |
10025 | But after all, what are the kings and peasants, poets and draymen, but great, greater, or greatest, less, lesser, or least atoms of us? |
10025 | But it''s what I''m cut out for, and what are you goin''to do about it? |
10025 | But what''s a man to- day on just a fair living? |
10025 | But what''s the use trying to keep life in something that''s dead? |
10025 | But you think, darling, I got one minute''s happiness like this?" |
10025 | Ca n''t you go home one evening?" |
10025 | Ca n''t you see she''s gone back?" |
10025 | Can we have some like them?" |
10025 | Charley boy better be making connections with headquarters or he wo n''t find himself such a hit with the niftiest doll in town, eh?" |
10025 | Could n''t you slip me one in a''mergency?" |
10025 | Did n''t you promise Shila? |
10025 | Did n''t you run the Two Dollar Hat Store that time in Syracuse and get away with it?" |
10025 | Did n''t you walk down here to pick me up?" |
10025 | Did you see her new white spats to- night?" |
10025 | Did-- did you and Lester have a nice ride?" |
10025 | Do n''t any young man got to get his start slow?" |
10025 | Do n''t it warm your heart, Mrs. Suss? |
10025 | Do n''t you think I know you too well for that? |
10025 | Do you know it is said that on the Desert of Sahara, the slope of Sorrento, and the marble of Fifth Avenue the sun can shine whitest? |
10025 | Do you know the size of Siberia? |
10025 | Does a little mother with something like that to bank on have time to be miserable over family rows? |
10025 | Does it, Lenie?" |
10025 | Everything is something awful, ai n''t it?" |
10025 | For myself a smaller house without such a show and maybe five or six roomers without meals, you think ai n''t easier as this big barn? |
10025 | For myself, you think I ask anything except my little girl''s happiness? |
10025 | For why once in a while should n''t a poor girl get a rich man except in books and choruses?" |
10025 | Gee, ca n''t a feller walk?" |
10025 | Get me? |
10025 | Get me?" |
10025 | Go-- you hear?" |
10025 | Goes to show we were just cut and dried for each other, do n''t it? |
10025 | Got the key?" |
10025 | Gravy? |
10025 | Grounds for what, Hanna?" |
10025 | Harry, ai n''t there no way I can please you no more-- no way?" |
10025 | Have I ever landed anywhere but on my feet? |
10025 | Have n''t you got her?" |
10025 | He did it? |
10025 | He--""Baby, ai n''t you ashamed like it makes any difference how a good man talks?" |
10025 | How is your mother, Mrs. C.? |
10025 | How many will you take care of?'' |
10025 | How''s Burkhardt? |
10025 | How''s that, sweetness?" |
10025 | How''s that?" |
10025 | Howdado, Sara? |
10025 | Huh, Millie?" |
10025 | Huh? |
10025 | Huh? |
10025 | I can use the lower shelf of the china- table, eh, ma?" |
10025 | I guess you want you should look all worn out when a certain young man what I know walks down to meet our train at Atlantic City this afternoon, eh?" |
10025 | I knew nothin''except-- except--""Except what?" |
10025 | I wo n''t have it-- you hear? |
10025 | I''ll be movin''along unless there''s anything you want?" |
10025 | I''m going to take you back, dearie-- ain''t that enough? |
10025 | I''m missing a chance, to- day that, mark my word, would make me a rich man but for want of a few--""Harry, you mean that?" |
10025 | I-- Life''s life, Millie, and what you going to do about it?" |
10025 | I--""Why should I give to this war? |
10025 | If she backs out, we string her up by the thumbs-- not, Ruby?" |
10025 | If she had it, would n''t she be willing to take the very last penny to give her girl the kind of a wedding she wants? |
10025 | If us fellows with education do n''t set the example, what can we expect from the other fellows? |
10025 | If your wife ai n''t the one to break it to you you''re broke, who is? |
10025 | In thirty years, do you think you can find those graves? |
10025 | In what school does the great army of industry earn its first experience? |
10025 | Is eight years hasty? |
10025 | Is eight years of buried- alive hasty? |
10025 | Is it, Harry?" |
10025 | Is she? |
10025 | Is she?" |
10025 | Is that enough, Harry, to do the Goldfinch- Goetz spectacle on your own hook? |
10025 | Is that the way to act when Shila comes up after a good day? |
10025 | Is-- is it any wonder, Milt, I-- I ca n''t see the joke?" |
10025 | It ai n''t hard to guess when a woman''s got a marriageable daughter-- not?" |
10025 | It ai n''t nice, I tell him.... Me? |
10025 | It''s a faint, ai n''t it? |
10025 | It-- it''s only my-- my fear that I''m losing you, and-- and my hate for the every- day grind of things, and--""I ca n''t help that, can I?" |
10025 | Kaufman?" |
10025 | Little more of that stew, mother?" |
10025 | Look at those fingers yellowing again-- looka--""They''re my fingers, ai n''t they?" |
10025 | Mama darling?" |
10025 | Mama,''ai n''t you got your own Shila-- your own Selene? |
10025 | Maybe if-- when his uncle Meyer takes him in the business, we--""Baby, not Leo?" |
10025 | Maybe, baby, I-- well, just maybe-- eh, baby?" |
10025 | Me to own a show after all these years; me to--""Do n''t you think it means something to me, too, Harry?" |
10025 | Miss Horowitz? |
10025 | Mr. Krakower? |
10025 | Mr. Schloss? |
10025 | Mr. Suss? |
10025 | Mr. Vetsburg, let me give you this little tender-- No? |
10025 | Mrs. Suss? |
10025 | My darlin''in there-- why are you hurtin''him so? |
10025 | My old man did it?" |
10025 | My whole life?" |
10025 | No? |
10025 | Not, baby? |
10025 | Not? |
10025 | Not? |
10025 | Now cut it out-- you hear? |
10025 | Now do n''t you, Loo?" |
10025 | Now what did I say so bad? |
10025 | Our furniture-- our--""What''s a flat? |
10025 | Pay- day?" |
10025 | Promise me?" |
10025 | Put ginger in your mama, Ruby, and we''ll open her eyes on the boardwalk-- not?" |
10025 | Remember Joe Claiborne promised us a real stage- job, and we opened a lemonade- stand on our front gate to pay his commission in advance?" |
10025 | Round trip?" |
10025 | See that little streak?" |
10025 | See? |
10025 | Shall I come out?" |
10025 | Shall Shila read it to you?" |
10025 | Shapiro& Stein?" |
10025 | Simon? |
10025 | Sure?" |
10025 | That you? |
10025 | That''s a new weave, ai n''t it? |
10025 | That''s gramaw''s-- to go back--""You mean the bank- book''s hers?" |
10025 | The marmalade- money I made the last two Christmases? |
10025 | The velvet muff I made myself out of the fur- money you give me? |
10025 | This morning, after we got her in Lester''s Uncle Mark''s big automobile, I says to her, I says,''Mama, you sure it ai n''t too much?'' |
10025 | Time to touch my old man, eh?" |
10025 | Vetsburg?" |
10025 | Vetsburg?" |
10025 | Vetsburg?" |
10025 | Vetsburg?" |
10025 | Was I right, mama, when I said if you''d only let me stop school I''d show you? |
10025 | Was I right, momsie?" |
10025 | Was n''t I right?" |
10025 | Was n''t it sweet for him to put it that way right off, ma? |
10025 | Well, Sadie, it''s your turn next, eh?... |
10025 | What court would listen to his stillness for grounds? |
10025 | What did they do? |
10025 | What do people think? |
10025 | What do you say? |
10025 | What does your speedometer register?" |
10025 | What has there ever been? |
10025 | What if a rainy day should come-- where would we be at? |
10025 | What is the terrible riddle? |
10025 | What shall we do? |
10025 | What show you got in the end against your playin''pals like Joe Kirby and Al Flexnor? |
10025 | What would you say, sweetness, if I told you I was down to my last few thousands? |
10025 | What you doin''out this kind of a night? |
10025 | What you doing?... |
10025 | What you got special against Joe? |
10025 | What you homesick for? |
10025 | What you think, Ruby, I do all day without steps to run, and my gedinks with housekeeping and marketing after eighteen years of it? |
10025 | What you wanna cheer her up with-- a corpse? |
10025 | What''ll I do? |
10025 | What''ll I do?" |
10025 | What''ll you have, hon?" |
10025 | What''s J. G. Hoffheimer got that I''ai n''t? |
10025 | What''s a flat? |
10025 | What''s anything? |
10025 | What''s anything?" |
10025 | What''s eating you now? |
10025 | What''s eating you this time?" |
10025 | What''s furniture? |
10025 | What''s the difference whether you live in ten rooms like yours or in four like this as long as you''re buried alive? |
10025 | What''s the difference who I mean? |
10025 | What''s the hurry call this time? |
10025 | What''s the idea calling me off when I got a business dinner on hand? |
10025 | What''s the idea?" |
10025 | What''s the use making yourself sick? |
10025 | What''s the use tearing yourself to pieces with it? |
10025 | What''s the use, seeing the way you had your heart set on-- on things? |
10025 | What''s there in it for me? |
10025 | What''s those things got to do with it? |
10025 | What''s to be done?" |
10025 | What''s, nowadays, baby, a man forty? |
10025 | What?" |
10025 | Whatcha got friends for?" |
10025 | Whatta you bet? |
10025 | When could it have been if not after my sister broke her confidence to tell me? |
10025 | When do you think I called you up last night? |
10025 | When she stinted and scrimped and saved on shoe- leather for the happiness of it?" |
10025 | When your mama do n''t go this time not one step we go by ourselves-- ain''t it?" |
10025 | Where do you think your laundry- money that I''ve been saving goes, Harry? |
10025 | Where''d the fun be if I could n''t make this town point up its ears at my girl? |
10025 | Where''d you dig up the spangles, Babe? |
10025 | Where''d you get that hand- me- down?" |
10025 | Where''s it got me these eight years? |
10025 | Where''s it got me? |
10025 | Where-- to jail? |
10025 | Whither? |
10025 | Who done your bankin''last year? |
10025 | Who first employs the untaught hand? |
10025 | Who has not loved beside thyme or at the sweetness of dusk? |
10025 | Who?" |
10025 | Why ai n''t he livin''in White Plains, where his wife and kids are?" |
10025 | Why ca n''t you get yourself on the right track where you belong, Charley? |
10025 | Why did n''t you get it a comb, too?" |
10025 | Why did n''t you scare me to death and be done with it?" |
10025 | Why do n''t I die? |
10025 | Why do n''t I die?" |
10025 | Why do n''t you clear-- out-- West where it''s clean?" |
10025 | Why do n''t you wake up, mama? |
10025 | Why do you think all of a sudden last night I seen your bluff through about Gerber? |
10025 | Why has he stopped hollerin''? |
10025 | Why not? |
10025 | Why should I give to what they''re fighting for on the other side of the ocean? |
10025 | Why, Charley-- and you not even thirty- one yet? |
10025 | Why, Loo, do you know, I have n''t had to ask my old man for a cent since my poor old granny died five years ago and left me a world of money? |
10025 | Why, even as they blubber, are there women whose bodies have the quality of cream, slipping in between scented sheets? |
10025 | Why-- why, ai n''t mama forty- one, baby, and did n''t you just say yourself for sisters they take us?" |
10025 | Will you, I ask you, or wo n''t you?" |
10025 | Wo n''t you come in?" |
10025 | Would you?" |
10025 | Yes, reader; but who are you to turn away sickened and know no more of this? |
10025 | You ai n''t afraid, Babe, your old hubby ca n''t always take care of his girl A1, are you?" |
10025 | You ai n''t goin''to turn out like all the rest in this town? |
10025 | You ai n''t sorry about nothing, Jimmie?" |
10025 | You been overworking again, ironing my shirts and collars when they ought to go to the laundry? |
10025 | You got the ring safe, honey- bee, and the license?" |
10025 | You got your chance, boy, to show what you''re made of-- can''t you see that? |
10025 | You hear? |
10025 | You hear? |
10025 | You hear? |
10025 | You know what came out in the paper about making a new will if-- if you ever got pulled in again for rough- housing?" |
10025 | You know, do n''t you, Vetsy?" |
10025 | You promise me? |
10025 | You remember, dearie-- Lester''s uncle?" |
10025 | You sure you''re feelin''well, Babe? |
10025 | You think I did n''t know you were flirting? |
10025 | You think if she was, honey, I''d-- I''d see myself come butting in between you this way, like-- like a-- common girl? |
10025 | You think it''s a pleasure I ca n''t slam the door right in Mrs. Katz''s face when six times a day she orders towels and ice- water? |
10025 | You think it''s a pleasure I got to take sass from such a bad boy like Irving? |
10025 | You think once he gets it? |
10025 | You tired, Selene?" |
10025 | You want to square up those shoulders and put on khaki, do n''t you? |
10025 | You would n''t have missed it, eh? |
10025 | You''ai n''t been kiddin''me, Lew?" |
10025 | You''ll play''em close, honey?" |
10025 | You-- we-- We could n''t be no lower than that time we got back from Latonia, hon?" |
10025 | You--""Harry, what would you say if-- if I was to tell you something?" |
10025 | Your poor- as- a- church- mouse days? |
10025 | a-- a-- what?" |
10025 | if I''m where I am on my voice, where would you be?" |
10025 | she sobbed into her handkerchief,"why did n''t you take me when you took him?" |
10025 | what have I got besides money to talk for me?" |
10025 | what''ll I do, Burkhardt? |
10025 | where do you plant it?" |
16447 | ''Strictly and absol''--see here, did you ever read''The Wrecker''? |
16447 | A detective? |
16447 | A little blackmail on the side, eh? |
16447 | A little cleaning- up, maybe? 16447 A reporter?" |
16447 | About which I shall doubtless hear to- morrow? |
16447 | After this, you tell me that you ca n''t, you wo n''t? |
16447 | Agony Parlors? |
16447 | Ah; but when was that? |
16447 | Ai n''t I tellin''you I''m through with that game? 16447 All of it?" |
16447 | Am I an amateur Cupid, or what''s my cue? |
16447 | Am I going to die? |
16447 | Am I require at the factory? |
16447 | Am I to have my price? |
16447 | Am-- am I that to you? |
16447 | An explosion? |
16447 | And afterward? |
16447 | And are buried? |
16447 | And are you going to the office now? |
16447 | And does young Surtaine give you inside glimpses of the machinery of his business? |
16447 | And if I do, what then? |
16447 | And if he does n''t? |
16447 | And is the Board of Health satisfied? |
16447 | And is the editor often kind and obliging? |
16447 | And it''s as bad everywhere as here? 16447 And my privileges?" |
16447 | And now, suppose I offered to leave the check in your hands? |
16447 | And now, what about a little reading notice for McQuiggan''s proposition? |
16447 | And now? |
16447 | And she''s got typhus? |
16447 | And that appeals to you? |
16447 | And that is all? |
16447 | And that the''Clarion''ca n''t afford to touch the thing at all? 16447 And the German family at the top?" |
16447 | And the news of the outside world? |
16447 | And the picture? |
16447 | And then--''Try Certina,''eh? |
16447 | And were n''t you just as bad as you seemed? |
16447 | And what does Science so far from its placid haunts? |
16447 | And what earthly good does it do to print stuff like those shoplifting cases? 16447 And what is your diagnosis, Doctor?" |
16447 | And what was she to you? 16447 And what''s the use of printing that sort of thing, anyway? |
16447 | And you call that decent journalism? |
16447 | And you did n''t break it because of him? |
16447 | And you did n''t know him at first? |
16447 | And you heard what I said? |
16447 | And you intend to print it? |
16447 | And you need n''t say,''Was it?'' 16447 And you think that is all that''s necessary?" |
16447 | And your soothing, balmy oils for cancer? 16447 Andy? |
16447 | Any message? |
16447 | Any one waiting to see me, Jim? |
16447 | Any other orders to- day? |
16447 | Anything more? |
16447 | Anything more? |
16447 | Anyway, tone your article down, wo n''t you, Boy- ee? |
16447 | Are n''t they well treated? |
16447 | Are n''t we going through? |
16447 | Are n''t you afraid of contagious diseases? |
16447 | Are n''t you afraid? |
16447 | Are they dry? |
16447 | Are we going into the mixing- room? |
16447 | Are we talking about business? 16447 Are we to sit still and--""Is it?" |
16447 | Are you as busy as all that, Dad? |
16447 | Are you asking me to suppress the epidemic story? |
16447 | Are you going to be? |
16447 | Are you going to let people know that it''s typhus? |
16447 | Are you going to marry Hugh? |
16447 | Are you going to run the paper, Doc? |
16447 | Are you going to take that woman''s money? |
16447 | Are you in pain, Boyee? |
16447 | Are you not going to get me any supper? |
16447 | Are you ready for this? 16447 Are you responsible for this?" |
16447 | Are you scattering the blessings of Certina amongst a grateful proletariat? |
16447 | Are you sure that John M. Gibbs is back of that sewing- girl ad? |
16447 | Are you sure? |
16447 | Are you the editor? |
16447 | Are you vain, Hal? 16447 Are you very busy, Miss Neal?" |
16447 | Are you warm enough? |
16447 | Are you-- have you been''bad,''as you call it? |
16447 | Are you? 16447 Are your hands so clean, then?" |
16447 | At what hour does the victim''s dying shriek rend the quivering air? |
16447 | Away? 16447 Because of that old agreement?" |
16447 | Because she''s one of us? |
16447 | Been feeding with our representative citizens, eh? |
16447 | Been reading that slush, Hal? |
16447 | Been through the plant yet? 16447 Better''phone the coroner''s office, eh?" |
16447 | Bewitched, Hal? |
16447 | Booze? |
16447 | Bought in? 16447 Brain- food?" |
16447 | Bringing him up to the trade, eh? |
16447 | But afterward? |
16447 | But are you beating it out? |
16447 | But ca n''t we do something in the mean time? |
16447 | But for him? |
16447 | But how can it be? 16447 But how could I come?" |
16447 | But what interest have you in saving the''Clarion''? |
16447 | But what possible good will it do? |
16447 | But where are we to get revolvers on a Sunday night? |
16447 | But why? |
16447 | But you were so immersed in your floral designs-- What kind of a play is it? |
16447 | But you''d take my word? |
16447 | But you''re enjoying yourself, are n''t you? |
16447 | But your own part in this? |
16447 | But, Dad,queried Hal, with an effort of puzzled reminiscence,"in the old days Certina was n''t a kidney remedy, was it?" |
16447 | But-- stanch, do you think? |
16447 | By the way, where''s Young Hopeful? |
16447 | By the way,said McGuire Ellis,"how do you like the paper?" |
16447 | By whom? |
16447 | Ca n''t he? 16447 Ca n''t you control your own son?" |
16447 | Ca n''t you see that makes it all the worse, in a way? 16447 Ca n''t you see?" |
16447 | Ca n''t you sue them for libel, Dad? |
16447 | Ca n''t? 16447 Call myself? |
16447 | Can we do it, Mac? |
16447 | Can you blame him? 16447 Can you find the copy? |
16447 | Can you prove the facts? |
16447 | Can you pull it through, Boss? |
16447 | Can you save him? 16447 Certina?" |
16447 | Changed the formula, have you? 16447 Changed? |
16447 | Circumstances? |
16447 | Come down to see the old slave at work, eh? |
16447 | Coming? 16447 Compounding the medicine, you mean?" |
16447 | Couch? 16447 Could n''t you tell me that without a cane?" |
16447 | Could yeh sell me half a bottle to try it, sir? |
16447 | Could you look into it for us; for the''Clarion''? |
16447 | Courtesy of the profession? 16447 Cure? |
16447 | D''you think I like it? |
16447 | D''you think I''m made of money? |
16447 | Dad, do you want a retraction printed? |
16447 | Dad, when you made your report for the''Clarion''did you tell us all you knew? |
16447 | Dad, you believe I''m honest, do n''t you? |
16447 | Did Dr. Surtaine send you here with that thing? |
16447 | Did I kill him? |
16447 | Did I really hear them sweet words in Andy Certain''s voice? 16447 Did I?" |
16447 | Did he get the press? |
16447 | Did he get the press? |
16447 | Did he hurt Dad? |
16447 | Did he? 16447 Did he_ have_ to print it?" |
16447 | Did her father tell her? |
16447 | Did n''t Festus tell you? |
16447 | Did n''t I offer fair and square to match you for his soul? 16447 Did n''t he? |
16447 | Did n''t live there, did you? |
16447 | Did n''t you know I was a little sister of the poor? 16447 Did the law hurt our trade much?" |
16447 | Did the''Clarion''do that? |
16447 | Did you ask her if she was exceeding the speed limit? |
16447 | Did you break it for the same reason that drove you into it? |
16447 | Did you bring the proofs? |
16447 | Did you dance with Will Douglas? |
16447 | Did you design it? |
16447 | Did you ever fail of anything when you put on that wheedling face and tone? |
16447 | Did you get the message I sent you about Letter Number Seven? |
16447 | Did you give me away to him? |
16447 | Did you happen to notice about the prettiest thing that ever used eyes for weapons, in the hall? |
16447 | Did you obey a royal command and go to his office? |
16447 | Did you order it killed? |
16447 | Did you see his interview in the''Telegram''? |
16447 | Did you see that? |
16447 | Did you speak? |
16447 | Did you think it was queer? |
16447 | Did you think your son was Milly Neal''s lover? 16447 Did you want me?" |
16447 | Did you want to see me? |
16447 | Did you? 16447 Did-- he-- get-- the-- press?" |
16447 | Die? 16447 Do I get an answer to my question?" |
16447 | Do I get you righd? |
16447 | Do I go too far, since you have let me kiss you? |
16447 | Do I look thirty- five? 16447 Do I understand that Certina--""Say, wassa matter?" |
16447 | Do I understand you to say that this attack is due to your refusal to advertise in the''Clarion''? |
16447 | Do I? 16447 Do all newspapers carry that kind of stuff?" |
16447 | Do kidneys have seasons? |
16447 | Do many people ask favors of an editor? |
16447 | Do n''t I always confess my good actions? |
16447 | Do n''t I? 16447 Do n''t he own the town?" |
16447 | Do n''t it? |
16447 | Do n''t want to match? 16447 Do n''t you have to keep a check on the mixing, to make sure it''s right?" |
16447 | Do n''t you know the Rookeries? |
16447 | Do n''t you promise, with your Relief Pills to get women out of trouble? |
16447 | Do n''t you recall where? |
16447 | Do n''t you say in the advertisements that Certina will cure it? |
16447 | Do n''t you want me to go into it, Dad? |
16447 | Do the writers of those letters-- symp- letters, I believe, you call them--he began;"do they seem to get benefit out of the advice returned?" |
16447 | Do they expect to get money out of you this way? |
16447 | Do they? 16447 Do we go in?" |
16447 | Do you deny what the editor of the''Standard''said about Certina? |
16447 | Do you get that''and mine''? 16447 Do you know that-- you who know everybody''s business?" |
16447 | Do you know the nickname of this paper? |
16447 | Do you know what a Hardscrabbler is, Ellis? |
16447 | Do you know what an Old Home Week is? |
16447 | Do you know what they''ll call you if you print that? 16447 Do you know what you''re doing?" |
16447 | Do you know who''s really responsible for that tenement? 16447 Do you know_ who_ the Sewing Aid Association is?" |
16447 | Do you mean you''re going to run the paper honestly? |
16447 | Do you mind telling me why? |
16447 | Do you often go out wading, ten miles from home? |
16447 | Do you read it? |
16447 | Do you realize how strong it is, Esmé? |
16447 | Do you really like Mr. Pierce, Dad? |
16447 | Do you really want to know? |
16447 | Do you respect your business, Doc? |
16447 | Do you see something else around here that answers the description? |
16447 | Do you see the rest of it anywhere? |
16447 | Do you think I would n''t be amenable to your stern discipline? |
16447 | Do you think I''d make a good Goddess- Outside- the- Machine, to the''Daily Clarion''? |
16447 | Do you think I''d make a valuable employee, Miss Milly? |
16447 | Do you think many fathers would do this sort of thing, Dad? |
16447 | Do you think the Chief would make any other kind? |
16447 | Do you think,blandly inquired the editorial roosters,"that when you tip the hat- check girl she gets the tip? |
16447 | Do you want a drink? |
16447 | Do you want me to quit? |
16447 | Do you want me to stay? |
16447 | Do you want something to eat? 16447 Do you want to be better than the law?" |
16447 | Do you want to hear about it? |
16447 | Do you want to take him back? |
16447 | Do you wish to speak to the question? |
16447 | Do you, now? 16447 Do you? |
16447 | Do you? 16447 Do you?" |
16447 | Do you? |
16447 | Does it cure it? |
16447 | Does it hurt you much? |
16447 | Does it mean that it must be printed? |
16447 | Does it weigh upon you? |
16447 | Does my father know all this that you''ve been telling me? |
16447 | Does that square accounts between us? |
16447 | Does the Chief_ know_ it? 16447 Does the''Clarion''really intend to publish anything about an epidemic?" |
16447 | Doing any sickening, yourself? |
16447 | Doing_ what_? |
16447 | Dr. De Vito, what''s the newest wrinkle in brain- food? |
16447 | Dr. Elliot,said Hal quietly,"did you think I wanted to print that about Esmé?" |
16447 | Dr. Surtaine''s son? |
16447 | Dying, then? |
16447 | Ease it? 16447 Ellis, are you trying to plant an impression in my mind?" |
16447 | Ellis, how are you? 16447 Elpy,"said Dr. Surtaine, abruptly,"do you remember my platform patter?" |
16447 | Epidemic? 16447 Europe? |
16447 | Even the''Clarion,''which is supposed to have labor sympathies? |
16447 | Expensive, though, is n''t it? |
16447 | Father, does Certina cure Bright''s disease? |
16447 | Fetch''em? 16447 For instance?" |
16447 | For long? |
16447 | For long? |
16447 | For me? 16447 For the''Clarion''?" |
16447 | For what? |
16447 | Foreign proprietary,said Dr. Surtaine, using the technical term for patent- medicine advertising from out of town,"is n''t it? |
16447 | Forgive my stupidity, but what has the advertising manager to do with social news? |
16447 | From an æsthetic point of view? |
16447 | From whom? |
16447 | Genteel? |
16447 | Get what, dear? 16447 Gimme a shot at him while you''ve got him on the wire, will you?" |
16447 | Give the people who buy your paper the straight news they pay for? |
16447 | Give up a business worth half a million a year, net? |
16447 | Go down to lick the editor? |
16447 | Got a grip on your temper? |
16447 | Got any rope? |
16447 | Got anything in its place? |
16447 | Guardy, is he preaching? |
16447 | Had a drink to- day, Mac? |
16447 | Had n''t we better keep away from that? |
16447 | Had n''t you better think it over? |
16447 | Had n''t you heard? 16447 Hal, where''s Europe?" |
16447 | Hal,--Dr. Surtaine turned to his son,--"has McQuiggan brought in a new batch of copy?" |
16447 | Has it ever been done here? |
16447 | Has it? 16447 Has n''t it cost you something more than money, already, Boyee? |
16447 | Has n''t it taken Mr. Hale, the only friend I''ve got in the world? 16447 Has n''t there been enough judging of each other between you and me, Boy- ee?" |
16447 | Has there ever been such a thing as unhappiness in the world, sweetheart? |
16447 | Have I gone too heavy, sir? |
16447 | Have I got any dollars away from you, Andy? |
16447 | Have I said enough? |
16447 | Have I? 16447 Have a good time?" |
16447 | Have n''t we published everything about all the charities that you''re interested in? |
16447 | Have n''t you done that yet? |
16447 | Have n''t you enough troubles in your own business, Dad? |
16447 | Have we got other medicines besides Certina? |
16447 | Have you been taking that-- those pills? |
16447 | Have you done it in your paper? |
16447 | Have you ever worked? |
16447 | Have you forgotten me, Hal? |
16447 | Have you forgotten? |
16447 | Have you laid a wager as to which will keep silent longest? |
16447 | Have you reckoned the Pierce libel suits in? |
16447 | Have you set yourself that little job? |
16447 | He talks awfully young, does n''t he? |
16447 | He? 16447 Heart disease, you say?" |
16447 | Her? 16447 Here?" |
16447 | High- pitch? |
16447 | Honest, eh? |
16447 | How about getting a United States Public Health Surgeon down here? |
16447 | How about the''Clarion,''Mac? |
16447 | How are you going to get me out of it? |
16447 | How can I tell, sir? 16447 How can I tell? |
16447 | How can advertising be news? |
16447 | How can he tell? 16447 How can my father hope to answer all those?" |
16447 | How can you expect an institution to run, bereft of its presiding genius? 16447 How can you know?" |
16447 | How could I break through the solid phalanx of supplicating admirers? |
16447 | How could you get Certina here? |
16447 | How did that fellow get here? |
16447 | How did you find out? |
16447 | How did you know? |
16447 | How did you like Esmé Elliot? |
16447 | How do people live in places like this? |
16447 | How do they get in there, then? |
16447 | How do you account for this, then? |
16447 | How do you know about the epidemic? |
16447 | How do you know they''re stung? |
16447 | How do you know? |
16447 | How does it spread? 16447 How else can I make a career of it?" |
16447 | How have you managed to keep them out, thus far? |
16447 | How is it you Americans say? 16447 How is the paper going?" |
16447 | How long can you go on at this rate? |
16447 | How long has she owned it? |
16447 | How long has that been running? |
16447 | How many bottles does it take to cure? |
16447 | How many of the_ other_ cases have you had here? |
16447 | How much did you pay for it? |
16447 | How much of a verdict would bust us? |
16447 | How much? |
16447 | How often do you see Hal Surtaine? |
16447 | How old are you? |
16447 | How was he stupider? |
16447 | How would it be if I was to put you on half- time, Milly? |
16447 | How would this do? |
16447 | How''s that, Doc? |
16447 | How''s that, sir? |
16447 | How? |
16447 | How? |
16447 | How? |
16447 | Huh? |
16447 | I got ta make a living, have n''t I? 16447 I hated to have to say--""What does it matter?" |
16447 | I want to know what you''re going to do for me? |
16447 | I? 16447 I? |
16447 | I? |
16447 | I? |
16447 | If I tell you, you wo n''t publish it? 16447 If it really does amount to anything, would n''t it be better,"said Hal,"to establish a quarantine and go in there and stamp the thing out? |
16447 | If it were I? |
16447 | If it were you, would you ask it? |
16447 | If there''s no epidemic, why should I keep away? |
16447 | If you give''em advertising matter free, how can you ever expect''em to pay for it? |
16447 | If you''d known in time would you have--"Left that out of the paper? |
16447 | If-- what? |
16447 | In other words, you think the paper would get along better without me than with me? |
16447 | In the Number Four? |
16447 | In the''Clarion''? |
16447 | In this block? |
16447 | In what paper, Kathie? |
16447 | In what way? |
16447 | In what way? |
16447 | Including that of homicide? |
16447 | Insolent? 16447 Is Mr. Shearson the society editor?" |
16447 | Is Mr. Surtaine in? |
16447 | Is O''Farrell agent for all these barracks? |
16447 | Is any one hurt? |
16447 | Is he in love with you? |
16447 | Is he telling the truth, Mac? |
16447 | Is it a bet? |
16447 | Is it a partnership, where one party is absolute slave to the other''s slightest wish? |
16447 | Is it about Ellis? |
16447 | Is it because it''s Certina money? |
16447 | Is it some sort of epidemic starting? |
16447 | Is it the word you''re afraid of, or is it me? |
16447 | Is it to run to- morrow? |
16447 | Is it true, do you think? 16447 Is it your habit, Mr. Ellis, to run at the first suggestion of disaster?" |
16447 | Is n''t everything all right? |
16447 | Is n''t he a trouble- maker among the men? |
16447 | Is n''t it pretty late for explanations between you and me? |
16447 | Is n''t she morally bound to know? 16447 Is n''t that rather a fine distinction?" |
16447 | Is n''t that right, Ellis? |
16447 | Is n''t there some other association we can get into? |
16447 | Is some one dead? |
16447 | Is that an order? |
16447 | Is that question asked in good faith? |
16447 | Is that so? |
16447 | Is that your uncle, the gentleman that fixed my arm? |
16447 | Is the editor in? |
16447 | Is the game playing out? |
16447 | Is there a pestilence in the Rookeries? 16447 Is there any chance?" |
16447 | Is there_ anything_ that Certina is good for? |
16447 | Is this all yours, Andy? 16447 Is your church in this district?" |
16447 | Is your father a leading citizen? |
16447 | It could n''t be either of those, could it? |
16447 | It need n''t be a muckraking paper, need it, forever smelling out something rotten, and exploiting it in big headlines? |
16447 | It was only attempted suicide, was n''t it? |
16447 | It''s rather yellow, is n''t it? |
16447 | It''s run by an outsider, too, is n''t it? |
16447 | It''s true, is n''t it? |
16447 | It? |
16447 | Just how does that concern this discussion? |
16447 | Just what do you mean by that? |
16447 | Just what was that about Number Seven? |
16447 | Know Redding? 16447 Law?" |
16447 | Let us print a statement from you, from her--"In your sheet? 16447 Let''s see, when does it come?" |
16447 | Libel, eh? |
16447 | Liquor? 16447 Look here, Ellis,"he said:"are you trying to be honest, yourself? |
16447 | Mac, what''s the matter with you? |
16447 | Mac,said the brusque physician, for the first time using the familiar name:"between man and man, now:_ what_ about the boy?" |
16447 | Machinery? 16447 Make a fool of the paper by righting a rank injustice?" |
16447 | Make what all the harder? |
16447 | Making and unmaking judges, for example? |
16447 | Malaria? |
16447 | Max? 16447 Me? |
16447 | Meaning our friend Pierce? |
16447 | Meaning? |
16447 | Meningitis? |
16447 | Milly''s? 16447 Misgivings? |
16447 | More than usual? |
16447 | Morphine? |
16447 | Mr. Denton,said Hal,"did Miss Pierce explain why she did n''t return after running the nurse down?" |
16447 | Mr. Ellis,said Hal,"will you''phone Mr. Wayne to send up the man who covered the Pierce story?" |
16447 | Mr. Surtaine, have you thought what you are doing? |
16447 | Must I? |
16447 | My dear young lady, ought you to be risking your safety in such places as these? |
16447 | My own money? 16447 My part in it?" |
16447 | New cases? |
16447 | New? 16447 News?" |
16447 | No doubt what that means, is there? |
16447 | No? 16447 No? |
16447 | No? 16447 No? |
16447 | No? 16447 No?" |
16447 | Nor even suspect? |
16447 | Not a little bit on the asker? |
16447 | Not doing any doctoring nowadays, are you? |
16447 | Not going in for reform politics, are you? |
16447 | Not going out after those hundred drinks, eh, Mac? |
16447 | Not running an honest paper this week? |
16447 | Not so much that you''ll think Worthington dull and provincial? |
16447 | Not? 16447 Not?" |
16447 | Noticed that already, have you? 16447 Now who could that be, I wonder?" |
16447 | Now, what kind of a little game is this? |
16447 | Of the''Clarion''article? |
16447 | Of what sort? |
16447 | Off? |
16447 | Oh, that''s all in the game, is n''t it? |
16447 | Oh, yes, I know: we cure Bright''s disease, do n''t we? 16447 Old Home Week?" |
16447 | Or burying the dead in quicklime? |
16447 | Out all night again? |
16447 | Over Harrington Surtaine? |
16447 | Over the Pierce story? |
16447 | People die of tonsillitis, do they? |
16447 | Perhaps you''re the boy to do it, eh? 16447 Plague? |
16447 | Plain facts are what you want, are n''t they? |
16447 | Prefer to be fed up on pleasant lies? |
16447 | Pretty good, live town? |
16447 | Pretty little exhibition of temper, is n''t it? |
16447 | Pretty sound sense, eh? |
16447 | Prying into the secrets of the trade? |
16447 | Quicklime? 16447 Rather an intangible fortune, is n''t it?" |
16447 | Rather goes in for that sort of thing, does n''t she? |
16447 | Say,appealed Charley,"did you hear that cough- lozenge- peddling boob trying to tell me where to get off, in the proprietary game? |
16447 | Scared? 16447 See here, Mr. Sterne: is n''t it a fact that this attack was made because my father does n''t advertise with you?" |
16447 | See here, Neal: what made you quit us? |
16447 | See what? |
16447 | Septicæmia hemorrhagica? |
16447 | Shall I go, Dad? |
16447 | Shall I release it for Monday? |
16447 | She''s left? |
16447 | Shut your eyes and swallow it and ask no questions, if it''s good, eh, Doctor? |
16447 | Since when did you get so pick- an''-choosy? |
16447 | So the mystic''Must''is not exclusively a chief- editorial prerogative? |
16447 | So you call yourself an M.D., do you? |
16447 | So you''ve heard? |
16447 | Some kind of machinery? |
16447 | Something new? |
16447 | Something wrong? |
16447 | Somewhere about four thousand a week out, is n''t it? |
16447 | Speech? 16447 Stand?" |
16447 | Still sticking out for the money- back- if- not- satisfied racket-- in the other fellow''s business, eh, Andy? 16447 Still working at the Certina joint?" |
16447 | Still worrying about Dr. Surtaine''s influence over the paper? |
16447 | Stop? |
16447 | Suppose,said he,"a horse runs wild and makes a dive through that window? |
16447 | Sure? 16447 Taking''em? |
16447 | Tearing it down? |
16447 | Tell you? 16447 Thank_ me_?" |
16447 | That my old pal, Andy? |
16447 | That remains to be seen for me, does n''t it? 16447 That will be soon, wo n''t it, sir? |
16447 | That would be news, would n''t it? |
16447 | That''s quite unusual for your set, is n''t it? 16447 The Certina advertising?" |
16447 | The Chief? |
16447 | The Doctor thinks? |
16447 | The Rookeries deaths? |
16447 | The Rookeries? |
16447 | The arbutus? 16447 The contract that you said was no good? |
16447 | The epidemic story? 16447 The epidemic?" |
16447 | The father_ is_ rather impossible, is n''t he? |
16447 | The killed story? |
16447 | The readers, you mean? |
16447 | The wife of the son of a quack? 16447 The_ best_ friend, Boy- ee?" |
16447 | Them other cases the same thing? |
16447 | Then it''s to be killed? |
16447 | Then what does it matter if we hold it a little longer? |
16447 | Then why do n''t you get work on some paper that practices your principles? |
16447 | Then why were these bodies buried in quicklime? |
16447 | Then you meant nothing by it? |
16447 | Then you''re going to settle down here? |
16447 | Then you''ve seen the editorial page this morning? |
16447 | There always is, is n''t there, in a boy of that age, for a woman years older? |
16447 | Thereby keeping the graft in the family, eh? |
16447 | They wo n''t? |
16447 | Think so? |
16447 | This is n''t a bluff, I suppose? |
16447 | Tip O''Farrell, the labor politician? 16447 To the business? |
16447 | To undertake a partnership on five minutes''notice-- that is n''t business, is it? |
16447 | To- morrow? 16447 Up to me?" |
16447 | Upon what victim? |
16447 | Veltman? 16447 Veltman? |
16447 | Want to play it alone, do you? |
16447 | Wanted to? 16447 Was I staring very outrageously, sir?" |
16447 | Was he in love with you? |
16447 | Was it good? |
16447 | Was it? |
16447 | Was n''t it simply a case of currying favor with the working- classes? |
16447 | Was that what you had to tell me about the paper, when you asked me to come to see you? |
16447 | Wassamatter? |
16447 | We''re going to have a new press? |
16447 | We''re partners, are n''t we? |
16447 | Well, I''m-- What''s the idea? 16447 Well, Milly: what''s up?" |
16447 | Well, it can keep''em private for its own good, ca n''t it? 16447 Well, telescope''s sight, ai n''t it? |
16447 | Well, what about her? |
16447 | Well, what about it? |
16447 | Well, what newspaper is likely to do that? |
16447 | Well, what would you make of it, yourself? |
16447 | Well, you did n''t say there was anything more, did you? |
16447 | Well,replied the girl brazenly,"he said he''d seen me about the Rookeries district; and if that is n''t a low--""Had he?" |
16447 | Well; now that you own the''Clarion,''he said after a pause,"what do you think of it?" |
16447 | Well? 16447 Well?" |
16447 | Well? |
16447 | Well? |
16447 | Well? |
16447 | Well? |
16447 | Were you ever in St. Jo, Missouri? |
16447 | Were you there all the time? 16447 Whaddye want to know, else?" |
16447 | Whajjer want uvvum? |
16447 | What about her license? |
16447 | What about my opinion of amateur journalism? |
16447 | What about that roast? |
16447 | What about the Rookeries? |
16447 | What about the''Clarion''? |
16447 | What about''Must not''? |
16447 | What advice? 16447 What are the Relief Pills?" |
16447 | What are their interests? |
16447 | What are these, Dad? |
16447 | What are we doin''here, anyway? |
16447 | What are you doing here? |
16447 | What are you going to do about it? 16447 What are you going to do with her?" |
16447 | What are you going to do with it, now you''ve got it? |
16447 | What are you going to do? |
16447 | What are you going to talk about? |
16447 | What are you poking me in the ribs for? |
16447 | What are_ you_ doing here? |
16447 | What automobile? |
16447 | What became of Douglas? 16447 What bodies?" |
16447 | What branch of the work is this? |
16447 | What business is that of yours? |
16447 | What can he do? |
16447 | What can you do to E.M. Pierce''s girl in this town? |
16447 | What compelled you? |
16447 | What could they do? 16447 What d''you know about copper?" |
16447 | What did they say? |
16447 | What did you do to him? |
16447 | What did you think of their stories of the accident? |
16447 | What do I owe you? |
16447 | What do the certificates call it? |
16447 | What do you call that? |
16447 | What do you mean, then, by telling me you run an honest paper when you carry an abortion advertisement every day? |
16447 | What do you think of Old Lame- Boy? |
16447 | What do you think you''re hiring, a Professor of Journalism in the infant class? |
16447 | What do you think? |
16447 | What do you want me to do, Boy- ee? |
16447 | What do you want me to do? |
16447 | What do you want to see him about? |
16447 | What do you want, anyway? |
16447 | What does Dr. Merritt really think? 16447 What does he think it is?" |
16447 | What does it all matter? |
16447 | What does it care for the best interests of the town? |
16447 | What does it matter? |
16447 | What does the guaranty mean? |
16447 | What else could it be? |
16447 | What fer? |
16447 | What for? |
16447 | What for? |
16447 | What for? |
16447 | What for? |
16447 | What good does it all do you or anybody else? 16447 What good will talk do?" |
16447 | What has that faded beauty done, then? |
16447 | What have they been? |
16447 | What have you done with my subscription- flower? |
16447 | What have you got there? 16447 What have you to say for yourself?" |
16447 | What have you to say for yourself? |
16447 | What if it is? 16447 What in?" |
16447 | What is he up to? |
16447 | What is it, Emily? |
16447 | What is it, Norrie? |
16447 | What is it, Veltman? |
16447 | What is it? |
16447 | What is it? |
16447 | What is it? |
16447 | What is it? |
16447 | What is life, my dear friends? 16447 What is that?" |
16447 | What is the Neverfail Company? |
16447 | What is the formula now? |
16447 | What is the''Clarion''seeking to do? |
16447 | What is your question? |
16447 | What is your suggestion? |
16447 | What is''honestly''? |
16447 | What kind of a letter? |
16447 | What kind of labor? |
16447 | What kind of trouble? |
16447 | What limits are there to the boundless privileges of royalty? |
16447 | What on earth are you doing here? |
16447 | What on earth do you mean? |
16447 | What on earth is all this about, then? |
16447 | What on earth should I be vain about? 16447 What on?" |
16447 | What paragraph is that? |
16447 | What reason do you think drove me into it? |
16447 | What secret? |
16447 | What shall we do? |
16447 | What sort of business is it? |
16447 | What sort of sickness is it? |
16447 | What trade is that? |
16447 | What trick? |
16447 | What undertaker? |
16447 | What were you doing there? |
16447 | What were you thinking of her? |
16447 | What would my duties be? |
16447 | What would stop us? |
16447 | What''d you think of''Anti- Pellets''? |
16447 | What''s a Hardscrabbler? |
16447 | What''s all this about? |
16447 | What''s happened to you, since you used to itinerate with the Iroquois Extract of Life? |
16447 | What''s he saying? |
16447 | What''s his trouble? 16447 What''s in it?" |
16447 | What''s it to you if I have? |
16447 | What''s its value to you? |
16447 | What''s left of it? |
16447 | What''s left of the epidemic spread? |
16447 | What''s that you''ve written on it? |
16447 | What''s that? 16447 What''s that?" |
16447 | What''s that? |
16447 | What''s that? |
16447 | What''s the answer? |
16447 | What''s the fad now? 16447 What''s the game?" |
16447 | What''s the matter with business in this town? 16447 What''s the occasion?" |
16447 | What''s the other part? |
16447 | What''s the price,asked Ellis,"of the cigar and the compliment together? |
16447 | What''s the''Clarion''? |
16447 | What''s to be done, then? |
16447 | What''s to be done? |
16447 | What''s up there now; more murders? |
16447 | What''s up? 16447 What''s wrong with it? |
16447 | What''s wrong with it? |
16447 | What''s wrong with its tone? |
16447 | What''s wrong, Esmé? 16447 What? |
16447 | What? |
16447 | What? |
16447 | What? |
16447 | What_ is_ up? |
16447 | When? |
16447 | When? |
16447 | When? |
16447 | Where and when? |
16447 | Where are they? |
16447 | Where are you going? |
16447 | Where did I get it? |
16447 | Where do you come in on the idealist business, Mac? 16447 Where does a paper get its news?" |
16447 | Where does that lead to? |
16447 | Where has he been? |
16447 | Where is it? 16447 Where shall you go?" |
16447 | Where''d we get the money for a lawyer? |
16447 | Where''s Dad? |
16447 | Where''s Mac? |
16447 | Where''s my Dad? |
16447 | Where? |
16447 | Where? |
16447 | Where? |
16447 | Where? |
16447 | Wherein have I failed in my allegiance? |
16447 | Which job do you like best: the Certina or the newspaper, Miss Neal? |
16447 | Who are you,continued the journalist,"to talk standards of honesty in journalism to those boys?" |
16447 | Who are you? |
16447 | Who are you? |
16447 | Who do you suppose runs the newspapers of this town? |
16447 | Who else knows it''s typhus, Doc? |
16447 | Who fired you? |
16447 | Who is Jerry Saunders? |
16447 | Who is he? |
16447 | Who is it with her? |
16447 | Who is she? |
16447 | Who is that? |
16447 | Who is the man, Milly? |
16447 | Who is the young Greek godling, hopelessly lost in the impenetrable depths of your drawing- room? |
16447 | Who said anything about the''Clarion''s honor? 16447 Who to?" |
16447 | Who was it? |
16447 | Who''s that? |
16447 | Who''s the physician down there? |
16447 | Who''s to match him? |
16447 | Who''s treating them? |
16447 | Who''s''we''? |
16447 | Who, me? |
16447 | Who? 16447 Who? |
16447 | Whom did you dance with mostly? |
16447 | Whose writing is that? |
16447 | Why ca n''t I? |
16447 | Why ca n''t it be done? |
16447 | Why ca n''t it? |
16447 | Why ca n''t you? |
16447 | Why deliberately stir him up, Mac? |
16447 | Why did n''t you say so to our reporter, then? |
16447 | Why did n''t your sister sue the company? |
16447 | Why did she leave? |
16447 | Why did you come here to kill my father, Milly? |
16447 | Why do n''t you develop it? |
16447 | Why do n''t you take McQuiggan down to meet your Mr. Shearson, Hal? |
16447 | Why does n''t it get honest reporters? |
16447 | Why not this way? 16447 Why not wait till to- morrow?" |
16447 | Why not? 16447 Why not? |
16447 | Why not? 16447 Why not? |
16447 | Why not? 16447 Why not?" |
16447 | Why not? |
16447 | Why not? |
16447 | Why not? |
16447 | Why not? |
16447 | Why not? |
16447 | Why should I go to Elias M. Pierce''s office? |
16447 | Why should he be? |
16447 | Why should it be? 16447 Why should n''t it be so?" |
16447 | Why so? |
16447 | Why the fortification? |
16447 | Why unfortunate? |
16447 | Why would n''t you? 16447 Why, that''s John M. Gibbs''s store, is n''t it?" |
16447 | Why, what do you think the disease is? |
16447 | Why? 16447 Why? |
16447 | Why? |
16447 | Why? |
16447 | Why? |
16447 | Why? |
16447 | Why? |
16447 | Why? |
16447 | Why? |
16447 | Will he die? |
16447 | Will she get the fever? |
16447 | Will that medicine cause abortion? |
16447 | Will they? |
16447 | Will you come? |
16447 | Will you help me? |
16447 | Will you promise not to break it? 16447 Will you stay with me till he comes?" |
16447 | With what idea? |
16447 | With what? |
16447 | With you? 16447 With your lofty notions, Ellis, how did you ever come to work on a sheet like the''Clarion''?" |
16447 | Without any more advertising? |
16447 | Wo n''t the courts do anything? |
16447 | Wo n''t the old man back him up? |
16447 | Wo n''t they? |
16447 | Wo n''t you? |
16447 | Wonder if it''d do any good to marry her? |
16447 | Works out quite logically, does n''t it? |
16447 | Would it be our affair if Pierce did n''t control advertising? |
16447 | Would n''t it be a refreshing change,suggested Ellis,"to have one paper in Worthington that money wo n''t buy?" |
16447 | Would this help at all? |
16447 | Would you be sorry if I did? |
16447 | Would you like to hear some facts about the news we do n''t print? |
16447 | Would you obey it if it were? |
16447 | Would you? 16447 Would_ you_ feel well if you''d been in to dinner three times in the last week with Will Douglas, and then had to go in to supper with him, too?" |
16447 | Yes: but outside of that? |
16447 | Yes? |
16447 | Yes? |
16447 | You ai n''t a government agent or a medical society investigator? |
16447 | You among the number? |
16447 | You can lend me some pajamas? |
16447 | You can square that through your boy, ca n''t you? |
16447 | You can trust Ellis, can you? |
16447 | You did n''t bring it back with you, then? |
16447 | You did n''t put Veltman in your story? |
16447 | You do n''t care? |
16447 | You do n''t like the''Clarion''? |
16447 | You do the answering? |
16447 | You find me amusing? |
16447 | You have an appointment with him? |
16447 | You have no concern for yourself? |
16447 | You hold me to that? |
16447 | You keep your promise, then, to the little girl? |
16447 | You mean flirtation? 16447 You mean in Canadaga County? |
16447 | You mean that is the basis of the newspaper business as it is to- day? |
16447 | You mean that? |
16447 | You mean the ad? |
16447 | You say the sickness has been in there? |
16447 | You think I''m crazy? 16447 You think it good medicine for all that long list of troubles?" |
16447 | You think that''s swearing? |
16447 | You want me to tell you? |
16447 | You went and did it to Elias M., did n''t you? |
16447 | You went in and saw''em? |
16447 | You wo n''t help me to get justice for this woman?'' |
16447 | You wo n''t take me with you? |
16447 | You''d resign first? |
16447 | You''ll write the meeting? |
16447 | You''re Harrington Surtaine? 16447 You''re going to stand by and see my boy turn traitor to his class?" |
16447 | You''re not going away? |
16447 | You''re returning it? |
16447 | You''re sure of the facts? |
16447 | You''ve come to see me about--? |
16447 | You''ve got all the fake trimmings, have n''t you? 16447 You''ve had experience in this sort of thing before, I suppose?" |
16447 | You''ve put new drugs in? |
16447 | You-- can''t-- do-- it? |
16447 | You-- you wo n''t gimme away to the Chief? 16447 You? |
16447 | You? |
16447 | You_ are_ a doctor? |
16447 | Your father has dropped it? |
16447 | Your shoulder? |
16447 | Your wife? 16447 _ Are n''t_ you?" |
16447 | _ Are_ they the facts? 16447 _ Are_ you certain?" |
16447 | _ Are_ you? 16447 _ Do_ I know her?" |
16447 | _ Going_ to? |
16447 | _ Is_ it ruin to try and run a newspaper without taking a percentage of that kind of profits, Mac? |
16447 | _ Or_ a principle? |
16447 | _ Straight?_ Ladies and gents: the well- known Surtaine Family will now put on their screamin''farce entitled''Honesty is the Best Policy.'' |
16447 | _ What a paper to- morrow''s''Clarion''will be!_ But why? 16447 _ You_ will? |
16447 | & Treas._|||+-----------------------------------------+"Any good?" |
16447 | ''Grandmother, what makes your teeth so white?''" |
16447 | ''What about the other nine thousand?'' |
16447 | --"Are they concealing it at the City Hall?" |
16447 | --"Does he mean bubonic?" |
16447 | --"What''s he want?" |
16447 | --"Who says so?" |
16447 | About finances, by the way, where do you stand?" |
16447 | After a night''s rest--""In this house? |
16447 | All idealism goes that way, does n''t it?" |
16447 | And I''ve made you sit up--""What''s all this commotion?" |
16447 | And Wayne, in the same language, inquired:"How much?" |
16447 | And did n''t he think it quite professional of her to remember all about galleys and things? |
16447 | And do you know where my girl is now, on this day when your sheet is smearing her name all over the town?" |
16447 | And if you insist on knowing, I''ve been revisiting the pale glimpses of the moon-- at three o''clock P.M.""What do you mean, moon?" |
16447 | And is there some suffering friend who you can lead to the light?" |
16447 | And no other doctor gets in?" |
16447 | And what about the chaps that were going to put it out of business? |
16447 | And what harm are you doing by dropping the story, anyway? |
16447 | And what is it? |
16447 | And what will you make of it? |
16447 | And when I came here and told your father he''d got to help me out of my trouble, what do you think he told me? |
16447 | And wo n''t it take its hundreds of other lives unless warning is given? |
16447 | And yet-- and yet-- why otherwise should she come with the marks of fierce misery in her face, demanding an interview at this time? |
16447 | And you think with your little spewing demagoguery of newspaper filth, you can override me? |
16447 | And you''ll see that the''Clarion''keeps out of it, too?" |
16447 | And you''re going to begin at the bottom? |
16447 | And you''ve seen a lot of him lately, have n''t you?" |
16447 | And, Murtha, while you''re at the''phone, call up the''Clarion''office and tell McGuire Ellis to come up here on the jump, will you?" |
16447 | And_ where_ did you learn that delightful swing after the dip?" |
16447 | Andy Certain?" |
16447 | Andy the Spieler? |
16447 | Anything wrong at the shop, Milly?" |
16447 | Anything?" |
16447 | Anyway, it''s turned out well, has n''t it?" |
16447 | Are n''t any? |
16447 | Are n''t you sorry, sir, that you ever saw this room?" |
16447 | Are you as good a dancer as you used to be?" |
16447 | Are you engaged to Hal Surtaine?" |
16447 | Are you going to help me out?" |
16447 | Are you properly grateful?" |
16447 | Are you putting it to me?" |
16447 | Are you ready to take off your coat and work?" |
16447 | Are you so blame sure what_ you''d_ do in those conditions?" |
16447 | Are you staying here to- night?" |
16447 | Are you sure you''re not denying it now?" |
16447 | Arsenious acid, I suppose, to eat it out?" |
16447 | As for the Rookeries epidemic upon which all this turned, what did he really know of it, anyway? |
16447 | As well might one have asked,"What is the City Hall?" |
16447 | Ask of every bit of news,''Is this going to get me an advertiser? |
16447 | Below, in the same hand writing was the query:"_ What''s your percentage of the blood- money, Mr. Harrington Surtaine? |
16447 | Besides, can he afford to be in it if there_ should_ be any serious trouble? |
16447 | But did you notice him when he went?" |
16447 | But do you know your own? |
16447 | But do you think any paper in town touched it? |
16447 | But how to introduce these noble and fortifying ideals into the mind of that flighty young bird, Hal? |
16447 | But see here, Mr. Ellis, does n''t your contract hold you?" |
16447 | But the boy-- look here, you knew all about this Milly Neal business, did n''t you?" |
16447 | But the formula''s the vital thing, is n''t it?" |
16447 | But was it chance? |
16447 | But was the price so severe? |
16447 | But what I wanta ask you is this: We fellows who have to_ write_ the facts behind the news; where do we get off?" |
16447 | But what about my leaving, now?" |
16447 | But what about the run of the medical profession? |
16447 | But what does it cost to advertise? |
16447 | But what has that to do with Veltman''s resignation?" |
16447 | But what of Milly, taken on such poor terms? |
16447 | But what''s the reason for it?" |
16447 | But who was he to judge his father by such rigorous standards? |
16447 | But why, in particular, should he know?" |
16447 | But would the mere threat of firing suffice? |
16447 | But would you have told the truth of your part in it?" |
16447 | But you seem too-- too easy- going, too--""Too ornamental to be useful?" |
16447 | But, Esmé--""Well?" |
16447 | But, I guess, as father and son, pal and pal, we''re pretty well suited,--eh?" |
16447 | But, say, Mr. Surtaine, you ai n''t going to get virtuous in your advertising columns, too, are you?" |
16447 | By that same measure, what of Milly Neal? |
16447 | By the way, if he had a galley proof of anything that had been written about Kathleen Pierce''s motor accident, would he bring that along? |
16447 | By the way,"he added, becoming grave,"what was your game in cutting in on my''spiel''?" |
16447 | Ca n''t you tell the man- killer type when you see it?" |
16447 | Can I sell_ you_ a bottle?" |
16447 | Can we stand another?" |
16447 | Can you bang the big drum of righteousness in one column and promise falsely in the next to commit murder? |
16447 | Can you be honest on one page and a crook on another? |
16447 | Can you do it?" |
16447 | Can you do the story of the meeting?" |
16447 | Can you find O''Farrell?" |
16447 | Can you judge me so harshly, with your own conscience to answer?" |
16447 | Can you never learn to keep your hands off?" |
16447 | Can you remember it? |
16447 | Certina will do as much--""Is it true that alcohol simply hastens the course of the disease?" |
16447 | Come, now,"he added, in a hard, businesslike voice,"what are we going to call the cause of death?" |
16447 | Could any good come from such a stock? |
16447 | Could anything be clearer? |
16447 | Could he do that to them? |
16447 | Could n''t you exert the power without actually owning the newspaper?" |
16447 | Could she make a newspaper change its hue, as she could make men change color, with the power of a word or the incitement of a glance? |
16447 | Could you get up a preparation of it that looks tasty and tastes good?" |
16447 | D''yeh think it could be true?" |
16447 | Denton?" |
16447 | Did he not, at least, owe them a living? |
16447 | Did it fetch''em?" |
16447 | Did n''t I say I was scared?" |
16447 | Did n''t I tell you he was unexpected? |
16447 | Did n''t I tell you? |
16447 | Did n''t he call me up this morning and raise the devil?" |
16447 | Did n''t yeh hear whut he sayed? |
16447 | Did n''t you? |
16447 | Did you dance with him last night?" |
16447 | Did you do it all on your own?" |
16447 | Did you do it?" |
16447 | Did you really care? |
16447 | Did you tell Mac?" |
16447 | Didn''chu hear me?" |
16447 | Diphtheria?--Good enough for the present.--Ever see infectious meningitis? |
16447 | Do I seem false and disloyal to you? |
16447 | Do I?" |
16447 | Do n''t be young.--What? |
16447 | Do n''t you approve?" |
16447 | Do n''t you care for me-- a little, Hal?" |
16447 | Do n''t you know me?" |
16447 | Do n''t you know your Lewis Carroll? |
16447 | Do n''t you know, you say,''Aroint thee, witch,''when you want to get rid of her? |
16447 | Do n''t you remember?" |
16447 | Do n''t you think it''s fun having everything you want to buy, and having a leading citizen for a father?" |
16447 | Do n''t you think''pumess''is a nice lady- word, Guardy?" |
16447 | Do something for me, will you?" |
16447 | Do those things pay?" |
16447 | Do you believe the boy when he says that his father did n''t send him?" |
16447 | Do you expect it to work all one way?" |
16447 | Do you feel like a prince entering into his realm?" |
16447 | Do you get that? |
16447 | Do you know Pierce?" |
16447 | Do you know a man named Veltman?" |
16447 | Do you know how many bottles must be sold to any one patron before the profits begin to come in? |
16447 | Do you know that the money that bought this paper for you was coined out of the blood of deceived girls? |
16447 | Do you know that?" |
16447 | Do you know we''re putting on circulation at the rate of nearly a thousand a week?" |
16447 | Do you know what I took out of this town last night? |
16447 | Do you know what it means to damn the soul of a paper? |
16447 | Do you know what the great danger is now?" |
16447 | Do you know why?" |
16447 | Do you know why?" |
16447 | Do you know you''ve got to make a speech in an hour? |
16447 | Do you remember meeting me with Max Veltman the other night?" |
16447 | Do you think you can make Worthington feel like home?" |
16447 | Do you think you can?" |
16447 | Do you?" |
16447 | Does Mac know?" |
16447 | Does anybody else but me give you page ads.?" |
16447 | Does he still come to see you?" |
16447 | Does that go?" |
16447 | Does the name McQuiggan mean anything to you?" |
16447 | Eat? |
16447 | Eh? |
16447 | Eh?" |
16447 | Eh?" |
16447 | Elliot?" |
16447 | Elliot?" |
16447 | Ellis, why does the''Clarion''carry such stuff as that?" |
16447 | Esmé lifted up a very clear and sweet mezzo- soprano in a mocking lilt of song:--"How should my heart know What love may be?" |
16447 | Esmé, did I ever tell you my creed?" |
16447 | Esmé, did you notice how thin and worn he looks?" |
16447 | Ever know any folks there, George?" |
16447 | Every other paper in town gets his copy; why should n''t we? |
16447 | Father, you saw the story in the''Clarion,''--the story of Milly''s death?" |
16447 | For God''s sake, why?" |
16447 | From near the speaker a voice piped thinly:--"Will it ease my cough?" |
16447 | Get it? |
16447 | Got this morning''s?" |
16447 | Hale?" |
16447 | Has he killed you?" |
16447 | Have n''t you thrown it down?" |
16447 | Have one?" |
16447 | Have you a scar on your left shoulder?" |
16447 | Have you heard anything from Esmé Elliot since she left?" |
16447 | Have you heard of a single case outside of the Rookeries district, so far?" |
16447 | Have you met Esmé yet?" |
16447 | Have you seen the evening papers?" |
16447 | Have you sent a man to see her?" |
16447 | Have you? |
16447 | He bristled forth to the rail to meet a tall and rather elegant young man whom he greeted with a growl to this effect:"Hoojer wanter see?" |
16447 | He thought to interpret that taunt in the words which Veltman had used, aforetime:--"What''s_ your_ percentage?" |
16447 | He''s been here only a few weeks, has n''t he?" |
16447 | He''s in the printing- department, is n''t he?" |
16447 | Hoss- stealin'', barn- burnin'', boot- leggin'', an''murder thrown in when--""Be you the doctor was to Corsica Village two years ago?" |
16447 | How are you feeling, Hal? |
16447 | How can it make profits and pay your dividends if that kind of thing keeps up?" |
16447 | How can you know my motive?" |
16447 | How can you live without business?" |
16447 | How could he, their leader, recant his doctrine before these men? |
16447 | How could you take money made that way?" |
16447 | How do I know you''d print what I discovered-- supposing I discovered anything?" |
16447 | How do you like it? |
16447 | How do you like the results?" |
16447 | How do_ I_ know what I''d do?" |
16447 | How does the paper suit your tastes?" |
16447 | How else will I find out?" |
16447 | How is the boy?" |
16447 | How long will it go on paying that if the newspapers keep stirring up trouble for it? |
16447 | How long would you want me to stay?" |
16447 | How many here are hiding that dreadful malady, cancer? |
16447 | How many new victims?" |
16447 | How many readers care whether E.M. Pierce''s daughter ran over a woman or not? |
16447 | How many suicides do you suppose your''Boon to Womanhood''and its kind of hellishness causes in a year, thanks to the help of your honest journalism?" |
16447 | How much did we give it? |
16447 | How much of the news would he print? |
16447 | How serious is this Surtaine matter?" |
16447 | How soon is the epidemic likely to break, Doctor?" |
16447 | How the devil did you get in here?" |
16447 | How would you feel when Mac Ellis, and Wayne, and all the fellows that stuck by you found themselves out of a job because of your pig- headedness? |
16447 | How would you like it if he undertook to interfere with Certina?" |
16447 | How you call it? |
16447 | How''s that?" |
16447 | How''s that?" |
16447 | How''s that?" |
16447 | How? |
16447 | I believe that''s the proper business phrase, is n''t it?" |
16447 | I did n''t say?" |
16447 | I like being a spoiled child, do n''t you? |
16447 | I thought it might be that, maybe-- No? |
16447 | I would n''t ask it if it were anything else; but--""Would you do it yourself?" |
16447 | If one bottle cures--""Does_ what_? |
16447 | If she went astray once, who are you to judge her? |
16447 | If so, was n''t the whole affair a matter of selling shadow rather than substance? |
16447 | If so, what is its nature?" |
16447 | In other words, what do you want of me?" |
16447 | Is all the wrong on my side? |
16447 | Is it O.K.?" |
16447 | Is it very serious?" |
16447 | Is it your notion of a fair partnership to stay away and let your fellow toilers wither on the bough? |
16447 | Is it, oh, is it, the Great American Pumess that I have the honor to address?" |
16447 | Is n''t it likely to be serious for any of the unprotected young of your species when a Great American Pumess gets after him?" |
16447 | Is n''t that matter enough?" |
16447 | Is n''t that right? |
16447 | Is n''t that true?" |
16447 | Is n''t there anything else you''ve ever thought of turning to?" |
16447 | Is that going to lose me an advertiser?'' |
16447 | Is that it?" |
16447 | Is that plain?" |
16447 | Is that plain?" |
16447 | Is that some plan? |
16447 | Is that the idea, Father?" |
16447 | Is there any limit to the business that food could do? |
16447 | It ca n''t cost so much to make as--""Make? |
16447 | It is n''t too early to give it a start, is it?" |
16447 | It was, for the moment, the Great American Pumess who spoke:--"Wo n''t you even say you''re glad to see me?" |
16447 | It''s catching, ai n''t it?" |
16447 | It''s some difference of definition, I suppose''? |
16447 | It''s the finest bracer--""As a cure?" |
16447 | It_ is_''Doctor,''ai n''t it?" |
16447 | Journalistically, how can I? |
16447 | Just for a test,--for the last time will you or will you not, Mr. Sterne, publish this apology?" |
16447 | Just the same, if it was n''t for what you''ve done for Boyee--""Well, what about''Boyee''?" |
16447 | Knight- errantry, eh? |
16447 | Know anything about Worthington?" |
16447 | Know what I mean? |
16447 | Look here, Boyee; what''s the worst feature of an epidemic? |
16447 | Mac?" |
16447 | Mac?" |
16447 | May I ask some questions?" |
16447 | May I give you a lift in my car?" |
16447 | Maybe some kind of hypophosphite, eh?" |
16447 | McQuiggan?" |
16447 | Me? |
16447 | Meaning her_ fiancé_, Mr. William Douglas, with whom her mind and emotions should properly have been concerned? |
16447 | Not falling in love?" |
16447 | Not going?" |
16447 | Notes? |
16447 | Notice anything queer about the page?" |
16447 | Now if you had some man whom you could turn over this news end to while you''re building up a sound advertising policy--""How about McGuire Ellis?" |
16447 | Now where shall I begin?" |
16447 | Now, how are you going to make money with the''Clarion''?" |
16447 | Now, if I quit making Certina, what about them? |
16447 | Now, then, what''s your answer?" |
16447 | Now, what happens if you turn loose a newspaper scare? |
16447 | Of course you wo n''t print anything about this affair?" |
16447 | Oh, death, where is thy power? |
16447 | Oh, grave, where is thy victory? |
16447 | Oh, that''s Certina Charley, is n''t it? |
16447 | On her return she made a frontal attack:--"Norrie, what made you break your engagement to Will Douglas?" |
16447 | On the level? |
16447 | Or drink? |
16447 | Or give it away? |
16447 | Or try to communicate with her? |
16447 | Or would you take him out to the theater and feed him a fat cigar, and treat him the best you know how? |
16447 | Ought you to be going there?" |
16447 | Pierce?" |
16447 | Pierce?" |
16447 | Pistols?" |
16447 | Please, may n''t I have it to play with?" |
16447 | Poor Max has got a wife somewhere--""Max? |
16447 | Pure Food Law scared you out of the dope, eh? |
16447 | Revolvers?" |
16447 | Roast Certina, will he? |
16447 | See you at-- what time, by the way?" |
16447 | See you to- night, Andy?" |
16447 | See? |
16447 | See? |
16447 | Shall I tell Veltman to set it up in several styles so you may take your pick?" |
16447 | Shall I turn them out on the street?" |
16447 | Shearson?" |
16447 | Should he accept it, or was it safer to ignore this pestilent disturber? |
16447 | Since when? |
16447 | Smallpox?" |
16447 | So you know, do you? |
16447 | Something like typhoid?" |
16447 | Specifically, seats for shopgirls, and extra pay for extra work, as during Old Home Week, when the stores kept open until 10 P.M.? |
16447 | Still holding his eyes to hers, she stretched out her hand to receive the strip of print,"Do you think I''d better read it?" |
16447 | Suppose I should break all the rules of the office? |
16447 | Sure you wo n''t have a drink?" |
16447 | Sure you wo n''t let me hire a New York lawyer for the libel suit?" |
16447 | Surtaine?" |
16447 | Surtaine?" |
16447 | Surtaine?" |
16447 | Surtaine?" |
16447 | Surtaine?" |
16447 | Surtaine?" |
16447 | Surtaine?" |
16447 | Surtaine?" |
16447 | Surtaine?" |
16447 | Surtaine?" |
16447 | Surtaine?" |
16447 | Surtaine?" |
16447 | Surtaine?" |
16447 | Tell me, who''s this Balzac? |
16447 | The Grand Vizier said to the plagues,''How many of my people have you slain?'' |
16447 | The big thing now is, what''s the paper going to do about this meeting?" |
16447 | The breakfast was my suggestion, was n''t it? |
16447 | The department store advertising?" |
16447 | The eminent savant removed his hat with a fine flourish, further reflected in his language as he said:--"What does Beauty so far afield?" |
16447 | The question is, What am I going to do?" |
16447 | The''Star''? |
16447 | Then why are n''t we all dead?" |
16447 | Then you''ve seen him lately?" |
16447 | Then, in a pause, a young voice said:"Well, to bring the subject up to date, what about the deaths in the Rookeries?" |
16447 | Then,"Esmé, I was pretty rotten about that, was n''t I?" |
16447 | There was a pause: then,"You''ll come to see me-- when you can?" |
16447 | Therefore, when Milly Neal appeared at the gate at 9.05 in the evening, the Cerberus greeted her professionally with a"How goes it, Miss Cutie?" |
16447 | To Old Home Week?" |
16447 | To take Certina? |
16447 | Veltman?" |
16447 | WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO ABOUT IT? |
16447 | Want any help?" |
16447 | Want some advice from the Old Man?" |
16447 | Was I wrong? |
16447 | Was he really as unyielding in other tests of principle as he had shown himself with her? |
16447 | Was he too busy to come up to Greenvale, Dr. Elliot''s place, at 8.30 sharp? |
16447 | Was it fully come yet? |
16447 | Was it him that told you it was typhus?" |
16447 | Was it not, rather, as McGuire Ellis had suggested, the exemplification of an exact logic? |
16447 | Was n''t it? |
16447 | Was the advertising really of so much more import than the medicine itself? |
16447 | Was there peril in his presence? |
16447 | We''ve come to be real friends, have n''t we? |
16447 | We-- I-- didn''t know-- Have you been asleep?" |
16447 | Well, but, see here, dear, does Cousin Clarice approve of that sort of thing?" |
16447 | Well, if a witch can be arointed, why should n''t she aroint other things?" |
16447 | Well, not to go any farther, what about this for honesty?" |
16447 | Well, then: how''s a paper going to live that turns against its own support? |
16447 | Well, what did you do?" |
16447 | Were his fish securely in the net? |
16447 | Were there?" |
16447 | Whaddye mean?" |
16447 | What about her?" |
16447 | What about him? |
16447 | What about it?" |
16447 | What about that name for the new laxative pills, Con? |
16447 | What about your testimonials? |
16447 | What are the Rookeries? |
16447 | What are you giving for it?" |
16447 | What are you going to do with it?" |
16447 | What are_ we_ here for?" |
16447 | What chance have we got to develop ideals when you outsiders control the whole business?" |
16447 | What did it amount to, anyway? |
16447 | What did it matter, anyway, a bit of news like that? |
16447 | What did you have to drink?" |
16447 | What did you pay for your M.D.?" |
16447 | What difference does it make to them? |
16447 | What do those men know about the ethics of journalism? |
16447 | What do you know about it?" |
16447 | What do you know about mining?" |
16447 | What do you mean by the Death?" |
16447 | What do you mean? |
16447 | What do you suppose he''s doing down here?" |
16447 | What do you think it is, Doctor?" |
16447 | What do you think of that? |
16447 | What do you think ought to be done about the Rookeries?" |
16447 | What do you want to do with the''Clarion''?" |
16447 | What do you want, anyway?" |
16447 | What does he know of it? |
16447 | What else can it mean? |
16447 | What for?" |
16447 | What good''s a reporter who ca n''t get news? |
16447 | What have you been doing to yourself? |
16447 | What if the engineer_ was_ worked overtime? |
16447 | What is business?" |
16447 | What is it?" |
16447 | What is that?" |
16447 | What is there to do?" |
16447 | What is your Vitalizing Mixture?" |
16447 | What kind of plague?" |
16447 | What mattered his little pangs? |
16447 | What of them? |
16447 | What started you on that?" |
16447 | What thanks does the public give a newspaper? |
16447 | What was he doing there, with his keen face and worldly, confident carriage, amidst those clodhoppers? |
16447 | What was it this time?" |
16447 | What was the good?" |
16447 | What woman does n''t? |
16447 | What''ll the''Clarion''look like when its great sensation peters out into thin air? |
16447 | What''ll they ever get him? |
16447 | What''re you obliged to me for?" |
16447 | What''s Merritt going to do about it?" |
16447 | What''s a doctor''s fee? |
16447 | What''s that worth in advertising to the year''s business? |
16447 | What''s the newest thing in science? |
16447 | What''s the result?" |
16447 | What''s the use of scaring every one to death? |
16447 | What''s the worst thing about doctors''doses? |
16447 | What''s this,''Clarion''sensationalism?" |
16447 | What''s this?" |
16447 | What''s to hinder us from doing as we please? |
16447 | What''s up?" |
16447 | What''s your paper, by the way?" |
16447 | What? |
16447 | When do you start in work?" |
16447 | When''ll the next Surtaine roast be ready?" |
16447 | Whence had the knife leapt, to gleam so viciously in his hand? |
16447 | Whence the wherewithal?" |
16447 | Where are you off to this morning?" |
16447 | Where did he get it?" |
16447 | Where did you get it?" |
16447 | Where did you get it?" |
16447 | Where did you get on?" |
16447 | Where do your profits come from? |
16447 | Where does it come from? |
16447 | Where is it?" |
16447 | Where''s Dr. Merritt? |
16447 | Where''s Ellis?" |
16447 | Where''s all your glowing idealism now?" |
16447 | Where''s the harm in protecting the store?" |
16447 | Where?" |
16447 | Which paper?" |
16447 | While you''re looking around for your life- work, how about doing a little unpaid job for me?" |
16447 | Who among you, dear friends, but has felt it? |
16447 | Who are any of us to judge her? |
16447 | Who are you, to join that noble company of martyrs?" |
16447 | Who is it pays your salaries, do you think? |
16447 | Who owns that pest- hole?" |
16447 | Who owns the''Banner''? |
16447 | Who owns the''News''? |
16447 | Who pays for the running of a newspaper? |
16447 | Who said she had it? |
16447 | Who says you did?" |
16447 | Who was harmed by leaving it out? |
16447 | Who''s first?" |
16447 | Who''s going to be any the worse for it? |
16447 | Who''s we?" |
16447 | Why are you speaking out in meeting to me, particularly?" |
16447 | Why did he want to kill you?" |
16447 | Why did n''t you tell me?" |
16447 | Why does n''t the''Clarion''speak out, Mr. Surtaine? |
16447 | Why not? |
16447 | Why should I? |
16447 | Why should I? |
16447 | Why should n''t I take the money, when it''s there?" |
16447 | Why should n''t they have? |
16447 | Why should the papers help spread it by noticing it in their columns?" |
16447 | Why should you after-- Do you mind telling me how it happened?" |
16447 | Why the Neal story-- now?" |
16447 | Why would n''t it be new? |
16447 | Why, Boyee, what_ is_ a cure?" |
16447 | Why, what''s the''Clarion,''anyway? |
16447 | Why? |
16447 | Why?" |
16447 | Will Certina cure it?" |
16447 | Will he do it? |
16447 | Will it cure diabetes?" |
16447 | Will it?" |
16447 | Will the nurse die?" |
16447 | Will you come to see me to- morrow?" |
16447 | Will you come, and make Hal come, too?" |
16447 | Will you help me in the Rookeries matter?" |
16447 | Will you help?" |
16447 | Willard?" |
16447 | Work for the''Clarion''?" |
16447 | Would I waste it on you, Dave Sterne?" |
16447 | Would Kathleen write such a letter? |
16447 | Would he come at all, now? |
16447 | Would he dast swear to it if it was n''t true?" |
16447 | Would he help the League to obtain certain reforms? |
16447 | Would you fire me?" |
16447 | Would you mind joining me in the college yell? |
16447 | Yet if that were so, why had he sent word, the day after, that he could n''t keep his appointment? |
16447 | Yet-- and the qualifying thought dashed cold upon his enthusiasm-- what did the alternative imply for them? |
16447 | You agree with me in that, do n''t you?" |
16447 | You did n''t have to, did you?" |
16447 | You do n''t know much about what goes on in your town, do you?" |
16447 | You gave me the material, did n''t you?" |
16447 | You have n''t been making investments without my advice?" |
16447 | You have n''t told us that yet?" |
16447 | You liked the job, did n''t you?" |
16447 | You think because you''ve got your father''s quack millions behind you, that you can stand up to me?" |
16447 | You think it ai n''t genteel and high- toned, do n''t you?" |
16447 | You understand?" |
16447 | You understand?--What are you calling it? |
16447 | You would n''t try to hear through one, would you?" |
16447 | You''ll be going back to Washington?" |
16447 | You''ll be sure that he''s there?" |
16447 | You''ll be sure to do it, wo n''t you?" |
16447 | You''ll believe that, wo n''t you?" |
16447 | You''ll go, Boyee?" |
16447 | You''ll take my word, I suppose?" |
16447 | You''re ashamed of the proprietary medicine game, are n''t you, my dear?" |
16447 | You''re isolating them, are n''t you?--Pest- house? |
16447 | You''re not going back on me, now?" |
16447 | You''re safe?" |
16447 | You''re with me there, too, are n''t you?" |
16447 | You_ did_ send for me, did n''t you?" |
16447 | Young Surtaine, eh? |
16447 | Your professional fixer?" |
16447 | Yours and your father''s?" |
16447 | Yours?" |
16447 | _ All_ the facts?" |
16447 | _ Do n''t_ you think it would be safer to go?" |
16447 | _ Do you hear?_ Hurry!" |
16447 | _ Does_ he? |
16447 | _ Now_, will you shake?" |
16447 | _ Were_ you?" |
16447 | _ What''ll_ we be manufacturing?" |
16447 | _ Why is that story ordered killed?_""Consideration of policy which--""Policy! |
16447 | demanded Shearson pathetically,"before you went and mucksed everything up this way? |
16447 | go?" |
16447 | she cried with a sinking break of the voice,"do you think I''m_ bad_?" |
16447 | that led Milly Neal to her death? |
16447 | what have we here?" |