Questions

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

identifier question
38631And why do you suffer it?
38631A thirst for gold had proved irresistible: what would it be now when it became heightened by a thirst for blood?
38631Is there no comet that may warn an unprepared and a doomed people?
38631The watch on board the ship hailed them, and asked them whence they came and if they had seen any pirates?
38632Being surrounded with difficulties on all sides, and in great disorder, having nobody to give orders, what was to be done? 38632 This ship, which Oexmelin calls the_ Haktswort_( Oxford?) 38632 did he not promise to receive these gentlemen?
38632he cried,"what will you do with me, Englishmen?
32809What did you think when you found yourself in the hands of those barbarians?
32809Why then,said Montbar, roughly,"do you tamely submit to such insults?"
32809But, could he estimate the amount of labour required to procure such an enormous quantity, by people who had no other appliances than baskets?
32809Can they do it, and doing it, will they give up the advantages they will thereby acquire?
32809Did James want to salve his own conscience, or was it intended to satisfy those who clamoured on account of the injustice of the execution?
32809Did he not know that James was friendly with the king of Spain and wanted to get from him a princess for his son Henry?
32809Did not Keymis remember that these were not the days of the virgin queen, when to"singe the Spaniard''s beard"was worthy of praise?
32809How was it that thou didst not die In imagining a treason so enormous?
32809How were the relations to prove that the promise had not been fulfilled, and if they did so what redress could be obtained?
32809If Spain wanted peace, why did her people murder a ship''s company in cold blood a little while before?
32809If such was the experience of the foreigners, what must have been that of the Patriots?
32809Is it any wonder that the population decreased to a wonderful degree in a few years?
32809Is it any wonder that when caught the bush negro or maroon was severely punished, and that the utmost rigour of the law was exercised?
32809Is it any wonder that when the excitement attendant on his release had gone off he became sick and utterly prostrated?
32809This suited his ideas exactly, for were they not Roman Catholics-- the very body which he had been declaiming everywhere against?
32809Where was that evil and unworthy Haytian who thought he had not accomplished the decrees of the Eternal by exterminating those bloodthirsty tigers?
32809Why should Spain claim the whole of the New World?
32809Why should free negroes work?
32809Why should he plant for others when he himself was starving?
32809of their indulgence; when would they be tired of breathing the same air?
32809wert thou born of woman?
32809what beast could have such a wicked son?
26690But Don Alonso not believing this, answered,''How can that be?
26690For were he to be a_ French- man_ born, how came he to learn the_ Dutch_ language so perfectly as to prefer it to his own?
26690For who knoweth not that all places, both Military and Civil, through those vast dominions of the_ West- Indies,_ are provided out of_ Spain?
26690From what port they set forth last, when they came to seek them out?
26690Have they, peradventure, wit enough to build a fire- ship?
26690Or what examples can easily parallel the desperate courage of the Governour of_ Chagre?
26690Or what instruments have they to do it withal?''"
26690Shall these men be said to be influenced with Cowardize, who thus acted to the very last_ Scene_ of their own_ Tragedies?
26690Some, who never were out of their mothers''kitchens, may ask, how these pirates could eat and digest those pieces of leather, so hard and dry?
26690Soon after they brought a captain to him, whom he examined very strictly; particularly, wherein consisted the forces of those of Panama?
26690There were still remaining some few prisoners not wounded; these were asked by Lolonois, if any more Spaniards did lie farther on in ambuscade?
26690These were often asked,"What is become of your captain?"
26690What men ever fought more desperately than the Garrison of_ Chagre?
26690Whether they expected any more ships to come?
26690_ Or shall we rather say that they wanted no Courage, but Fortune?
26690_ What lion ever fought to the last gasp more obstinately than the Governour of_ Puerto Velo?
26690are these devils, or what are they?''
38633Ah, Captain Skinner,said he,"is that you?
38633At sea?
38633But I doubt,cried another,"if he be such a mighty conjuror, for if he was, how the devil was it that he did not conjure himself clear of us?"
38633But what signifies a hat, friend?
38633Curse you,said the pirate,"who do you think we are?"
38633D---- you villains, who are you? 38633 Well,"argued his opponent,"and who is that?"
38633What health is that?
38633What wo n''t do?
38633Who is king of England?
38633Zounds,said Russel, stamping on the deck,"did I not bid you stave all the casks that had water in them?"
38633After such justice, can we wonder at the crimes to which despair too often drove the pirates?
38633As the sailors stripped off his shoes and stockings, the officer asked him if all Robert''s crew were as likely men as himself?
38633From whence come you?"
38633JOHN( JOSEPH?)
38633Russel, the chief officers, and the prisoners then crowded into the cabin, and to the question of"How goes the game?"
38633The captain answered,"Something has happened to the ship; does she drive?
38633The captain, frightened and thinking the ship had broken from her anchors, asked,"What was the matter?"
38633Their watchword was,"Is your drunken boatswain on board?"
38633They said,"What is that to you?
38633What do you say, gentlemen?"
38633is he a conjuror?"
38633said Roberts,"do you do it voluntarily, or are you forced?"
38633said the captain,"how can that be?"
38633upon which Russel said,"You dog you, why did you not come aboard with the boat?
38633what satisfaction is this to me or the company?
38633what weather is it?"
38633what, are you going to leave me?"
19396A sail, how bears she or stands shee, to winde- ward or lee- ward? 19396 I will be one,"he concluded,"who will be the other?"
19396Master, how stands the chase? 19396 Are you a Merchant, or a Man of War? 19396 But why should they not go by water? 19396 How many Look- outs or Centinels? 19396 If any River or Creek comes near it, or where the best Landing? 19396 If fortified, how many Great Guns, and what number of small Arms? 19396 Of Spaine; Whence is yours? 19396 Pedro, our chief Cimaroon, asked him,Are you a man of war, and in want; and yet doubt whether this be meat, that hath blood?
19396Que gente?"
19396Right on head I say; Well we shall reatch him by and by; what''s all ready?
19396The Spaniard then put the query"Que gente?"
19396These are not the same as mustees, or octoroons], or Indians?
19396Try him once more, as before; Done, Done; Keep your loufe and charge your ordnance again; Is all ready?
19396Whether possible to avoid the Look- outs or take them?
19396Why in the world should they not make a raft of the trees,"and put ourselves to sea"?
19396Yea, yea, every man to his charge, dowse your topsaile to salute him for the Sea, hale him with a noise of trumpets; Whence is your ship?
19396and what their chiefest manufactures?
19396for such the Spaniards always keep; and how the Look- outs are placed?
19396how many families?
19396is all well?
19396whether it is possible to come undescried on them?
19396whether most Spaniards?
19396whether rich, and what their riches do consist in?
43771After mass, the body is heaved overboard and no burial rites are said, for who shall try to save a heretic''s soul? 43771 Do n''t you remember the other verses?
43771Now, Toddlekins, what did I say? 43771 There it is-- see?
43771What, more lemonade?
43771Where has it come from?
43771All I can say is, where is the white man in Jamaica?
43771All very square and very Spanish were these houses, very quaint to look upon; and if this is La Guayra, where is Caracas?
43771And shall I say I have not?
43771And what was that summons?
43771But did I tell you how as usual bravery was rewarded?
43771But whither, and to what, does it lead?
43771But, shall we say it?
43771Could it be that this great company were the revivified followers of the dauntless Sir Walter Raleigh, searching, centuries ago, for_ El Dorado_?
43771Did it not seem that he pleaded for the white man-- that the stronger black should have more charity?
43771Did she not give us the earliest news of Cervera''s mysterious fleet?
43771Did you ever imagine there could be such shade?
43771Do n''t you remember about Captain Kidd?
43771Do you suppose he is as old as that?
43771Does it mean the_ Gran Hotel de Venezuela_?
43771Does it seem possible that the little brown cloves, rattling in my spice- box at home, could ever have been so fresh and soft and pink?
43771For did not her children say that she would never waken more?
43771For how can the country''s business go on amid the turmoil of ever- impending revolution?
43771For why is there a great God above and his Holy Church on earth except to be honoured?
43771Green, the green of trees and grass, you ask?
43771Had n''t we seen his white hat disappear under the big, open doorway as we were on the way to market?
43771Has the white blood after all so little potency?
43771How can I explain it to you?
43771How is it that Castro is said to have laid by a million dollars out of a twelve thousand dollars a year salary?
43771How long has it been wandering, and what force is it which sends it thus unharmed, save for the loss of bark, out again into the light?
43771I wonder why they are not exported more freely in place of the big, thick- coated lemons?
43771Is it to be a''once upon a time''story, Dad?
43771Is not this a people left like children to build up the semblance of a government from the wrong stuff?
43771Is there not a strain of the Moor''s fatalism still traceable in the true Spaniard?
43771More German flags; they are very interesting, but why should a party of Americans be so honoured?
43771Must we be honest at the expense of all else?
43771No mention of colour distinction was made: but which of us was to have the charity?
43771Now, when did this mighty process begin, and what internal force is at work producing this continual outpouring upon the earth''s surface?
43771Or have you never had the fun?
43771Or was it for us as well?
43771Strange, is it not?
43771Ten anxious heads lean out from ten abbreviated windows; ten distressed voices ask in all available tongues,"Where is the Doctor?"
43771This, with a few nouns sprinkled in, was my vocabulary; but I had no fears,--had we not our own interpreter?
43771Was he ever intended to be a householder?
43771Was there a hand outstretched beneath in the far, disappearing morning which brought the ecstasy into the soul of that lonely wanderer?
43771What combination of characteristics is it that makes the Spaniard such a marvellous builder, and, at the same time, such a wretched maintainer?
43771What in all the world has the Southern Cross to do with the nineteenth century?
43771What is his position, and what has brought him into his present deplorable condition?
43771Where are the birds once peopling these forests, like myriads of rainbows?
43771Where is he?
43771Where is the Doctor?
43771Where is the woman with the baskets?
43771Where would the Englishman be in another century in Jamaica?
43771Who can tell?
43771Who ever thought of carrying an encyclopedia in a steamer- trunk?
43771Why did we shake every bone in our bodies over the upturned streets and boulders of Caracas?
43771Why is it that our going into Venezuela was considered by some unsafe?
43771Why is it that there must always be those who are constantly anticipating hot weather?
43771With these I can fare sumptuously:_ ¿ Cuanto cuesta?_( How much does it cost?)
43771With these I can fare sumptuously:_ ¿ Cuanto cuesta?_( How much does it cost?)
43771Would Jamaica revert back to the Haïtien type, or is some hand coming to uphold the island?
43771You remember?
43771_ ¿ Qué hora es?_( What o''clock is it?)
43771_ ¿ Qué hora es?_( What o''clock is it?)
43771and what could we do?
43771says Toddlekins,"that was lovely; is it true?
43771where should the children escape?
43770But what shall we do about the Islands of the Blest?
43770Can it be that we have been dreaming, that it was never there?
43770Do you mean to infer, my dear, that if we women in America had equal suffrage, you men would stay at home and wait for the money we earn? 43770 Do you need to ask?
43770So you have never gone down at sea, Rudolph? 43770 Turkey?
43770What are these?
43770What did she have to say?
43770What did you order?
43770Who are the coolies?
43770Why does n''t it know enough to shine on sailing day? 43770 Would they be sent?"
43770Ah, my friends of the feather toques and the winged head- gear, what have we to answer for?
43770And why should not Columbus have made his ships thus fast?
43770Appreciate?
43770But after all these snake stories you would rather not join us in our morning walk?
43770But now we may go on, and would you mind if we did n''t try to learn one bit of anything more for the rest of this beautiful evening?
43770But then there''s nothing much else to do in Haïti, and why not be willing to wait for dinner?
43770But there will come other days in Martinique-- there must come other days, for is not this_ Le Pays des Revenants_?
43770But these dark things in the water-- where do they belong?
43770But we were not to be discomfited by a rain- shower, for were we not prepared?
43770But what is the use in going to a market unless we can buy something?
43770But what will they see here to admire?
43770But who could decide in such a mob?
43770But, what could one do but look and marvel, when the sea about us was swarming with tiny boats, laden with treasures of the deep and of the forest?
43770Ca n''t you see it''s the sun- dial?"
43770Can it be that the plume- hunters for our Northern milliners have ranged through all these sunny islands?
43770Can it be that, with these few crude tools, he can fashion so wonderfully?
43770Could it be more lovely, more enchanting, more mysterious under a white sun shining from out a motionless blue heaven?
43770Do n''t you know they carry down the mountainside and into the city the finest water of the West Indies?
43770Do you recall the warnings of our black- coated friend of last evening-- warnings against"_ les serpents_,"as he called them?
43770Do you remember a game we children used to play, which had this little refrain?
43770Do you remember about the children who followed us so silently on our long walk?
43770Do you think we noticed the red oilcloth table cover, the dingy lamp, and the rock- bottom sofa?
43770Does a naked negro baby ever look as bare to you as a naked white baby?
43770Every one must have gone down into every one''s trunk this morning; was there ever such a change?
43770For nothing is it, dear one, to forget the stress of living for awhile, and let one''s spirit drop into the peace of a sleeping bell?
43770For who else do you think could have cut down the trees?
43770Go and see the captain?
43770Go to bed, we''re all right; the sea is n''t as bad as it was before midnight, and what''s the use of worrying anyway?
43770Has it ever impressed you how rarely nature appeals to one''s sense of humour?
43770Has the American dentist yet untrodden fields?
43770Have you heard of the feats of endurance which these young girls perform?
43770How can I bring again the witchery of that vision?
43770How can a civilised people be willing to turn the civic house- cleaning over to a lot of vultures?
43770How far are we from the voodoo and all the savagery of Africa?
43770How they will carry upon their heads, over one hundred pounds out from St. Pierre across the mountains, a distance of fifty miles in one day?
43770I called to Daddy:"What''s the use going any further?
43770I simply lay there wondering why, why, why, I had ever come?
43770I wonder how the bride feels by this time?
43770I wondered when the final smash would come and our big toy no longer swing back on its round legs?
43770If we did n''t find the gutter agreeable to our over- refined sensibilities why not go where it was"Belle"?
43770Is it possible that the writer of those lines had forgotten the Lady Proserpine?
43770Is it possible that there are no song- birds here, and in fact no birds of plumage left about the settlements?
43770It was so like the statue on the square without that the one at my side gasps,"It is he, Mother, what shall we do?"
43770Let me see-- how many meals is this so far?
43770Oh, I am so glad, for then you would n''t be here, would you?"
43770One was Guadeloupe, the other-- what shall we call her; Florentine?
43770Proserpine?
43770Shall we not see you in the morning?
43770So now the question is, how shall he get rid of the mongoose?
43770Something was continually hammering into my ears:"Why do n''t you tell about the aqueducts?
43770Tell me, what would you have said?
43770The Kaiser''s subjects talk fair enough, but they unquestionably want St. Thomas-- and who knows?
43770The señor''s first question was:"Have you seen the Cathedral?"
43770There, now, may I go on, and may I say just what I wish of the señor without offence?
43770These swarms of men and boys had come out to dive for coins-- silver preferred-- and how had they come?
43770Was it upon such wrecks of life that the gentle_ Saviour_ gazed in pitying love?
43770Was n''t that enough to establish a lasting bond of interest between Martinique and the wanderer from the North?
43770Was n''t there just cause that I should wake him up?
43770What can be keeping the shoppers so long?
43770What can he be saying?
43770What can the señor do without his best umbrella?
43770What could I do but go?
43770What does it matter?
43770What good can I do by holding my breath and bracing back in this way?
43770What mattered a short delay?
43770Where are our monuments, our squares, our well- watered streets?
43770Who knows but some of her charms might miraculously sift in through a rent in my package and breathe a spell upon my words?
43770Who knows but that it is even older?
43770Who says that all the true Santo Domingo mahogany was cut generations ago?
43770Who shall say?
43770Why are we so dumbly indifferent to that craving?
43770Why did they ever have a mother who would be so unconventional?
43770Why do n''t you give more information?"
43770Why not leave them in the box at the consulate?
43770Why, why are we of the North so blind to the soul''s necessity for beauty?
43770Will he take the black umbrella of his wife''s aunt?
43770Will the Germans try to block our acquisition of this group?
43770Would he forswear the friendship?
43770You remember it was a great ceiba to which Columbus made fast his ships on the bank of the Ozama River in Santo Domingo?
43770You''re not nervous?
43770were we never to begin our search?
43770what is it you''re drawing?"
43770what would the señor think if he should ever read these words?
43770yes, he responds with great ardour, but with what result?
19206All these gaily dressed natives that one sees in the streets are, I suppose, Christians?
19206And now, Ned,Tom said, after sitting for some time gazing into the red fire,"what on earth are we to do next?"
19206Are the men all cowards, or can none of them swim? 19206 Are they good to eat?"
19206Are you here?
19206Are you hit, sir?
19206Are you sure,Ned asked the governor one evening,"of the natives here?
19206Are you, indeed?
19206At any rate, Father, you would not object when the time comes for me to sail with Mr. Francis Drake?
19206But hath he not already made two or three voyages thither, Father?
19206But how do you mean to light it?
19206But how is that to be done?
19206But think you,Tom Tressilis said,"that the captain will turn back on his voyage, for us?"
19206But what about strings?
19206But, Father, do you think it not lawful to kill the Spaniard, and to take the treasures which he robbeth from the poor heathen of the West?
19206But,said Ned,"why on earth do not the negroes take to the trees?
19206Can not a boat be launched,said Ned to the soldiers standing round,"to effect the rescue of these poor fellows in that wreck?"
19206Can we do nothing to help them?
19206Did you come out with him, in his further voyages here?
19206Did you notice, Tom?
19206Do n''t you see how he is trembling? 19206 Do you feel badly hurt?"
19206Do you not recognize me? 19206 Do you not remember me?
19206Do you think so?
19206Do you?
19206Does not it seem to you that we are not so high above the sea as we are wo nt to be?
19206Have they lost the key, and are they going to break open the door, and finish with us, now? 19206 Have you been doing anything to enable you to receive them hotly?"
19206How can boys like you have an enemy?
19206How did you know in which cell we were confined?
19206How far do you think it is across to the other coast?
19206How far do you think the sea lies on the other side of this range of giant mountains?
19206How far off should you say it was, Ned?
19206How is it, then, that if we are at peace here, we can be at war in the Indian Seas?
19206How is that, Tom?
19206How many men are after you?
19206How will you cook them, Ned?
19206How would you do that?
19206I am going to fish,he said;"are you disposed to come, also?"
19206I suppose it is of no use our chasing them?
19206If you are Master Francis Drake, will you let me join your ship, for the voyage to the Indies?
19206Is there anything the matter?
19206Is there no hope,they asked,"of helping the ship?"
19206Is there no one who can reach her from here?
19206Listen,he said,"do you not hear the distant baying?"
19206Look, what on earth is he doing?
19206Not land at Ternate?
19206Ought we not to refuse to accept this horrid worship?
19206Shall we light a fire, Ned? 19206 Shall we make a sortie?"
19206Then whatever is to become of us?
19206They can not fight neither, can they?
19206They ill treat those that fall into their hands, do they not?
19206Upon what day do you think the ship will arrive?
19206What are those-- natives?
19206What are we to do, Ned?
19206What can he be up to?
19206What can they be going to do now?
19206What can they be staring so fixedly at?
19206What can they be waiting for?
19206What do you say, Otter?
19206What do you think they will do with us, Ned?
19206What do you think?
19206What have these men divided their forces for?
19206What is it, and who can have written to me?
19206What is it?
19206What is that a sign of?
19206What is that?
19206What is this?
19206What is your latest news from Ternate?
19206What on earth are they doing?
19206What should make you think so?
19206What was the object of your captain, in visiting these seas?
19206What will you do?
19206Where are you? 19206 Where was it that your parents lived?"
19206Whither can they be going to take us?
19206Whither do you intend to go?
19206Whither would you fly?
19206Who are these English?
19206Who are you?
19206Who are you?
19206Who is he?
19206Why do they not shoot the dogs?
19206Why does not one of them jump over, with a rope?
19206Why think you so?
19206Why?
19206Will he consent, think you, to your taking to a seafaring life?
19206Will it be necessary to watch, think you?
19206Will you let me go, sir, with my three friends?
19206Will you want me to read to you?
19206Would you advise us to fly?
19206You are sure you were not mistaken?
19206You did not have any very stirring adventures?
19206You do n''t think that it is dangerous to light a fire?
19206You think,Don Sagasta said,"that there is no fear of her mentioning the fact that she has seen my friends, to any of the searchers?"
19206A white boy, and in rags, how comes this?"
19206But now that we are close, and there is no fear of tempests, had we not better talk over whether, after all, we shall land at Ternate?"
19206But what will the admiral think, when night comes on and we do not return?
19206But, after all, what can I do?
19206Do n''t you think so?"
19206Do they live near the seacoast, or among the mountains?"
19206Half an hour after the Golden Hind came to anchor, a boat was seen approaching, and was met by the hail,"Who goes there?"
19206How then do they walk?"
19206It was brought them across at an island??
19206It was brought them across at an island??
19206It was lucky, indeed, that the governor did not put the question separately, instead of saying,"Were you two the leaders?"
19206Late in the evening Ned exclaimed,"What is that, Tom, behind that tree?"
19206Poor boy, how have you got into a strait like this?"
19206The question is, how many of them are there?"
19206Then he paused, and turning to the governor said:"Will you translate this, for the benefit of these benighted heathens?"
19206There are, I suppose, other places at which the enemy could land?"
19206Think you, for a moment, that two lads who have been brought up among the Indians, from their childhood, could manage a boat in such a sea as this?
19206What do you advise us to do, senor?
19206What good do you expect from them?
19206What have you to say to this?"
19206What is the nearest town on the coast?"
19206What is your name, lad?
19206What on earth is to be done, now?"
19206What position did you hold in the ship?"
19206What tempted thee to go into the water, on a day like this?"
19206What will become of our comrades?"
19206Where are all the natives?"
19206Which think you is the best?"
19206Why should these children have been kidnapped on the eastern coast, and brought across the continent?
19206he asked in Portuguese, as he reached them,"and whence come you?"
19206she exclaimed,"and by what right do you enter these gardens?
973''Mark 40, 72, 91--''"Mark?
973And do you remember what I said to that villain, Jack Malyoe, that night as his boat went by us?
973And do you then really think that your father would consent to your having a share in this terrible bloody and murthering business?
973And how big did you say''twas?
973And how long has it been,he asked,"since he left you?"
973And if I find it''tis mine to keep, is it, and no mistake?
973And look''ee, Hiram,the old man resumed, suddenly,"I do hear that you be courtin''the girl, too; is that so?"
973And what if it should be full of money, Tom?
973And what right has he got to send down here against me in North Carolina, I should like to ask you?
973And who are you, anyhow,he cried out,"to threaten to strike me and to insult me, who am as good as you?
973Are you come after this, Abraham Dawling?
973Are you sick, Sally?
973At sea?
973Boy, what do you want here, boy?
973But what do all these figures mean?
973But what other name d''ye give him? 973 Can you tell me that?"
973Could n''t you, then, get a pilot, Baldwin?
973D''ye suppose I''ve never been down here before, not to know that every man about here knows the passes of the shoals?
973Did you go off with Levi?
973Do n''t you remember what I told you, sir, 269 foot? 973 Do you know the passes in over the shoals, Jem?"
973Do you mean to tell me that you know where the villain is? 973 Do you remember,"said he,"that expedition of ours in Kingston Harbor, and how we were all of us balked that night?"
973Does she drive? 973 Go?"
973Hi, Captain, wo n''t you dance with me?
973Hiram,said he, abruptly,"Hiram, do you know that Levi West is forever hanging around Billy Martin''s house, after that pretty daughter of his?"
973Hiram,said she,"if I tell ye something will you promise on your oath not to breathe a word to any living soul?"
973How about that five hundred pounds, Hiram?
973I wonder, Tom,said he,"if you could spare me a score or so of these doubloons?"
973I wonder,he said,"why the wretch should have hidden these papers so carefully away with the other treasures, for they could do him no good?"
973Is it not enough for a man to turn pirate for? 973 Is thee in such haste to meet him as all that?
973Is this the Levi West you''ve been telling me of? 973 Peg?"
973Suppose it should be full of money, what then?
973Suppose you get your dose to- morrow, Captain,some one called out,"what then?"
973Thou would? 973 Well, Captain,"called a voice,"will ye fight him to- morrow?"
973Well, Hi,said he,"d''ye see I''ve come back home again?"
973Well, Master Harry,says he,"and did I not tell you I would make a man of you?"
973Well, and what do you think of that?
973Well, my lad,he said,"and what is this great thing you have to tell me that is so mightily wonderful?
973What are you after?
973What authority have you got to come down upon us this way? 973 What d''ye call him, Molly?"
973What d''ye mean by that?
973What d''ye mean, ye villains? 973 What d''ye mean?"
973What do them Virginny''baccy- eaters do down here in Caroliny, anyway?
973What do you do here with this Yankee supercargo, not fit for a gentlewoman to wipe her feet upon? 973 What do you mean?"
973What does all this mean?
973What is it, Hiram?
973What''s all this?
973What''s all this?
973What''s that about a peg? 973 What''s that about a peg?"
973What''s the matter?
973What,says our Harry,"and will you not then let me wait until our prize is divided and I get my share?"
973When shall I go?
973Where d''ye come from?
973Where shall you go now?
973Where''s Brookes?
973Where''ve you been?
973Who are you?
973Who be you?
973Who is she?
973Whose else would it be but yours if you find it?
973Why d''ye stop?
973Why not call him''Chist,''since he was born in a chist out of the sea? 973 Why, how was that?
973Why,said the New York captain,--"why, has a-- a bloody p- pirate like you a wife then-- a-- like any honest man?"
973Why,said the man who had pushed it,"you saw''twasn''t done a purpose, did n''t you?"
973Wo n''t you let me come in, Hi?
973Wo n''t you take a taste of Hollands, Captain?
973Ye have n''t? 973 Ye''ll have the law, will ye?"
973Ye''ll-- have the law, will ye? 973 Yes,"said Hiram,"I''ll let you come in, but why do n''t you go home?"
973You would chase me out of the West Indies, would you? 973 Your wife''ll be a rich widdy then, wo n''t she?"
973And do n''t they say to dig close to it?
973And how does your head feel by now, my young master?"
973And how had it all come about?
973And then another question framed itself in his mind: Who was this customer whom his approach had driven away?
973And then he read aloud,"''Mark-- S. S. W. S. by S.''What d''ye suppose that means, Tom?"
973And what do you suppose were our hero''s emotions at this time?
973Burned by Blueskin, was it?"
973But did Blackbeard really bury treasures, as tradition says, along the sandy shores he haunted?
973But tell me this, was there nothing found with you with a mark or a name upon it?"
973But tell me, Tom, didst thou ever hear of the farmer girl who counted her chickens before they were hatched?"
973But tell me, Tom, do you think you could find the place again where''twas hid?"
973By what easy gradations had the respectable Quaker skipper descended from the decorum of his home life, step by step, into such a gulf of iniquity?
973Could it have been madness-- madness in which the separate entities of good and bad each had, in its turn, a perfect and distinct existence?
973Cringle?"
973D''ye get it through your skull?"
973D''ye know that they say that she was away from home three days last week, nobody knew where?
973D''ye know what I''ve come home for?"
973D''ye mean to stave a hole in us?"
973D''ye remember?
973D''ye suppose ye can blind me?
973D''ye think I mind it at all?
973D''ye understand?
973Do n''t she, Captain?"
973Do you understand?"
973Does a dream appear to be long or to be short?
973Go?
973Go?
973Hey?
973Hey?
973How was anyone to tell whether in such circumstances any time appeared to be long or short?
973I reckon I''m changed, ai n''t I, Hi?"
973I reckon you''ve come to me for advice?"
973I was sent to ask you if you''re man enough to take your life in your own hands and to go with me in that boat down there?
973I wonder if they left that behind them?"
973If I remained in appearance the peaceful trader I really am, how long does thee suppose I could remain unassailed in this place?"
973Is it, then, any wonder that Barnaby True could never remember whether such a voyage as this was long or short?
973Is thee ready now to hear my news?"
973Is there, deep under the accumulated debris of culture, a hidden groundwork of the old- time savage?
973It was the common thing to greet Hiram himself with,"Hey, Hiram; how''s Sally?"
973Jack Malyoe, Master Barnaby?"
973Maybe he would stop in the midst of the beating he was administering, and, grinding his teeth, would cry out:"Wo n''t ye say naught?
973Meantime, what was to be done?
973Suppose I could bring thee face to face with him-- what then?
973Suppose Levi West should come back again, what then?
973Suppose the chist was all full of money, sir, and suppose we should find it; would there be enough in it, d''ye suppose, to buy a ship?"
973Tell me; do you know the name of the vessel that was wrecked, and from which you were washed ashore?"
973Then to the others:"Now, my men, the moment we run her aboard, you get aboard of her as quick as you can, do you understand?
973Thou would?"
973Was the cargo of the Eliza Cooper contraband and subject to confiscation?
973Well, what then?
973Well, what then?
973Were they, indeed, about to find the treasure chest?
973Were those bonds burst asunder, as it was with this man, might not the wild beast rush forth, as it had rushed forth in him, to rend and to tear?
973What I want to know is, are you going to pay me my money or no?"
973What are you come to now?
973What d''ye mean, coming down on us this way?"
973What do you seek here?
973What have ye come for, then?"
973What now was his-- Mainwaring''s-- duty in the case?
973What weather is it?"
973What were they doing on the lonely shore thus at night?
973What?
973Where be ye?"
973Who is he?"
973Who knew but what her uncle might forbid their fondness?
973Why do n''t you push off the bow?"
973Wo n''t ye say naught?
973Wo n''t you come and drink a dram of rum with us?"
973Would he not wait a little longer?
973You can go out somewhere, d''ye understand?"
973You do n''t think I''m afraid of his bullies, do you?"
973dost thou know who thou art?
973he called, from the distance,"and whence come you?
973he cried out,"and so you is the supercargo, is you?
973said he,"what''s Squire Hall got to do with it?
973what was such a description as that in a busy seaport town, full of scores of men to fit such a likeness?
973who are these?"
26862''Mark 40, 72, 91--''"Mark?
26862And did he,exclaimed the lady,"have long, black mustachios, and did he have silver earrings in his ears?"
26862And do you remember what I said to that villain, Jack Malyoe, that night as his boat went by us?
26862And do you then really think that your father would consent to your having a share in this terrible bloody and murthering business?
26862And had he but one eye, and did he carry a gold- headed cane?
26862And how big did you say''twas?
26862And how long has it been,he asked,"since he left you?"
26862And if I find it''tis mine to keep, is it, and no mistake?
26862And look''ee, Hiram,the old man resumed, suddenly,"I do hear that you be courtin''the girl, too; is that so?"
26862And what if it should be full of money, Tom?
26862And what right has he got to send down here against me in North Carolina, I should like to ask you?
26862And what then?
26862And who are you, anyhow,he cried out,"to threaten to strike me and to insult me, who am as good as you?
26862Are you come after this, Abraham Dawling?
26862Are you sick, Sally?
26862At sea?
26862Boy, what do you want here, boy?
26862But what do all these figures mean?
26862But what other name d''ye give him? 26862 Can you tell me that?"
26862Could n''t you, then, get a pilot, Baldwin?
26862D''ye suppose I''ve never been down here before, not to know that every man about here knows the passes of the shoals?
26862Did you go off with Levi?
26862Did you say it hath caused the death of three men? 26862 Do n''t you remember what I told you, sir, 269 foot?
26862Do you know the passes in over the shoals, Jem?
26862Do you mean to tell me that you know where the villain is? 26862 Do you remember,"said he,"that expedition of ours in Kingston Harbor, and how we were all of us balked that night?"
26862Do you, then, think that I have time to chatter with you while two villains are lying in wait for me, perhaps at the very door? 26862 Does she drive?
26862Go?
26862Hi, Captain, wo n''t you dance with me?
26862Hiram,said he, abruptly,"Hiram, do you know that Levi West is forever hanging around Billy Martin''s house, after that pretty daughter of his?"
26862Hiram,said she,"if I tell ye something will you promise on your oath not to breathe a word to any living soul?"
26862How about that five hundred pounds, Hiram?
26862I wonder, Tom,said he,"if you could spare me a score or so of these doubloons?"
26862I wonder,he said,"why the wretch should have hidden these papers so carefully away with the other treasures, for they could do him no good?"
26862Is it not enough for a man to turn pirate for? 26862 Is thee in such haste to meet him as all that?
26862Is this the Levi West you''ve been telling me of? 26862 Peg?"
26862Sir,said he,"surely I am not mistaken in recognizing in you the supercargo of the ship_ Susanna Hayes_, which arrived this afternoon at this port?"
26862Suppose it should be full of money, what then?
26862Suppose you get your dose to- morrow, Captain,some one called out,"what then?"
26862Thou would? 26862 Vy you keel ze man?"
26862Well, Captain,called a voice,"will ye fight him to- morrow?"
26862Well, Hi,said he,"d''ye see I''ve come back home again?"
26862Well, Master Harry,says he,"and did I not tell you I would make a man of you?"
26862Well, and what do you think of that?
26862Well, my lad,he said,"and what is this great thing you have to tell me that is so mightily wonderful?
26862What are you after?
26862What authority have you got to come down upon us this way? 26862 What d''ye call him, Molly?"
26862What d''ye mean by that?
26862What d''ye mean, ye villains? 26862 What d''ye mean?"
26862What do them Virginny''baccy- eaters do down here in Caroliny, anyway?
26862What do you do here with this Yankee supercargo, not fit for a gentlewoman to wipe her feet upon? 26862 What do you mean?"
26862What does all this mean?
26862What is it you say?
26862What is it, Hiram?
26862What you doing? 26862 What''s all this?"
26862What''s all this?
26862What''s that about a peg? 26862 What''s that about a peg?"
26862What''s the matter?
26862What,says our Harry,"and will you not then let me wait until our prize is divided and I get my share?"
26862When shall I go?
26862Where d''ye come from?
26862Where shall you go now?
26862Where''s Brookes?
26862Where''ve you been?
26862Who are you?
26862Who be you?
26862Who is she?
26862Whose else would it be but yours if you find it?
26862Why d''ye stop?
26862Why not call him''Chist,''since he was born in a chist out of the sea? 26862 Why, how was that?
26862Why,said the New York captain,--"why, has a-- a bloody p- pirate like you a wife then-- a-- like any honest man?"
26862Why,said the man who had pushed it,"you saw''twasn''t done a purpose, did n''t you?"
26862Wo n''t you let me come in, Hi?
26862Wo n''t you take a taste of Hollands, Captain?
26862Ye have n''t? 26862 Ye''ll have the law, will ye?"
26862Ye''ll-- have the law, will ye? 26862 Yes,"said Hiram,"I''ll let you come in, but why do n''t you go home?"
26862You would chase me out of the West Indies, would you? 26862 Your wife''ll be a rich widdy then, wo n''t she?"
26862And do n''t they say to dig close to it?
26862And have you never heard him speak of his friend Mr. Abner Greenway, of Kingston, Jamaica?"
26862And how does your head feel by now, my young master?"
26862And how had it all come about?
26862And then another question framed itself in his mind: Who was this customer whom his approach had driven away?
26862And then he read aloud,"''Mark-- S. S. W. S. by S.''What d''ye suppose that means, Tom?"
26862And what do you suppose were our hero''s emotions at this time?
26862And what, if I may be so bold as for to ask you, was the reason for their attacking so harmless a man as you proclaim yourself to be?"
26862Burned by Blueskin, was it?"
26862But did Blackbeard really bury treasures, as tradition says, along the sandy shores he haunted?
26862But tell me this, was there nothing found with you with a mark or a name upon it?"
26862But tell me, Tom, didst thou ever hear of the farmer girl who counted her chickens before they were hatched?"
26862But tell me, Tom, do you think you could find the place again where''twas hid?"
26862By what easy gradations had the respectable Quaker skipper descended from the decorum of his home life, step by step, into such a gulf of iniquity?
26862Could it have been madness-- madness in which the separate entities of good and bad each had, in its turn, a perfect and distinct existence?
26862Cringle?"
26862D''ye get it through your skull?"
26862D''ye know that they say that she was away from home three days last week, nobody knew where?
26862D''ye know what I''ve come home for?"
26862D''ye mean to stave a hole in us?"
26862D''ye remember?
26862D''ye suppose ye can blind me?
26862D''ye think I mind it at all?
26862D''ye understand?
26862Do n''t she, Captain?"
26862Do you understand?"
26862Do you, then, never carry a weapon, even in such a place as this, where at any moment in the dark a Spanish knife may be stuck betwixt your ribs?"
26862Does a dream appear to be long or to be short?
26862Go?
26862Go?
26862Hey?
26862Hey?
26862How was anyone to tell whether in such circumstances any time appeared to be long or short?
26862How was he, a stranger in a foreign land, to totally defend himself against an accusation of mistaken justice?
26862I reckon I''m changed, ai n''t I, Hi?"
26862I reckon you''ve come to me for advice?"
26862I was sent to ask you if you''re man enough to take your life in your own hands and to go with me in that boat down there?
26862I wonder if they left that behind them?"
26862If I remained in appearance the peaceful trader I really am, how long does thee suppose I could remain unassailed in this place?"
26862Is it, then, any wonder that Barnaby True could never remember whether such a voyage as this was long or short?
26862Is thee ready now to hear my news?"
26862Is there, deep under the accumulated debris of culture, a hidden groundwork of the old- time savage?
26862It was the common thing to greet Hiram himself with,"Hey, Hiram; how''s Sally?"
26862Jack Malyoe, Master Barnaby?"
26862Maybe he would stop in the midst of the beating he was administering, and, grinding his teeth, would cry out:"Wo n''t ye say naught?
26862Meantime, what was to be done?
26862Says the negress, looking very intently at our hero,"Be you afeared, Buckra?"
26862Suppose I could bring thee face to face with him-- what then?
26862Suppose Levi West should come back again, what then?
26862Suppose the chist was all full of money, sir, and suppose we should find it; would there be enough in it, d''ye suppose, to buy a ship?"
26862Tell me, are you willing to assist a poor, defenseless female in her hour of trial?"
26862Tell me; do you know the name of the vessel that was wrecked, and from which you were washed ashore?"
26862Then to the others:"Now, my men, the moment we run her aboard, you get aboard of her as quick as you can, do you understand?
26862Thou would?"
26862Was the cargo of the_ Eliza Cooper_ contraband and subject to confiscation?
26862Well, what then?
26862Well, what then?
26862Were they, indeed, about to find the treasure chest?
26862Were those bonds burst asunder, as it was with this man, might not the wild beast rush forth, as it had rushed forth in him, to rend and to tear?
26862What I want to know is, are you going to pay me my money or no?"
26862What are you come to now?
26862What d''ye mean, coming down on us this way?"
26862What do you seek here?
26862What have ye come for, then?"
26862What monstrous thing was this that had befallen him who, but a moment before, had been so entirely innocent of the guilt of blood?
26862What now was his-- Mainwaring''s-- duty in the case?
26862What was he now to do in such an extremity as this, with his victim lying dead at his feet, a poniard in his heart?
26862What weather is it?"
26862What were they doing on the lonely shore thus at night?
26862What''s to do here?
26862What?
26862Where be ye?"
26862Who is he?"
26862Who is shooting pistols at this hour of the night?"
26862Who knew but what her uncle might forbid their fondness?
26862Who would believe him to be guiltless of crime with such a dreadful evidence as this presented against him?
26862Why do n''t you push off the bow?"
26862Wo n''t ye say naught?
26862Wo n''t you come and drink a dram of rum with us?"
26862Would he not wait a little longer?
26862You can go out somewhere, d''ye understand?"
26862You do n''t think I''m afraid of his bullies, do you?"
26862[ Illustration: WHO SHALL BE CAPTAIN?]
26862dost thou know who thou art?
26862he called, from the distance,"and whence come you?
26862he cried out,"and so you is the supercargo, is you?
26862said he,"what''s Squire Hall got to do with it?
26862she exclaimed;"and had he a flat face and a broken nose?"
26862what was such a description as that in a busy seaport town, full of scores of men to fit such a likeness?
26862who are these?"
26862wouldst thou have believed that so small a thing as this would have caused so much trouble?"
55100A nice fellow, Jones; eh? 55100 And be at Cien Fuegos on the 28th?"
55100And if the ounces be wanting, and they do n''t get married?
55100And is commerce tolerably flourishing?
55100And is justice ultimately done on the offenders?
55100And the women?
55100And then he''ll come back to you?
55100And what is the prevailing disease of the colony?
55100And who manages the church?
55100And who shaves them?
55100And why did you come to visit such a region as this?
55100And will they not get another?
55100And will you not return home?
55100And you,said I, to the mild voice,"will not you return?"
55100Are you sea- sick?
55100Are you sure of that?
55100Are you talking of sugar? 55100 But do they mind being locked up alone?"
55100But what_ do_ they do?
55100But will nothing grow there?
55100But will they not look elsewhere for other work?
55100But you did love him?
55100Can anything be done to stop it, James?
55100Do n''t you like going in the droger?
55100Do you ever find it dull here?
55100Do you observe,said a lady to me,"that the women when they walk never hold up their dresses?"
55100Does it?
55100How can you blame the Captain- General,they have said,"when the same thing is done by the French and English consuls through the islands?"
55100I say, how about that bath?
55100Into the very hole?
55100Is there a public- house,I exclaimed, feverishly,"in this---- place?"
55100It is love then that ails you?
55100James,said I,"might I trouble you to leave those boots, and see the bath filled for me?"
55100Madam,said I,"is there an inn here; and if so, where may it be?"
55100No; she kept no hotel now- a- days-- what use was there for an hotel in St. Georges? 55100 Nothing?
55100Oh, you live at Kingston?
55100People often do come out and go back again without ever reaching the crater at all, do n''t they?
55100Said a mass over him?
55100Served me right; did n''t it? 55100 Start at four?"
55100Taken up with a class?
55100The Jew is going to be married then?
55100Then what''s the harm of the droger?
55100Well,said I,"and what do you think of it?"
55100Well; it was n''t de ting, was it? 55100 What of Trinidad?"
55100Where shall I call for you?
55100White art thou, my friend? 55100 Who on earth is that princess?"
55100Who you call fellor? 55100 Why did he not go home?"
55100Why the mischief do n''t you come on?
55100Will they pitch into one another?
55100Will you have a long drink or a short one?
55100Wonderful that; is n''t it?
55100You do n''t think much of yellow fever?
55100You do n''t think we have, do you?
55100You tink so?
55100Your heart would permit of your doing that?
55100A few friends were to dine with me that day; and where would have been my turtle soup had Soulouque and his suite taken possession of the house?
55100A nice house of assembly, is n''t it?"
55100After all, what we should desire first, and chiefly-- is it not the truth?
55100After that, how can I say ought against the hotel?
55100And are the Americans the first bumptious people on record?
55100And how could they fail to be satisfied, looking at their advantages?
55100And if he travel for pleasure how can he possibly find less?
55100And if so, why disturb such contentment?
55100And is it not reasonable to suppose that you do do so?
55100And is not this God''s ordinance?
55100And may we not boast that this is the only object looked for in all our treaties and diplomatic doings?
55100And that waiter, David; was he not for good- nature the pink of waiters?
55100And then where are our professions for the amelioration, and especially for the Christianity of the human race?
55100And then who ever smiled as she smiled?
55100And what shall I say of Greytown?
55100And what then?
55100And when shall I see that gallant young lieutenant again?
55100And who can blame the black man?
55100And who have displaced so many of the poor and weak, and spread abroad so vast an energy, such an extent of power as we of England?
55100And why should we begrudge the same career to America?
55100And you, are you willing to assist him in his views?
55100Are there not white men enough-- men and brothers-- to do the somewhat disagreeable work of soldiering for him?
55100Are these men so punished as to deter others by the fear of similar treatment?
55100Are we not to be protected from competition?
55100Are we to associate with the children of such women, and teach our daughters that vice is not to be shunned?"
55100Bull?"
55100But if so, what of Trinidad?
55100But may we not say that that giant has been killed?
55100But nevertheless, who can stand by quiescent and see a brute half murder the poor woman whom he should protect?
55100But one has to think of that doctor''s dictum--"The prevalent disease, sir?
55100But shall I not write a distinct chapter as to this most respectable little island-- an island that pays its way?
55100But then, what is the use of mountains?
55100But what could I do?
55100But what could Lords and Commons do in Malta, or in Jersey?
55100But what does the negro care?
55100But what if the work be not as yet good?
55100But what is the use of expostulating with a man who ca n''t speak a word of English?
55100But what of that?
55100But what shame of that?
55100But what, O lady, of their grandchildren?
55100But when did Sir Robert Peel''s pledge in one year bind even his own conduct in the next?
55100But when has truly mighty work been heralded by magniloquence?
55100But which colony is second in the race?"
55100But who can tell what government will prevail in New Granada in forty- nine years?
55100But who will put his capital into a country in which the President can pass any law he pleases on his own behalf?
55100But why should not the men be taken up to the mountains, as has been done with the white soldiers in Jamaica?
55100But with whom did the fault chiefly lie?
55100By what other process have poor and weak races been compelled to give way to those who have power and energy?
55100Can I have my clothes washed?
55100Can it be wondered at that in his heart of hearts he should still have a sort of yearning after slavery?
55100D''you like dat name?"
55100Did any of my readers ever see the beds of an Irish cotters establishment in county Cork?
55100Did any one of my readers ever have a berth allotted to him just over the screw?
55100Did we have any grand words from old George Stephenson, with his"vera awkward for the cou"?
55100Do we not, in regard to all our friends, take the good that we find in them, aware that in the very best there will be some deficiency to forgive?
55100Does she not daily show that she is unfit to hold it?
55100From the invention of a new constitution to that of a new shirt is it even wanting?
55100From whence is that sum to be procured?
55100Gentlemen capitalists, will you on this showing take shares in the concern?
55100Have we a right to expect that he should be perfect?
55100He goes home, and what does he say of us?
55100He is a man and a brother, and shall we not regard him?
55100How could it be kept while the quicksilver was standing at eighty- five in the shade?
55100How many new eras have there not been?
55100How on earth was she to get herself dressed, it occurred to me then, if we should postpone our journey and remain there?
55100How should we look at the English politician who would propose to sell it to the United States; or beg Spain to take it as an appendage to Cuba?
55100How would this affect the clearance?
55100How, indeed, can it be otherwise?
55100However, I ought to forgive him, for did he not return to me sixpence discount, unasked?
55100I replied in my ignorance;"has not one to go by the music in Jamaica?"
55100I said;"is not that high?"
55100I will not dig cane- holes for half a crown a day; and why should I expect him to do so?
55100I wonder whether I could make the process in any simple way intelligible; or whether in doing so I should afford gratification to a single individual?
55100If I ask Mrs. So- and- So here, how can I keep out Mrs. Such- a- One?
55100If all this canal grandiloquence would pave the way to"transit,"might it not be well?
55100If he be vituperative, who can wonder at it?
55100If labourers be brought here, will not these white people again cultivate their grounds?
55100If they lie to you, can not you lie to them?
55100If you do n''t drink your wine after dinner, why not take it before?
55100In Costa Rica, Don Juan Rafael Mora, familiarly called Juanito, is now the president, having been not long since re- elected(?)
55100In how many pages is its history written?
55100In what compound are we to look for the full strength of each component part?
55100Is he not a man and a brother?"
55100Is it fair to put warders among such men, so well able to act, so ill able to control their actions?
55100Is it not for that reason that we hold Gibraltar, are jealous about Egypt, and resolved to have Perim in our power?
55100Is it not the case that the Anti- Slavery Society has done its work?--has done its work at any rate as regards the British West Indies?
55100Is it not thus that Great Britain, speaking to him from the high places in Exeter Hall, shouts to him in his death struggles?
55100Is it not thus that we should accept their little efforts?
55100Is it not true that we would fain make all ways open to all men?
55100Is not this peculiar eloquence used in propagating all French projects for increased civilization?
55100Is there anything to eat?
55100It may seem harsh to say so thus plainly; but will any philanthropical lover of these lower classes deny the fact?
55100It was then one: and where was he to call for me?
55100Many of them are in their way good; but are they not such as we have generally seen in the lower spheres of life?
55100May we not say that, having got rid of them out of St. Vincent, we can afford to get rid of them altogether?
55100Must it not be so also with the Jamaica planters?
55100Oh, my hard taskmaster of the sugar- mill, is he not better off than thou?
55100Oh; we are getting into the trade- winds, are we?
55100Or is it even possible to conceive of a world progressing without such a love?
55100Putting these two things together, would not any simple man advise them to abandon sugar?
55100Shall we not again be slaves, in reality, if not in name?
55100Shall we not be driven from our squatting patches?
55100Shall we not have to work?"
55100Shall we not starve; or, almost worse than that, shall we not again fall under Adam''s curse?
55100Should I go back and ask for a seat, if it were but on a bench in the government scullery, among the female negroes?
55100Should punch be as strong as brandy, or as sweet as sugar?
55100Since you are in such a hurry, shall we make a start of it?"
55100That the fact of the colony having been conquered need preclude it from the benefit(?)
55100The great West Indian question is now this: Is there reasonable ground for such hope?
55100The laws even are still French, and the people are, I believe, blessed(?)
55100The political question that presses upon me in viewing Jamaica, is certainly this-- Will the growth of sugar pay in Jamaica, or will it not?
55100The question stands thus: can not he be made to do so?
55100These very people of whom we are speaking, would they not be your cousins but for the lack of matrimony?
55100They are both very respectable, no doubt; but what were their grandmothers?"
55100This again is a matter of considerable importance, as, indeed, where is it not?
55100To have done their appointed work, and done it well,--should not this be enough for any men?
55100Under these circumstances, who can feel sympathy with her, or wish that she should retain her colony?
55100Vaminos?
55100Was I not dressed from my chin downwards, and was not that enough for her?
55100Was Luther apt to speak with great phraseology?
55100Was there aught of the eloquent sententiousness of a French marshal about the lines of Torres Vedras?
55100Well, what has the Don said of my beard?
55100What could a man do when so appealed to but rush quickly from beneath his musquito curtains to her rescue?
55100What could a man say to him on so terribly mortal a subject?
55100What could he have said to his young wife''s mother when she came to meet him at Southampton, expecting to throw her arms round her daughter?
55100What has a man to wish for but that?
55100What have they been doing in the Ionian Islands?
55100What if we should put our money into the canal, and future presidents should refuse to be bound by the agreement?
55100What is our old aristocratic planter to do with a negro churchwarden on one side, and a negro coroner on another?
55100What is that to consumption, whose visits with you are constant, who daily demands its hecatombs?
55100What love can he have for Spain?
55100What minister can pledge his successors?
55100What more can a man rationally want if he travel for business?
55100What must the place be during the nine months when Parliament does not sit?
55100What other place could I name?
55100What should I do?
55100What should make us dull?
55100What was I to do?
55100What was it to me that she was as black as my boot, or that she had come to look after the ship''s washing?
55100What wonder that Presidents so spoken of should sign away their lands and waters?
55100What would be said of an English agriculturist who burnt his straw?
55100What would the world now be without it?
55100What would they do in the Scilly Islands?
55100Where shall I sleep?
55100Where should I go?
55100Where was I to go?
55100Where would my cacao- plants be then?"
55100Who cares?
55100Who could ask more, madam, than to bask in such sunshine as yours from year''s end to year''s end?"
55100Who is not sick of the grandiloquence of French progress?
55100Who knows what may occur between this and the end of the century?
55100Who knows, or has known, or ever seen, any man that has returned happy from the diggings, and now sits contented under his own fig- tree?
55100Whom shall we name next?
55100Why else should they have been named after him of the heavens who first suffered from such mishaps?
55100Why not Juanito as well as any one else?
55100Why not allow the claim; or seem to allow it, if practicable?
55100Why should a negro enlist any more than work?
55100Why should he care for the busher?
55100Why should not those felons-- for such they all are, I presume, till the term of their punishment be over-- why should they sleep after five?
55100Why should such a man be shut up for life at such an outlandish place?
55100Why should we think that Providence should work more rapidly now in these latter ages?
55100Why that drinking of spirits and smoking of tobacco among men whose term of life in that prison should be a term of suffering?
55100Why those long twelve hours of bed and rest, spent in each other''s company, with noise, and singing, and jollity?
55100Will coarse abuse and the calling of names avail anything?
55100Will such back and belly arrangements as those I have described deter men from sin by the fear of its consequences?
55100Would n''t they hang a cloth over it for a shilling?"
55100Would not a strict Governor, with due reference to Downing Street, do almost as well?
55100and what was I to do with myself for three hours?
55100do n''t you know what quick dances are?
55100how about that bath?"
55100or frowned as she can frown?
55100or of some English cotter''s establishments in Dorsetshire, Wiltshire, and Somersetshire?
55100said I;"and he with such a beautiful nose?"
55100that we would have them open to ourselves, certainly; but not closed against any human being?
55100the soldiers say in Bermuda when they complain of their own; and who can answer them?
55100what dat?"
55100what have they done in Jamaica?
55100where was the lava?
55100why should he work at thy order?
55100why should their diet be more than strong health requires?
55100why should their hours of work be light?
9835''S fish, will ye yap, then, puppy- dog?
9835''Tis an emptiness-- I am done with the folly henceforth--"Ah-- ah... and what of your Joan-- your Damaris?
9835''Tis life to you--"Wouldst have me live, to plague you again, mayhap?
9835''Tis too great for her body--''tis giant soul and her but a woman-- so doth strong soul overcome weak body, and small wonder, say I?
9835''Twas so my thought--"Because I am dying, Martino? 9835 ''Twas you fought the_ Happy Despatch_?"
9835A battle at sea? 9835 A boat, is it?
9835A boat?
9835A boat?
9835A match? 9835 Adam,"said I at last,"how far are we, do you reckon, from Nombre de Dios?"
9835Aft with him-- to the coach--"Coach, Cap''n?
9835Ah, Martino,sighed she softly,"do not these petticoats become me vastly well, yes?"
9835Ah, can not you see-- how you-- hurt me?
9835Ah, prithee, why art grown so strange to me?
9835Ah, what now?
9835Ah, you have heard it-- this name, before-- yes?
9835Ah,_ caro mio_, art so strange-- dost not know thy Joanna-- dost not know me, Martino?
9835Ah-- ah, you love me better thus, yes? 9835 Ah-- ah-- then she was with you when you found it-- the woman that wore this gown before me, eh, Martino?"
9835Ah-- ah? 9835 Ah-- and will you not speak to me?"
9835Ah?
9835Ahoy, Jerry, I''m all adrift-- where be you? 9835 Am I not better than dream- woman, I that men have died for-- I, Joanna?"
9835Am I not-- your-- enemy?
9835Am I so hateful to you yet? 9835 An Indian?"
9835Anan, pal?
9835And am I of so little account as not to be warned of this?
9835And because,quoth Diccon, his eye more truculent than ever,"because women will be women, eh, Captain?"
9835And did not Adam see you safely below?
9835And did you not-- kiss me in my sickness-- once, no?
9835And do ye so?
9835And doth it begin to work-- yes? 9835 And has she so indeed?"
9835And have you-- made this for-- me, Martino?
9835And how I gave you an evil draught that was agony?
9835And how I plagued you--"Nay, why remember all this, Joanna?
9835And how came ye here-- in an open boat?
9835And how say you, Joanna?
9835And how so?
9835And is he yet so direly sick?
9835And is this-- all?
9835And knew you were hid in the boat?
9835And must I weep therefore?
9835And she you?
9835And so,said I, when he had shortened sail and was seated beside me again,"so Captain Penfeather gave you medicine for her?"
9835And the Señorita Joanna, young sir?
9835And these the tools you made''em with, eh, Martino?
9835And what is to become of me, Resolution?
9835And what o''Belvedere?
9835And what o''Captain Jo?
9835And what o''my Lady Joan? 9835 And what o''vengeance?"
9835And what o''your big rogue, Jo?
9835And what of Joan?
9835And what of Joanna? 9835 And what of the battle?"
9835And what then, Martin? 9835 And what''s to let me from shooting ye?"
9835And when are we like to reach these islands?
9835And when was that?
9835And wherefore not, Martin? 9835 And wherefore not?"
9835And wherefore?
9835And why for not? 9835 And why not, Martino?"
9835And why theer?
9835And would you aid your poor Joanna, yes?
9835And yet you will adventure yourself to Nombre de Dios?
9835And yet, dear Martin, you lived with her on-- on our island?
9835And you are an Englishman?
9835And you do think me-- very beautiful, Martin?
9835And you-- loved each other-- long since?
9835And your enemy, Señor?
9835And your health improves, Señor, I hope-- yes?
9835And your wound pains you belike?
9835And yourself?
9835Are the evil spirits fled from my brother?
9835Are there many English prisoners in the Inquisition at Nombre?
9835Are they dead?
9835Are we beset?
9835Are ye hurt?
9835Are ye much hurt?
9835Are ye strong enough, pal?
9835Are ye there, Jo, are ye there?
9835Are ye wounded?
9835Are you alone?
9835Are you alone?
9835Are you an Englishman?
9835Are you of the Faith?
9835Are you so dull- witted, my Martin?
9835Art wakeful too, Martino?
9835As how, Martin?
9835As how, my son?
9835As how?
9835Aye, Cap''n,growled Job,"''tis well enough keeping the Don to hang afore Nombre but why must this dog live aft and cosseted?
9835Aye, Martin, and should have very properly destroyed every rogue aboard but for my lady--"My lady?
9835Aye, but how came you alone, what of Adam and the rest?
9835Aye, but what o''Joanna, what o''that she- snake, ha?
9835Aye, but will they serve?
9835Aye, but, sir, how if things go contrary- wise?
9835Aye-- and what then?
9835Because she forbade me and her word is my law, d''ye see? 9835 Burn him,''tis keelhaul''i m I would first and then give''i m to Pompey to carve up what remained--""Pompey?"
9835But she is a pirate, you tell me?
9835But since ship she is, what matter for aught beside?
9835But this was my mother--"Ha-- she that stabbed and killed the pirate Bartlemy ere he slew her? 9835 But what o''Cap''n Tressady?
9835But, sir,said I, amazed at this audacity,"will you outface five lusty men well- armed?"
9835Captain Jo says we sail, and sail it is, hey?
9835Child?
9835D''ye grieve for your Joan-- Damaris-- yes?
9835D''ye live yet? 9835 Darien?"
9835Dear Martin, what of my father?
9835Deluding vision,said I,"blest sight long- hoped and prayed for-- why plague me now?"
9835Desecration-- desecration?
9835Did I make Joanna any promise, aye or no?
9835Did ye ever hear of an English gentleman lost or taken hereabouts some six years since and named Sir Richard Brandon?
9835Do I hurt you overmuch?
9835Do I offend?
9835Do ye regret his murder then, Martin?
9835Do you not love her-- no?
9835Don Federigo is governor of the town, I think?
9835Doth your love grow all sudden cold--"Love?
9835Even clad-- in these-- these things?
9835Even though I beseech you on my knees?
9835Even though I-- vow myself your slave?
9835For me?
9835For my sake, Martino?
9835For''tis my earnest hope to bring you to the loving care of one who hath sought you long and patiently--"Is it Joan? 9835 For,"said he,"there may be other travellers behind us to spy some gleam of our fire and who shall these be but enemies?"
9835Force her to drink, comrade? 9835 God love me-- are you hurt, sir?"
9835Gone-- gone, is she? 9835 Greater blessings--""But,"said I,"what should be greater--""Ah, Martin-- dear-- cannot you guess?"
9835Ha''n''t Black Pompey done your business? 9835 Ha, Joanna lass, are ye hit indeed?"
9835Ha, d''ye mean yon woman?
9835Ha, d''ye stir at last, sluggard? 9835 Ha, dare ye say it, dog?"
9835Ha, will ye run then?
9835Ha, wo n''t ye talk? 9835 Ha,''s fish, d''ye live yet?"
9835Ha-- demon, is it?
9835Had I but quadrant and compass, Martin--"How, sir,said I,"can you navigate?"
9835Hath Jo sent us her plaything?
9835Hath Joanna ordered this?
9835Hath dying then no fears for you-- no?
9835Have ye suffered so much then?
9835Have you no pity for one hath never known aught of true love or gentleness? 9835 Have you no word of greeting for me?"
9835Have you no word of-- love for me, after all these years, Damaris?
9835He is dead?
9835He?
9835Heard ye ever such unholy hubbub, Martin?
9835Here then steered I, perforce, and, storm- tossed, was cast here, I and-- my comrade--"Comrade, Señor?
9835Here,said he after some while,"here were a noble ending to the feud, Martin?"
9835Here?
9835Here?
9835His name?
9835Home?
9835How came I here in the shade?
9835How came you here?
9835How came you in her company, Martin?
9835How cometh his blood on you?
9835How far is it hence?
9835How if I kill you first?
9835How is she heading, Martin?
9835How mean you?
9835How now, Diccon?
9835How now, Martino?
9835How now,said she,"wilt crave mercy of me and live?"
9835How should this be?
9835How so, Resolution?
9835How so, sir?
9835How so?
9835How so?
9835How then,I demanded,"will ye sleep here in the wild and no watch?"
9835How then-- must we stay and fight?
9835How then-- will ye deny me yet, fool? 9835 How was I wounded, then?"
9835How, are you for Nombre de Dios likewise, Adam?
9835I pray what manner of ship?
9835I prithee, sir,said she softly,"tell now-- shall there be room for me in your boat?"
9835I was, but since then I''ve been slave to be whipped, dog to be kicked, Lutheran dog to be spat upon, and lastly Indian--"And what now?
9835I wonder,sighed she, never stirring,"I wonder why I do not kill you?
9835I wonder-- when the third shall be?
9835In the matter of houses and land, Martin?
9835In the wilderness?
9835Indeed and is this so?
9835Is he well?
9835Is it Sir Adam Penfeather you mean-- Captain Penfeather?
9835Is it me ye seek?
9835Is it so great wonder I should not know you at first, dear Martin, and you so wild and fierce- seeming?
9835Is it well to be so extravagant in praise of your own?
9835Is the hour of vengeance at hand-- seek ye my life indeed? 9835 Is this true?"
9835Is this your Englishman, Jo? 9835 Is your love for me dead, then?"
9835Joan?
9835Joanna?
9835Kindnesses?
9835Life?
9835Lord love you, Martin,said he, snatching me in his iron grip,"Lord love you, what would you be at?
9835Love?
9835Loved you it-- so greatly, Joan?
9835Martin,he questioned suddenly,"do you love her?"
9835Martin,said Sir Richard, his face a pale oval in the dimness,"d''ye hear aught?"
9835Mayhap He doth, but what o''me? 9835 Mayhap, Martin, who can say?
9835Mayhap,said he,"yet am I minded to adventure it""How, sir-- with one sword and a knife?"
9835Mercy?
9835Most true, sir, but-- nay, what would you?
9835Must we die soon, think ye?
9835My lady''s here?
9835My lady-- Joan?
9835My life holdeth but one purpose--"What purpose, Martino, what?
9835Nay, not yet, master; give''em six minutes or say ten and they''ll be as dead as the pig you ate of last--"How so?
9835Nay, of what avail?
9835Nay-- of what avail?
9835No tricks, lad-- no running for''t if I loose ye-- you''ll bide here-- come life, come death? 9835 No, Martin, no-- except-- when first I clapped eyes on you, she chanced to be lying in your arms, d''ye see?"
9835Now kiss me-- you were ever true and kind-- kiss me? 9835 Now tell me, Don Federigo,"I questioned,"seek you not the life of this Belvedere that slew your son?"
9835Of what avail that this man lie pent in dungeon or sweating in chains and I not there to see his agony? 9835 Of what avail,"cried I bitterly, looking up into the pale serenity of his face,"of what avail two swords''gainst a ship''s company?"
9835Oh, Madre de Dios, where now are your tongues? 9835 Oh, Martino, hast thou so little faith to think my blood spilt in vain?
9835On whom?
9835Resolution Day,said he,"have you a memory for faces?"
9835Resolution, how am I to die?
9835Resolution, what is''t?
9835Resolution,said I, staring up at his grim figure,"she schemed to lure Tressady to his death?"
9835Resolution,said she, drooping against the mast,"fight me the ship--""And what o''me?"
9835Sail wi''the flood, is it?
9835Sail, Jo?
9835See,cried she, with a little, soft laugh,"am I not a goodly_ camarado_ for any brave fellow, yes?"
9835See-- who comes yonder?
9835Seek ye the white scarf?
9835Señor,quoth he gently,"you do hear them howling for my blood?
9835She is a great lady in England-- yes?
9835She is the lady Joanna that you preserved from death and worse, it seems--"Says she so, Adam?
9835Sir, what o''the fight?
9835Sir, what would you?
9835Sir,quoth I, getting to my feet,"what''s to do?"
9835So now,quoth Tressady,"since I command here, none denying--""And what o''Captain Jo?"
9835So then the town is saved, sir?
9835So will I win free of you so soon as I may--"Free of me?
9835So you are Captain Jo, eh-- Captain Jo of the Brotherhood?
9835So you are determined on''t, Martin?
9835So you will abandon me then?
9835So you would mend the boat,_ amigo mio_, and sail away from the island and me-- yes?
9835So, then, sir, you knew I should stay?
9835Sufferings, Martin?
9835Surely our case is not so hopeless you despair thus soon?
9835Tell me, Resolution, when shall we sight Nombre de Dios?
9835Tell me,cried Joanna, reaching out to nip my leg''twixt petulant fingers,"why must you brave the fire to save me you do so hate-- tell me?"
9835Tell me,said I after some while,"when Adam marched on his desperate venture, did he name any day for his likely return?"
9835Tell me,said I as gently as I might and laying a hand on his hairy shoulder,"who are you-- the name of your ship-- who was your captain?"
9835The air, comrade?
9835The feud?
9835The postern?
9835The which doth put me to great wonder you should come to forget her a while--"Forget her? 9835 Then here,"says he in a little,"here is an end to reason, Martin?"
9835Then wherefore trouble to shave your beard?
9835They have left me my life that I may burn--"When?
9835Think ye there is a God?
9835Think ye they will-- torture me first?
9835To- day-- to- morrow-- the day after-- what matter? 9835 Together, Martin?"
9835Trouble, Señor? 9835 Vengeance, young sir?
9835Was this Joanna nursed me?
9835We are beyond hope?
9835Well an''good-- murder''s an''anging matter, ai n''t it?
9835Well, dear sir?
9835Were you not afraid?
9835What do you here?
9835What evil have I wrought you?
9835What ha''you done with Joanna-- where is she?
9835What have these years made of me?
9835What is come of your fellow?
9835What is this, Father Alexo?
9835What is''t, Job lad? 9835 What manner of man is this Adam of yours, Martin?"
9835What new deviltries have ye in store?
9835What now, lad-- what now?
9835What now-- is he to us, then?
9835What now?
9835What now?
9835What now?
9835What o''clock is it?
9835What o''that? 9835 What of Sir Richard, your enemy?"
9835What of her, Adam-- what of her, man?
9835What of her, Martin?
9835What of the two Spaniards I struck down last night?
9835What of your daughter?
9835What saw I, Martin? 9835 What see you, yonder in the distance, dear Martin?"
9835What should fright you that do fear nothing?
9835What then?
9835What thing are you that seeming man must blench at a little blood? 9835 What troubleth your sluggish brain now?"
9835What would you with the wreck, fool?
9835What would you, Joanna?
9835What, Martin-- will ye blaspheme now? 9835 What, Tressady,"said I,"d''ye cheat the gallows yet?"
9835What, are ye hurt, Jo?
9835What, d''ye pray, brother? 9835 What, ha''ye just thought on''t at last, Martin?"
9835What, hath she been with me in my sickness, Adam?
9835What, my Joan?
9835What,cried I, shaking her to and fro despite my weakness,"what ha''you told my lady?"
9835What-- Resolution?
9835What-- do you here, my lord?
9835What-- what mean you?
9835When eyes look sweetness-- why scowl? 9835 When?"
9835Where am I?
9835Where away,_ camarado_?
9835Where do we make for, Resolution?
9835Where lays his course?
9835Where lieth he now to your knowledge?
9835Where lieth he now?
9835Which on''em, pal?
9835Whither are we sailing, Godby?
9835Whither now, Martin?
9835Who are you?
9835Who be you, bully, who and what?
9835Who is he?
9835Why not rouse me, Resolution?
9835Why seek such of me?
9835Why then who-- who and what is Joanna?
9835Why then, in God''s name-- where is she?
9835Why then, we are like to meet at Nombre de Dios?
9835Why there, Martin? 9835 Why, as to that, comrade, how if Joanna think as I think?"
9835Why, sir-- what now?
9835Why, very well, Martin--"Ha, d''ye doubt my word, Adam?
9835Will ye cower then, you beater of women? 9835 Will ye slay him, Martin?"
9835Will you not speak with me then-- no?
9835With four guns, mounted on wheels?
9835With my Lady Joan--"How?
9835Woman,I cried, as my pains increased,"what mean you now?
9835Yet this my body, though sorely changed, is yet the slime;''twill bleed if you prick it and I can die as well now as six years ago--?
9835Yet you hang these same rogues?
9835Yon man be the property o''Captain Jo--''tis Joanna''s man and whoso harms him swings--"Aye, but he''ve murdered Pompey, ai n''t''e?
9835You are Englishman-- yes?
9835You builded me my little house?
9835You could not endure me beside you, to-- to live-- with me near you?
9835You do not-- love me, then? 9835 You had a mind to nought but vengeance, which is an empty thing, as belike you''ll allow, Martin, you being now three long, empty years the wiser?"
9835You have suffered the torture?
9835You heard it, Martin; you heard it?
9835You see it, Martin?
9835You will be hating me for this, hating me-- yes?
9835You would be shot ere you had gone a yard-- are ye mad indeed or-- do you seek death?
9835You-- killed him?
9835You-- never could love me, mind and heart and body? 9835 You-- you?"
9835You?
9835Your brother?
9835Your hatchet-- this?
9835Your ship?
9835''How long will she last?''
9835''Twas Joanna and Resolution Day fought the ship after Belvedere was dead--""Ah, dead, is he?
9835Ah, think you I count that?
9835Aha, when I think o''what I''ve endured, I do love my little blowpipe--""Blowpipe?"
9835And how if he never returns, my Damaris-- how then?"
9835And if Adam were slain indeed and England thus beyond our reach, how long must we wait to be sure of this?
9835And if I hate fiercely, so is my love-- ha, d''ye blench, fool, d''ye shrink; you thing shaped like a man, must ye cringe at the word''love''?"
9835And is this so great a matter?"
9835And my hair?
9835And now I was roused by a question sudden and imperious:"Who are you?"
9835And now,"said he, propping himself against the rock behind him,"it is my turn to die, as I think?
9835And sure, oh, sure you are never one so vile to deceive the poor, sweet soul?"
9835And the laws-- what of the laws?
9835And the reason why?
9835And then a voice spake in sonorous Spanish, very soft and low and sweet, yet a voice that chilled me none the less:"Whom bring ye?"
9835And then again, why not a pirate?
9835And then, am I not your sworn brother?
9835And then, as she had read my very thought:"Is''t your boat-- to bring her afloat?
9835And these?"
9835And was this so great a matter?"
9835And what must we do wi''him-- shall he hang?"
9835And what then?"
9835And what''s that but a promise, Martin?"
9835And what?
9835And wherefore carried, you''ll ask?
9835And wherefore, to what end?"
9835And you, Martino, wilt kiss me-- not in gratitude-- this last time?"
9835And your vengeance-- is it achieved?"
9835And, mark me, here''s Belvedere''s nose out o''joint, d''ye see?
9835Are you a sailor-- can ye navigate, ha?"
9835Are you not grateful, no?"
9835Are you sleepy?"
9835Are you yourself so innocent, you that know Tressady o''the Hook?"
9835Art hungry, Martino?"
9835As what, Martin?
9835At last, my lady having left us awhile, he turns his sharp eyes on me:"Comrade, how goeth vengeance nowadays?"
9835At this she flinched and her fierce eyes wavered; then she laughed loud and shrill:"Will ye die then?
9835Aye, I love you-- I, Joanna, that never loved before, do love you, Martino--""What of your many lovers?"
9835Aye, Pompey''s the lad to set''em dancing Indian fashion--""You hear, Jo, you hear?"
9835But as I lay thus was a gentle touch on my bowed head and in my ear Don Federigo''s voice:"Alas, good my friend, and doth Hope die for you likewise?
9835But come, drink,_ amigo mio_, drink an you will--""Whence had you that gown?"
9835But for this I had been dead and thou safe with thy loved Joan-- dost curse thyself?"
9835But the sun is hot and you will be a thirsty fool--""Where learned you that evil song?"
9835But there is an empty place betwixt us, brother-- what of the old cacique so cunning in battle-- what of my father?"
9835But what more?"
9835But what of your dream?"
9835But what pen could do the sweet soul justice, what word describe her innumerable graces?
9835But why must you stare?"
9835But, Martin, if she be yet in these latitudes, where may we hope to find her?"
9835But, will you not drink?"
9835Can it rebuild our desolate towns, or cure any of a broken heart?"
9835Can not an Indian suffer-- cannot he die?"
9835Can you not say somewhat to my comfort?
9835Can you not-- pity me-- a little, yes?"
9835Come, end me, Martino, end me and be done-- or will you suffer the Don to show you, yes?"
9835Could she have better employ?"
9835D''ye hear, fool, d''ye hear?"
9835D''ye mind how I burned the boat you had so laboured at?"
9835Did I not give thee unto her that waiteth, living but for thee, yes?
9835Did he not merit death?"
9835Didst ever smile in all thy sullen days or speak me gentle word or kindly?
9835Dirt to dirt!--ah?
9835Do I then weary you, good Master Innocence?"
9835Do you mean ships?"
9835Dost curse thyself, Martino-- dost curse thyself for saving me from the fire?
9835Doth it begin so soon?"
9835Doth it please you, thus?"
9835Doth this grieve you?"
9835For may vengeance bring back the beloved dead?
9835For where shall a wronged man find such a comfortable assurance as this?
9835God be merciful to thee-- alas, what do you in this place of torment and living death-- young sir?"
9835Ha''n''t ye done yet an''be curst?"
9835Ha, here me- thinks is the very hand o''Providence, and who am I to gainsay it?
9835Ha-- having quarrelled with daughter you speed away to sire--""And what then?"
9835Ha-- will ye tell me you''ve quarrelled already in true lover- like fashion-- is this it?"
9835Have you enough knowledge to handle this ship in a storm?"
9835Have you got her fast in the bilboes-- safe under lock and key?"
9835He is your friend-- yes?"
9835He should walk overboard wi''slit weasand, or better-- he''s meat for Pompey, and wherefore no?
9835Here I started to hear my lady calling me softly:"Art awake, dear Martin?"
9835Here our guide paused as if unsure; but suddenly was the gleam of a lanthorn and I heard Don Federigo''s welcome voice:"Is that Hualipa?"
9835Here you''ve lain these twelve hours like a dead man and small wonder, what with your wound--""So you have come-- at last, Adam?"
9835How if he cometh never back?
9835How say you, Señor Don Federigo; you agree-- no?"
9835I am a simple fellow and nought to show for his years of life--""Wherefore so humble, poor man?
9835I asks why, Cap''n?"
9835I pray you, Señor, how many of our company ha''you strung aloft since last we met?"
9835I was buckling on my belt when her voice arrested me, albeit she spoke me very sweetly and soft:"You go now to your woman-- your light of love-- yes?"
9835I?"
9835Indeed, I am a sorry companion for a voyage, I doubt--""Howbeit,"said I,"last night, but for your ready wit, we had been taken--""Say you so, Martin?
9835Is he here?"
9835Is it him you come a- seeking of, master?"
9835Is she in these latitudes?"
9835Is the outfacing of five rogues any greater matter than outfacing this God''s wilderness?
9835Is the sullen fit on you?"
9835Is there a man here that will not obey Joanna-- no?
9835Is this a cocos palm?"
9835Is''t agreed?"
9835Joanna''s choice is mine, messmate--""How d''ye mean?"
9835Look now, Martino, have you not seen me long-- long ere this?"
9835Lord love you, Martin, are ye awake at last?
9835Myself( wondering): Then you do think he will succeed-- will come sailing back one day?
9835Myself: And wherefore believe this?
9835No?"
9835No?"
9835Now at this I sank on my knees beside him, and when I would have spoken, could not for a while; at last:"Is there aught I may do?"
9835Now wherefore will ye be quit o''me?"
9835Oh, Martino,"she cried;"will you not be my friend, rather?"
9835Oh, mean you my daughter Joan?
9835Ready there?
9835Saw ye ever a lovelier, sweeter soul?"
9835Shall we despair?
9835Shall we set about building another vessel and the enemy come upon us before''tis done?
9835She''s''La Culebra,''and why?
9835She( after a moment): Should you, Martin?
9835She( quickly): Why, Martin-- pray why?
9835She: The best?
9835So they will torture me-- as they did you-- but when, ah, God-- when?"
9835So would I humbly sue forgiveness of you since I am to die so soon--""To die?"
9835So you''ll steal the boat, will ye-- leave us marooned here, will ye?"
9835So, comrades all, who''s for Carthagena along with me; who''s for a Spanish ship and Old England?''"
9835Talk o''fame?
9835Talk o''glory?
9835Tell me, I pray, how didst know my unhappy name?"
9835Then what of this?"
9835They have marched across country on Carthagena--""Yes, Martin, but what dream--?"
9835Think ye I shall suffer you to leave me here alone and destitute, fool?"
9835Think you I do not know it?
9835Wake-- wake and tell me, must we die soon?
9835Well, then, shall we stay here sucking our thumbs?
9835What dost thou among the living dead?"
9835What o''yourself, friend?
9835What other way was there?
9835What--?"
9835When comfort and all manner o''delights be offered-- why choose misery forrard and the bloody rogues o''her fo''castle?
9835When lips woo kisses-- wherefore take a blow instead?
9835When we had stared thus a while, he leaned him back in the great chair and spoke me in his soft, sweet voice:"You are English, señor?"
9835Where is she now, Adam?"
9835Where''s my comrade, Roger?"
9835Wherefore go?"
9835Wherefore would ye leave me here, curst Englishman?"
9835Why d''ye stare on me so?
9835Why so I would, but what o''Belvedere?"
9835Will ye die?"
9835Will ye not spare a look?
9835Will ye not speak-- have ye no word to my comfort?"
9835Wilt not forget past scores and strive to love me-- some little-- Martino?"
9835Would you kiss a dying woman an''she might creep to your arms, Martino?"
9835Wouldst have me live, indeed?"
9835Yes?
9835Yet must I get you safe away, but how-- how?"
9835Yet who would seek vengeance on a worm?"
9835You hear me, yes?"
9835You know him?
9835You saw him dead, Martin?"
9835You will cherish thus-- and comfort one-- hath wronged you and yours-- so bitterly?"
9835You''ll not forget old Resolution, shipmate?"
9835said he, pinching his chin and eyeing me askance,"was it steel or did ye shoot him, comrade?"
9835said he; and then in changed voice, and his keen gaze aloft amid the swelling sail,"What o''the lady Joanna, shipmate?"
9835said she, softer than before and most hatefully a- smiling,"''tis for her sake your chin goeth bare and smooth-- yes?
9835says she, mocking,"do I then vex you a little,_ amigo mio_?
9835says she, staring as one vastly amazed,"child-- and to me, fool, to me?
9835they shouted,"Us ha''fought as long as men may, and now what?"