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 |
---|---|
39494 | Is there ony room at your head, Saunders, Is there ony room at your feet? 39494 ''Twas I that stood to greet you on the churchyard pave--( O fire o''my heart''s grief, how could you never see?) 39494 Back from the chill sea- deeps, gliding o''er the sand dunes, Home to the old home, once again to meet? 39494 Dost fear to ride with me? |
39494 | If it is all as safe and dull As it seems? |
39494 | O sweetest my sister, what doeth with thee The ghost of a nun with a brown rosary And a face turned from heaven? |
39494 | Or ony room at your side, Saunders, Where fain, fain I wad sleep?" |
39494 | We must not buy their fruits; Who knows upon what soil they fed Their hungry thirsty roots?" |
39494 | What comes apace on those fearful, stealthy feet? |
39494 | What is it cries with the crying of the curlews? |
39494 | What is this that sighs in the frost?" |
39494 | What white thing at the door has cross''d, Sister Helen? |
39494 | Who meet by that wall, never looking at heaven? |
39494 | Who meet there, my mother, at dawn and at even? |
39494 | Who rideth through the driving rain At such a headlong speed? |
14044 | Had n''t they seen him with his sword on every''quid''they''d ever had? |
14044 | It''s all right now, is n''t it? |
14044 | Well well; but how did you come here? 14044 What are they talking about? |
14044 | What does it all mean? |
14044 | What is it? |
14044 | What,said the wounded man,"the place they used to tell us about in Sunday school? |
14044 | Why should English archers use French terms? |
14044 | And after all, what do we know? |
14044 | But what about that wound?" |
14044 | D''ye see them? |
14044 | They do n''t think I''d let down my pals?" |
14044 | Where did you get that?" |
14044 | Who am I that I should doubt the faith of a clerk in holy orders? |
14044 | Why should they have lilies?" |
14044 | Would I allow them to reprint"The Bowmen"as a pamphlet, and would I write a short preface giving the exact authorities for the story? |
14044 | Yet the very next paragraph in the article begins:--"''Where was this?'' |
14044 | he asked? |
32891 | About what? |
32891 | Almost there? |
32891 | Are any of the others up? |
32891 | Earl? |
32891 | He''s going to sleep now, are n''t you Roy? |
32891 | How about a good week hunting jack- rabbits? 32891 How''s Roy?" |
32891 | How''s Roy? |
32891 | Huh? |
32891 | I mean, was it during hunting season? |
32891 | Is Bill up? |
32891 | It-- wasn''t Bill, was it? |
32891 | Look,Larson said abruptly,"you do n''t believe that phantom buck business, do you?" |
32891 | Lord,he groaned,"how much farther?" |
32891 | Norm told you I saw the phantom once, did n''t he? |
32891 | Norm, Norm, it was n''t Bill, was it? |
32891 | Norm, what''s wrong? |
32891 | Trouble? |
32891 | Were you carrying a gun? |
32891 | What''s left? |
32891 | When did you see the phantom? |
32891 | Where''s Norm? |
32891 | Why did n''t the phantom attack you, Bill? |
32891 | Yea? |
32891 | Yes? |
32891 | Yes? |
32891 | You about ready to go back to town, Doc? |
32891 | You called the sheriff? |
32891 | You think the phantom buck might have done the killing? |
32891 | You think-- maybe...? |
32891 | _ It is n''t Bill, out there on the road, dead?_He went swiftly to her and put one hand on her shoulder. |
32891 | Ai n''t that the general idea?" |
32891 | Bill''s okay, is n''t he?" |
32891 | Could they handle him like a ten year old kid? |
32891 | Glenn, Glenn, take care of her, will you?" |
32891 | Got any snake bite medicine?" |
32891 | Have n''t seen Bill, have you? |
32891 | He''s coming in behind the plough? |
32891 | If I had met him...""You did n''t?" |
32891 | Ready to go?" |
32891 | Snow snakes biting tonight?" |
32891 | Then:"Oh? |
32891 | We all too scared to think clearly for ourselves?" |
32891 | What''s so damn much different between men killing deer, or a deer killing a man? |
32891 | What''s the matter? |
32891 | What''s the matter? |
32891 | Who did they think he was? |
22246 | ''Lowmintrduce L''d Cairngorm,he said; then, adding quickly to me,"Come and dine to- morrow, wo n''t you?" |
22246 | A woman? 22246 And how is the Woman of the Water?" |
22246 | But, my dear sir,I retorted,"do you, a man of science, mean to tell me that such things can not be explained?" |
22246 | Did he come back? |
22246 | Do I look like a man who makes puns? |
22246 | Do you really believe it is a ghost? |
22246 | Do you think you could communicate to my aunt the fact that you are a Cairngorm and a neighbour? 22246 Does she still play in the moonlight?" |
22246 | Feed her? 22246 He is the fourth, then?" |
22246 | How can you''tell life''anything? |
22246 | Hungry? 22246 I suppose that often happens?" |
22246 | I-- beg your pardon-- but then-- is your aunt Lady Bluebell? 22246 Is there any reason in the world why you should not enjoy all you have got in life?" |
22246 | Secondly,I continued,"I was sitting alone in my garden last summer-- near the end of July-- do you remember? |
22246 | Shall I go away? |
22246 | Soverin''did you say, sir? 22246 Well, sir-- find anything, sir?" |
22246 | What do you mean? |
22246 | What does she mean? |
22246 | What is it, Judith? |
22246 | What is the matter? |
22246 | What the deuce do you mean, you scoundrel, by leaving that port open every night? 22246 What?" |
22246 | When? |
22246 | Where were you staying? |
22246 | Where? 22246 Whereabouts are you?" |
22246 | Why do n''t you answer me? |
22246 | Why? |
22246 | Will you let me try? |
22246 | You do n''t mean to say he has gone overboard? |
22246 | You have had a bad night, eh? 22246 ***** Well, do you want to hear any more? 22246 And I-- do you know who I am? |
22246 | Are you consumptive? |
22246 | Are you deaf, like Aunt Bluebell? |
22246 | Are you feeble- minded, a cripple, an outcast? |
22246 | Are you poor, like-- lots of people? |
22246 | Are you ready?" |
22246 | Are you subject to hereditary insanity? |
22246 | Are you-- repulsively ugly?" |
22246 | Did you notice anything extraordinary in his manner?" |
22246 | Do n''t you know it is against the regulations? |
22246 | Do n''t you know that if the ship heeled and the water began to come in, ten men could not shut it? |
22246 | Do you know anybody here?" |
22246 | Do you?" |
22246 | Have you a room- mate?" |
22246 | Have you been crossed in love? |
22246 | Have you been feeding the Woman of the Water?" |
22246 | Have you lost the world for a woman, or any particular woman for the sake of the world? |
22246 | How can a man of your age talk of being melancholy, or of the hollowness of existence? |
22246 | How in the world did you come there at that hour?" |
22246 | I took you at your word, I followed your advice, I asked you to marry me, and this is the delightful result-- what''s the matter?" |
22246 | Is that a fair bargain?" |
22246 | Is the port screwed down?" |
22246 | Look''ere, sir, is that fastened what you may call securely, or not, sir? |
22246 | Miss Lammas, will you do me the honour to marry me?" |
22246 | On the very next trip-- What are you looking at?" |
22246 | Perhaps-- perhaps you are a Miss Bluebell?" |
22246 | Shall I make you a pick- me- up? |
22246 | Shall I take you at your word, Miss Lammas?" |
22246 | The doctor turned sharply on me----"Have you any reasonable explanation of these things to offer?" |
22246 | Then I spoke to the Welshwoman:"What are you about, Judith? |
22246 | Upon my word-- I can smell it now, can not you?" |
22246 | What, you? |
22246 | Why could not she look like her mother, too, as well as the rest of them? |
22246 | Why do you not care for the ship?" |
22246 | Why have we never met before?" |
22246 | Why?" |
22246 | Would my cuff do, do you think?" |
22246 | Would n''t it be singularly awkward for you if I had said''Yes''? |
22246 | You do n''t mean to say so, Brisbane? |
22246 | You must have wandered in there through the park; you came up to the house and looked at me----""Was that you?" |
42566 | Come, wots yer shout for liquor? 42566 Do ye me dear?" |
42566 | Ho, trespasser, what shall I do? |
42566 | It''s a fair deceit And I am a curious man-- Yes I am a curious man, my badge Is seventeen seventy- seven, But wot is a badge? 42566 Mein gott, vots them?" |
42566 | O Corney is it you? |
42566 | O WHERE is my Johnnie acushla? |
42566 | O troubadour, what brings you here, So lone and sad? |
42566 | O who am I? 42566 Then how on earth could you expect to be the man who could get on?" |
42566 | Thy name? |
42566 | What? 42566 Where is now, that love?" |
42566 | Why do n''t you get up out of that? |
42566 | Will you give that rose to me? |
42566 | Will you slack? |
42566 | Would you know him, an''he be Waiting there, by yonder tree? |
42566 | ''Twas on her mother''s sofa he looked at her, said he,"I''m kinder sweet on you, love, will you accept of me? |
42566 | ******"What brings the two of you down here?" |
42566 | Ah vot is deed of glory, ven blood is on ze vings Of love, zat makes ze heaven on earth, und vot are kings? |
42566 | Am I before a doctor''s shop, Where coloured bottles be? |
42566 | And legislative rights imposed upon the noble''s backs? |
42566 | And toil is overcrowded, Mam, Intelligence is got by cram; And what''s for lovely Sally of the garret, shall she spoil? |
42566 | As he fastened it on to her chain,"Will you keep this locket in place of it? |
42566 | For fifty years I''ve ambushed, and watched around me bate, But never met a sweetheart, that took me so complate, And what''s a bate? |
42566 | Have we been privileged to pay our swollen rates and tax? |
42566 | He cried"Shall I evict by Law? |
42566 | He jumped up in bed, and he cried with an oath,"What''s that, that you''re doing, you scamp?" |
42566 | He stopped the old piano, and"Vot of zat?" |
42566 | He swigged the pint before him, then heaved a bitter sigh,"What? |
42566 | I heard a voice that muttered"What are ye doin''there?" |
42566 | Is there a green light, on my face, That you should spake to me? |
42566 | Mervyn Jones of Pontypridd?" |
42566 | Now shall I chuck you out myself, Or seek injunct, from Chancerie?" |
42566 | O have ye saw the blackberries, Upon the brambly bush? |
42566 | O have you ever saunthered out Upon a winther''s night, Whin the crispy frost, is on the ground, An''all the stars, are bright? |
42566 | O is it with pills, or senna and salts, your''shake up the bottle''and mess Of slops, to avenge for the deed I''ve done? |
42566 | O is she dead, thy wife? |
42566 | Or take the Law myself, on you?" |
42566 | PRETTY maiden, all the way, All the way, all the way, Pretty maiden, why so gay, On the road, to London? |
42566 | Said he,"What''s up? |
42566 | She greeted me upsmiling, with business kindled fire, And volunteered the question,"What rooms do you require?" |
42566 | Siz he"What''s all this squealin''for? |
42566 | THE tears were in her eye, Said I"what makes you cry?" |
42566 | That thou should''st cause the lieges to irradiate their hair, With horror at thy felon work? |
42566 | The groom ran down the stable stairs with horsey oathings dire, And a constable came knocking said he"are you''s on fire?" |
42566 | The iron ships, and bullet proof cuirass to scape the fight? |
42566 | The pensive penguin harkened unto his lonely wail; The albatross did follow he shrieked him for the clew,"O who am I? |
42566 | Then have you bent your awe sthrick gaze, There, up aginst the skies? |
42566 | What boots it if thou crack Thy butler''s neck? |
42566 | What for?" |
42566 | What makes ye bawl?" |
42566 | YE strife waxed hot, in air they spring,-- No fiercer fray, did minstrel sing,-- But why spill here, Ye tender tear, For Roundhead, or ye Cavalier? |
42566 | [ Decoration][ Illustration: WHY DID YE DIE?] |
42566 | [ Illustration] He saved the King of Snookaroo, he had no trowsers on, its thrue, But what is that to me or you? |
42566 | and what am I to do?" |
42566 | and what am I to do?" |
42566 | and what am I to do?" |
42566 | and what am I to do?" |
42566 | and what he is to do? |
42566 | and where am I? |
42566 | and where am I? |
42566 | and where am I? |
42566 | and where am I? |
42566 | and where he is? |
42566 | did Government send out to bring us Jabez home? |
42566 | did Lord Macaulay write"The Lays of Antient Rome?" |
42566 | is n''t he a cough- drop? |
42566 | is the dancing done? |
42566 | said one,"Votever has there happened, vots been, and gone, and done? |
42566 | said she,"did ye take The shillin''?" |
42566 | said the ladies in court,"Was n''t that lawyer a treat?" |
42566 | so give me a decent show-- Whew!--eh-- what''s this? |
42566 | that Cromwell lopped a royal head as traitor knave? |
42566 | that all his cuirassiers were sworn to pray and shave? |
42566 | that justice wrung thy neck on Tyburn tree, To expiate the direful debt to justice due by thee? |
42566 | that laureates have lived of royal deeds to sing? |
42566 | the printing press was made, torpedoes, dynamite? |
42566 | to see a strong man thus,"O Reginald Fitz Alpine Smyke, Why, wherefore, whence, this fuss? |
42566 | was England parcelled out amongst the Norman few, That thou should''st haunt in Hampton Court thy noisome work to do? |
42566 | we fought and flew, On many a bloody battle field, right on to Peterloo? |
42566 | we''ve wove around the world a social net Of speaking steel, that thou should''st perpetrate thy murder yet? |
42566 | what was there? |
42566 | what''s the use of bawlin''there?" |
42566 | when George the Third was king? |
42566 | whose ravings Across the ocean flew, Of"Who am I? |
42566 | why did ye die? |
42566 | why did ye die? |
42566 | why did ye die? |
42566 | why grims it so with thee? |
37232 | ( 1) How could he, therefore, find any difficulty in such words addressed to the repentant Zacchaeus, who had just believed in the mission of Christ? 37232 ( 1) In the fourth Gospel, to the question:"What must we do, that we may work the works of God?" |
37232 | ( 1) What date must be assigned to this Epistle? 37232 ( 4) Little evidence? |
37232 | ''How, Lord,''I said,''is the rock old and the gate new?'' |
37232 | ( 1) How came the devil, the origin of lying and deceit, to be made at all? |
37232 | ( 2) Now if Marcion mutilated Luke to so little purpose as this, what was the use of his touching it at all? |
37232 | ( 2)"If Satan cast out Satan he is divided against himself: how then can his kingdom stand?" |
37232 | ( 3) Did he omit them or merely use a Gospel which never included them? |
37232 | 14, where Jesus bids the lepers conform to the requirements of the law? |
37232 | 17:{1}"Why askest thou me concerning good? |
37232 | 18 ff, in which the keeping of the law is made essential to life? |
37232 | 18,(2) the[------] is retained, and the question of the ruler is:"Good master, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?" |
37232 | 2,(5){ 112} where the Pharisees say of him:"This man receiveth sinners and eateth with them?" |
37232 | 24:(2)"Do ye not therefore err, not knowing the Scriptures nor the power of God?" |
37232 | 25,(5)"so that the question of the lawyer simply ran:{ 113}"Master, what shall I do to inherit life?" |
37232 | 29, in reply to the question,"Which is the first Commandment of all? |
37232 | 29, where the answer is given to the rich man pleading for his relatives:"They have Moses and the prophets, let them hear them"? |
37232 | 2? |
37232 | 3 So Credner, Ewald, Hitzig, Lachmann,(?) |
37232 | 34, the passage reads:"and if ye lend to them of whom ye hope to receive, what thank have ye?" |
37232 | 4 B. Bauer, Hitzig(?) |
37232 | 46:(4)"But why call ye me Lord, Lord, and do not the things which I say?" |
37232 | 7, 9:"I am the door,"the question:"What is the door of Jesus?" |
37232 | And he said unto them: What would ye that I should do for you? |
37232 | And how can we believe thy story that he was seen by thee? |
37232 | And how could he have been seen by thee when thy thoughts are contrary to his teaching? |
37232 | And if thou sayest:''It is possible,''then wherefore did the Teacher remain and discourse for a whole year to us who were awake? |
37232 | And in what way? |
37232 | And when you know this, with what{ 366} gladness, think you, you will be filled? |
37232 | But Jesus said to them: Ye know not what ye ask: can ye drink the cup that I drink? |
37232 | But can any one through a vision be made wise to teach? |
37232 | But he answered and said unto them: Who are my mother and brethren? |
37232 | By whom was it written? |
37232 | For he will send him to judge, and who shall abide his presence? |
37232 | God calls out: Adam, where art thou? |
37232 | He also cites Melito of Sardis: why does he not refer to Apollinaris of Hierapolis? |
37232 | He, therefore, explains the question of the rulers:"What is the door of Jesus?" |
37232 | If it be argued that he was still living, then why does Eusebius not mention him amongst those who protested against the measures of Victor of Rome? |
37232 | If moreover the translator{ 245} was so ignorant of Latin, can we trust his translation? |
37232 | In any case, what could such a statement as this do towards establishing the Apostolic origin and credibility of the fourth Gospel? |
37232 | Is it possible that he could have had nothing interesting to tell about a work presenting so many striking and distinctive features? |
37232 | It is Judas Iscariot, and not the disciples, who says:"Why was not this ointment sold for three hundred pence and given to the poor?" |
37232 | Now, was it, as one of men might reason, for tyranny and to cause fear and consternation? |
37232 | Or how will you love him, who beforehand so loved you? |
37232 | The question therefore is: Are these data sufficiently ample and trustworthy for a decisive judgment{ 91} from internal evidence? |
37232 | The words:"Or how will you love him who so beforehand loved you?" |
37232 | There is evidently no intention on the part of the Scribes and Pharisees here to ridicule, in asking:"What is the door of Jesus?" |
37232 | To the all- important question:"How old is Heracleon?" |
37232 | To the inquiry:"What shall I do to inherit eternal life?" |
37232 | Upon what principle of dogmatic interest, then, can Marcion have erased the one while he retained the other? |
37232 | We again, however, come to the question: Who really made the quotations which Hippolytus introduces so indefinitely? |
37232 | When did Irenæus, however, really write his work against Heresies? |
37232 | Why single these out and seem to exclude the sellers of sheep and oxen? |
37232 | [------]''And why is the gate new, Lord?'' |
37232 | and what guarantee have we that he has not paraphrased and expanded the original? |
37232 | can he enter a second time into his mothers womb and be born? |
37232 | or be baptized with the baptism that I am baptized with? |
37232 | these eighteen years, to be loosed from this bond on the Sabbath day?" |
37232 | used in the 2 Why"early"? |
37232 | ye of little faith?" |
37232 | { 208} our Gnostics in the present tense? |
17626 | ''For if ye love them which love you, and lend to them which lend to you, what reward shall ye have?'' 17626 And that we may not have to ask''Of what God was the Word made flesh?'' |
17626 | Can a devil open the eyes of the blind? |
17626 | Have we not all one God and one Christ? 17626 How can ye believe who receive honour one of another, and seek not the honour that cometh of God only?" |
17626 | What, then, are those precepts in which we are instructed? 17626 Will not the angel''s announcement be subverted, that the Virgin should''conceive in her womb and bring forth a son?'' |
17626 | ); and at the end of the same we have:--"If the Lord thus humbled Himself, what shall we do who have through Him come under the yoke of His grace?" |
17626 | *****"And regarding our affection for all He thus taught:''If ye love them which love you what new thing do ye? |
17626 | 22) And Justin also reproduces this in his Dialogue:--"For, tell me, did God wish the priests to sin when they offer the sacrifices on the Sabbaths? |
17626 | Again, what is"contemporary history?" |
17626 | Are not these the commonest words of daily life? |
17626 | Are we, then, able to form any conjecture as to the name of this most ancient Gospel? |
17626 | Are ye not better than the birds and the beasts? |
17626 | But has He really revealed these? |
17626 | But how about those words which succeed them in answer to the question of the Virgin,"How shall these things be?" |
17626 | But many will say to me, Lord, Lord, have we not eaten and drunk in Thy name, and done wonders? |
17626 | But may he not have derived all this from Philo? |
17626 | But what is the import of the discrepancy? |
17626 | But why do we lift up our feet from the ground to go about some daily duty? |
17626 | Can a marble statue, after it is thrown down, rise up again of itself, and stand upon its feet? |
17626 | Can it be reasonably said to reach to within fifty years of His Death, or to within twenty, or even nearer? |
17626 | Can the writer of"Supernatural Religion"be serious when he writes,"He nowhere identifies the Logos with Jesus?" |
17626 | For what is a man profited if he shall gain the whole world but destroy his soul? |
17626 | For what is the distinguishing function of the Priesthood? |
17626 | For without reason does she say,''And whence is this to me that the mother of my Lord should come to me?'' |
17626 | From whom did Philo derive_ his_ doctrine of the Logos? |
17626 | Have we not one calling in Christ?" |
17626 | He that believeth,''& c. Whom, indeed, did He reveal to the woman of Samaria? |
17626 | His saying,"My God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?" |
17626 | How, then, is such a book to be met? |
17626 | How, we ask, could such a Gospel have perished utterly? |
17626 | If it be rejoined that this superior force must act according to law, we answer, certainly, but according to what law? |
17626 | If it was not as her son, but only as a stranger, that Mary carried Jesus in her womb, how is it she says,''Blessed is the fruit of thy womb?''" |
17626 | If there be a conflict now going on between God and Satan, can there be a doubt as to the side to which this miracle is to be assigned? |
17626 | Is it not Mediation and Intercession, and the Fourth Gospel more than all sets forth Christ as Mediator and Intercessor? |
17626 | Is there not one Spirit of grace poured upon us? |
17626 | Matthew and Mark):--"For, when crucified, He spake,''O God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken me?''" |
17626 | Now the question arises, is there any power or force clearly above the highest controlling power within us,_ i.e._ above our conscience? |
17626 | Now what is a law? |
17626 | Now, what are the facts? |
17626 | Now, who is this Man Whose figure stands thus prominent above His fellows? |
17626 | Supposing, then, that the Apocalypse was anterior to St. John, on whose lines, so to speak, does Justin develope the Logos doctrine? |
17626 | The other question is,"from whom did Justin derive his identification of the Logos with Jesus?" |
17626 | To what date before their time must this tradition reach, so that it must be relied upon as exhibiting the true state of things? |
17626 | To what period must his reminiscences as a Christian extend? |
17626 | Was he, then, acquainted with the fact that Justin''s words_ in this place_ so closely correspond with St. Luke''s? |
17626 | Was it not''the Messias which is called Christ?'' |
17626 | Well, then, the reader will ask, from whom did Justin derive the knowledge of doctrines and facts so closely resembling those contained in St. John? |
17626 | What Son is this Whom none but the Father knoweth, and Who alone knoweth the Father, and Who reveals the Father to whomsoever He will? |
17626 | What Son is this compared with Whom such saints as Moses, David, Elijah, Isaiah, and Daniel are"servants?" |
17626 | What answer, the reader will ask, does the author of"Supernatural Religion"give to all this? |
17626 | What are the words of which this sentence is composed? |
17626 | What can this writer mean by the"philosophic terminology"of our Lord''s sayings as reported in the Fourth Gospel? |
17626 | What did he write to you at the time when the Gospel first began to be preached? |
17626 | What new doctrine is this? |
17626 | What proof have we of His Revelation, or that it is a Revelation? |
17626 | What time must his experiences cover? |
17626 | What, then, is the inference which the author of"Supernatural Religion"draws from these discrepancies? |
17626 | When was this power of performing miracles withdrawn from the Church? |
17626 | [ 155:1] What sign showest Thou us? |
17626 | [ 158:1] But do we know much more of the physical?" |
17626 | and From whom did Justin derive his identification of the Logos with Jesus? |
17626 | of this work? |
17626 | or what shall he give in exchange for it? |
17626 | p. 293) Now just as in the former case we had to ask,"What is the characteristic of the priest?" |
17626 | so in order to answer this we have only to ask,"What is the characteristic of the angel?" |
17626 | to which we may add another:"Did Justin quote any other lost Gospel besides our four?" |
10659 | Ah,--but your name? |
10659 | And a man with strong desires, you say, might change? |
10659 | And he brings no kind of introduction to me-- no letter or anything? |
10659 | And the cure? |
10659 | And this solidity? |
10659 | And what do you make of it all? |
10659 | And where is the gentleman now? |
10659 | And who brought him here? |
10659 | And you do n''t think father has heard it either, then? |
10659 | Are_ you_ real? |
10659 | Bruder Asmodelius accepts you,they whispered;"are you ready?" |
10659 | But how, in the name of space, is that to be done? |
10659 | But the torn tent and the wounded flesh? |
10659 | But what have I to do with this Bruder Asm-- Asmo--? |
10659 | But what makes you think the creature is starved? |
10659 | But why in the hall, Barker? 10659 But, how is it possible?" |
10659 | Did I dream everything-- everything? |
10659 | Did he frighten you? |
10659 | Do you know what it is, Hubbard, this beast? |
10659 | Has sufficient material drawn from the depleted body to produce physical results? 10659 Haunted?" |
10659 | How can it be possible? 10659 How is this concentration to be effected?" |
10659 | I can hardly believe--"You have not heard, then? |
10659 | I heard nothing,he whispered;"what in the world do you think it is? |
10659 | In time,I put in,"you mean a man living here might become brutal?" |
10659 | In what way? |
10659 | Is n''t it a mercy the doctor was here? |
10659 | Is the Camp asleep? |
10659 | It has changed? |
10659 | Joan injured? |
10659 | Joan? |
10659 | John Silence,I said,"will know--""You think it''s something-- of that sort?" |
10659 | No one has been actually injured so far? |
10659 | Of course not; why should I? |
10659 | Safer, Joan? |
10659 | Sitting in the dark? |
10659 | So the gentleman made you feel queer, did he? |
10659 | Surely there can be no question of this poor starved beast injuring anybody, can there? |
10659 | The dog again? |
10659 | The fundamental fact in this most curious case,he went on,"is that the''Double''of a man--""You mean the astral body? |
10659 | Then is n''t that the best way to cure the fool-- the brute--? |
10659 | Then it might even kill? |
10659 | Then you actually penetrated far enough into that state to experience yourself as a normal portion of it? |
10659 | Through what? |
10659 | Walking in her sleep, you mean? |
10659 | Was I so utterly deluded? |
10659 | What do you mean? |
10659 | Where has he gone to? 10659 Why''extraordinary''?" |
10659 | Why''extraordinary,''Barker? |
10659 | You have not heard what happened there before it was abandoned--? |
10659 | You heard those footsteps about half an hour ago? |
10659 | You mean his Subtle Body, as you call it, might issue forth automatically in deep sleep and seek the object of its desire? |
10659 | You mean that if this fluid animal thing, or whatever it is, should be prevented getting back, the man might never wake again? |
10659 | You mean,said Harris, a little puzzled,"the disturbing memories--?" |
10659 | You really know very little about it, then? |
10659 | You still have the boys''orchestra? 10659 You''ve not heard anything at night yourself, have you?" |
10659 | And the piece itself, although Harris did not recognise it as anything familiar, was surely the music of a Mass-- huge, majestic, sombre? |
10659 | And why, he suddenly thought again, were they so impressed by the mere fact of his coming to revisit his old school? |
10659 | As in the case at hand, he may not know it--""It is not necessarily deliberate, then?" |
10659 | Been setting the night- lines, eh? |
10659 | But in any case it is not wise to leave precipitately--""Oh, Timothy, does he think it''s a devil--?" |
10659 | But what did"_ Opfer_"mean? |
10659 | Can it be a porcupine?" |
10659 | Can you understand what it is you''re doing in your''Body of Desire''?" |
10659 | Could this be his son? |
10659 | Do you know me? |
10659 | Eh?" |
10659 | Had he blundered into it at all? |
10659 | Had he not rather been led into it, deliberately led? |
10659 | How had he blundered into so equivocal a situation? |
10659 | In this little place of peaceful dreams would he, perhaps, not cut something of a figure? |
10659 | Is n''t it, perhaps, something of that kind?" |
10659 | Now, do you think you can help me with_ that_?" |
10659 | What are they?" |
10659 | What could it all mean?" |
10659 | What did it all mean? |
10659 | What then?" |
10659 | What was it they so admired and wondered at in his simple act? |
10659 | Who''ll second me?" |
10659 | Why not in the waiting- room?" |
10659 | You mean that the Double--?" |
10659 | _ Opfer, Opfer, Opfer!_ What in the name of heaven did it mean, that strange, mysterious word that struck such terror into his heart? |
10659 | and then-- but how in the world describe what is indescribable? |
10659 | gasped Mrs. Maloney,"a phenomenon?--you mean that you know what it is?" |
10659 | he asked presently, after a general pause;"this tearing of tents and flesh; this howling, and the marks of paws? |
10659 | he asked, looking hard at him;"haunted, did you say?" |
43346 | ''How?'' 43346 But how,"said I,"when morning comes, shall I know that your appearance to me has been real, and not the mere representation of my own imagination?" |
43346 | For Heaven''s sake,I exclaimed,"Lord Tyrone, by what means or for what reason came you hither at this time of night?" |
43346 | Have you then forgotten our promise? |
43346 | I may, then, infer that you are happy? |
43346 | May I not ask,said I,"if you are happy?" |
43346 | This gentleman then adjured the spirit in a variety of forms, and asked if it was not a bad spirit? 43346 What is the matter?" |
43346 | Will not the news of my death be sufficient to convince you? |
43346 | ''Do you believe,''said I,''that Christ died to save us from sin?'' |
43346 | ''Do you expect letters?'' |
43346 | ''In God''s Name, what do you want, or what can I do for you?'' |
43346 | ''In the Name of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost,''said I,''are you the spirit of my child?'' |
43346 | ''In what shape shall it be?'' |
43346 | ''Well,''said a clergyman, one of the three,''I wonder, after all, if there is any future state or not?'' |
43346 | --"What of the Dead? |
43346 | 33?'' |
43346 | 35.--''While your body was lying in the coffin, was anything put in the hand? |
43346 | 36.--''What was it?'' |
43346 | 37.--''By whom was it put there?'' |
43346 | 38.--''Who else were present at the time?'' |
43346 | :--''Where was your body buried?'' |
43346 | :--''Will you spell the name of the place where we lived when you left this state?'' |
43346 | And tell me, most potent seigniors, what is the origin of these forces? |
43346 | And with whom resides the impulse of their action and the guidance of their control? |
43346 | Are you a bad spirit? |
43346 | Are you happy? |
43346 | But still, a thoughtful mind will venture to demand whence did these atoms derive their existence? |
43346 | By fire? |
43346 | Can we do you any good? |
43346 | Days? |
43346 | Did they make them feel them? |
43346 | Did they see them? |
43346 | Did you know any at this table? |
43346 | Did you live in this neighbourhood? |
43346 | Do you mean five days? |
43346 | Dr. Edmunds:"How were the names spelled out?" |
43346 | Has the spirit of my child_ ever_ been put in communication with myself or her mother through this or any other table?'' |
43346 | Have you been dead years? |
43346 | He inquired further, whether there was any of their old acquaintance in that place where he was? |
43346 | He then asked her if she had hurt her wrist:''Have you sprained it?'' |
43346 | How could any one be afraid of me? |
43346 | How did they know they were there? |
43346 | How long have you been dead? |
43346 | How many? |
43346 | I asked,''Are you my child?'' |
43346 | I exclaimed,"and can not I prevent this?" |
43346 | I had offered a glass of wine and water to my wife, when, on putting it to her lips, she paused and exclaimed,''Good God, what is that?'' |
43346 | I then said,''Are you from God?'' |
43346 | I then said,''In the Name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, I command you to answer-- are you from God?'' |
43346 | In how many years? |
43346 | In the reign of her successor? |
43346 | Is he alive or dead? |
43346 | Is it displeasing to God? |
43346 | Is it the woman''s spirit, or the man''s, who haunts the house? |
43346 | Is it what the Bible calls"divination"to consult you in this way? |
43346 | Is it wrong? |
43346 | Is there a middle state of souls? |
43346 | It was followed by another:--''What was the name of the person whose spirit is here?'' |
43346 | Months? |
43346 | Shall any of us see the Last Day? |
43346 | Similar strange phenomena occurred on this occasion likewise:--"Are you a Spirit who inhabited this earth? |
43346 | The end of wickedness? |
43346 | Then how did the spirits make themselves known-- by what means? |
43346 | Was the Baptist religion true? |
43346 | Was the man hung? |
43346 | Was the murder found out while he lived? |
43346 | Weeks? |
43346 | Were you ever there? |
43346 | What frightened them? |
43346 | What killed the two people in the haunted room? |
43346 | What kind of spirits? |
43346 | What was the name of the woman? |
43346 | Who could it have been?'' |
43346 | Who murdered her? |
43346 | Who was murdered, a man or a woman? |
43346 | Why do those spirits haunt that house? |
43346 | Will Enoch and Elijah come again? |
43346 | Will Russia conquer England? |
43346 | Will it be in the reign of Queen Victoria? |
43346 | Will it be partly destroyed by fire? |
43346 | Will it be the end of the World or the end of wickedness? |
43346 | Will that be the Millennium? |
43346 | Will the Jews be restored? |
43346 | Will the Last Judgment be then? |
43346 | Will the World be destroyed by water? |
43346 | Will the end of the World be soon? |
43346 | Will you point them out? |
43346 | Will you spell the true religion? |
43346 | Will you spell your name? |
43346 | and from what, and from whom, do they inherit the propensities wherewithal they are imbued? |
43346 | he exclaimed at length,''am I awake or asleep, in my senses or gone mad?'' |
43346 | my dear uncle, how could the spirit of a living man appear?'' |
43346 | or''Where were_ you_ buried?'' |
43346 | repeated Sherbroke,''what can you mean? |
43346 | said Miss Wright,''did he come after I went to bed?'' |
43346 | said Sir Martin,''that you are so anxious for the arrival of the post?'' |
16726 | A church? |
16726 | A type of life? |
16726 | And again, in this life, we have all three been together? |
16726 | And the dark man--? |
16726 | And the friend he--_I_ refused to betray? |
16726 | And the method? |
16726 | And the purpose? |
16726 | And the victim? |
16726 | And then? |
16726 | And what''s this rubbish the brutes have left? |
16726 | And you spoke to the man? |
16726 | And your luggage-- where is that? 16726 And-- to obtain this form or outline?" |
16726 | Bodies,he whispered softly,"actual bodies?" |
16726 | But this sentence? |
16726 | But where''s all the stuff you went away with? 16726 But why did you hide away so long? |
16726 | Can you explain such gibberish? |
16726 | Eh? 16726 Evocation?" |
16726 | For your experiment? |
16726 | He is so clever, is n''t he? |
16726 | I may see them? |
16726 | I went off easily? |
16726 | I? 16726 Is he an actor, a priest of some strange religion, an enquiry agent, or just-- a crank?" |
16726 | It has to do with-- with--? |
16726 | It might take actual shape-- assume a bodily form visible to the eye? |
16726 | It was there-- in the other region? |
16726 | Nothing but this hand- bag? |
16726 | Once roused and made aware? |
16726 | Only this? |
16726 | She saw nothing? |
16726 | She spoke? |
16726 | Some Body of belief, you surely mean? |
16726 | Then you are_ dead_? |
16726 | They exist as Powers-- unmanifested on the earth to- day? |
16726 | To be aware, you mean, is not sufficient? |
16726 | To help me_ now_? |
16726 | To what useful end? |
16726 | Was it, sir? 16726 We are going-- the day after to- morrow-- to spend the night in the Desert; she wondered if, perhaps, you would care to join us?" |
16726 | We are on the earth,was the reply, spoken unnecessarily low since no living thing was within earshot,"we are in physical conditions, are we not? |
16726 | We saw you there-- in the Wadi Hof,put in Vance, suddenly breaking his long silence;"you too sleep out, then? |
16726 | What in the world is up with me? |
16726 | What is it that you know? |
16726 | What were you doing by the fire before you came here? |
16726 | What''s that you''re doing? |
16726 | What''s the matter? |
16726 | Who are you? 16726 Why do I spend my time sight- seeing, instead of going alone into the Desert as before? |
16726 | Why should I need more? |
16726 | Why? 16726 You go at night sometimes into the Desert?" |
16726 | You have no other luggage? |
16726 | You have-- brought them? |
16726 | You made out their shape at all, or outline? |
16726 | You saw them? |
16726 | You think it possible, then, to get into touch with these High Powers you speak of, Powers once manifested in common forms? |
16726 | You will let me know-- their message? |
16726 | A-- compass, did you say?" |
16726 | Again, beneath his breath, Henriot heard himself murmur-- his own voice startled him as he whispered it:"Actual bodily shape and outline?" |
16726 | And at midnight? |
16726 | And what had he to do with them? |
16726 | And who were they-- these two beings, standing on the white floor of sand below him? |
16726 | And why does another man now stand in my place? |
16726 | And, again, hidden swiftly behind it like a movement running below water--"What does he want with it? |
16726 | And-- have you brought nothing home-- no treasures?" |
16726 | Beginning with commonplaces, such as"You like Egypt? |
16726 | But by whom? |
16726 | But how can I help? |
16726 | But how? |
16726 | But shall I, as an outsider, observing with unexcited mind, see anything, know anything, be aware of anything at all, let alone the drawing of it?" |
16726 | But was he really properly awake? |
16726 | But was not something larger, vaster these particles composed now also on the way? |
16726 | But you paint, do n''t you? |
16726 | But, again, why should he? |
16726 | Come in, wo n''t you? |
16726 | Had he so soon forgotten that strange union of form and sound which once was known to the evocative rituals of olden days? |
16726 | How could he express the violent contradiction? |
16726 | How could his mind interpret an experience so long denied that the power of expression, as of comprehension, has ceased to exist? |
16726 | How should the sea take note of rubbish that lies above its tide- line?" |
16726 | How translate this symbolical representation, small detail though it was, of a transcendent worship entombed for most so utterly beyond recovery? |
16726 | I beg your pardon? |
16726 | I surely know you... but I have forgotten...?" |
16726 | I wondered"--he smiled again slightly at the nature of the request--"if-- by any chance-- you had a pocket compass you could lend me?" |
16726 | In his eagerness to hasten disclosure he interrupted--"And there may be types of life that have no corresponding bodily expression at all, then?" |
16726 | Is n''t that the case?" |
16726 | It happened to my niece, did n''t it, John?" |
16726 | It was very near him too--"I beg your pardon, but have you, by any chance, such a thing as a compass you could lend me?" |
16726 | It went on for hours, while she lay terrified in bed--""Frightened, you say?" |
16726 | Jones?" |
16726 | Long watching and preparation on both sides had cleared the way for the ripening of acquaintance into confidence-- how long he dimly wondered? |
16726 | Looking back, he has often asked himself,"How in the world can I accept it?" |
16726 | On the skating- rink each Sunday the tourists regarded the natives as intruders; in the church the peasants plainly questioned:"Why do you come? |
16726 | Our conventional notion of a body-- what is it? |
16726 | Some kind of soul, alien to humanity, or to-- to any forms of living thing in the world to- day?" |
16726 | Tell me what you propose-- your plan?" |
16726 | The voice, the eyes, the near presence-- what did they bring that set his nerves thus asking unusual questions? |
16726 | This idea of mischief, almost of danger, in their purposes was oddly insistent; for what could possibly convey it? |
16726 | This strange impression that something grave was happening, something unearthly-- how was it born exactly? |
16726 | Was it his talent for drawing that they sought to use him for? |
16726 | Was that a sound at the back of the room? |
16726 | Was there not an observatory on the Mokattam Hills, too, where tourists could use the telescopes on privileged days? |
16726 | What d''ye say, eh?" |
16726 | What happened then? |
16726 | What has made me change?" |
16726 | What is the deeper motive he conceals? |
16726 | What is your name? |
16726 | What must I do?" |
16726 | What was it, then, that suddenly strengthened this solitary link so that the chain tautened and he felt the pull of it? |
16726 | What was the contrast that made the man seem beside her-- vile? |
16726 | What, then, could be the contents of the little brown parcel the professor had bequeathed to him with his pregnant dying sentences? |
16726 | Whence came this prodigious glad excitement in his heart, this sense of mighty Powers coaxed down to influence the very details of daily life? |
16726 | Whence came, too, the impression that she exercised some strong authority, though never directly exercised, that held him at her mercy? |
16726 | Where had he seen those eyes before? |
16726 | Where is the Body of Worshippers through whom it can manifest? |
16726 | Where should he go? |
16726 | Where, oh where in the echoing Past had he known this woman''s soul? |
16726 | Where? |
16726 | Who told you to--?" |
16726 | Who were they? |
16726 | Why did I see this? |
16726 | Why had Vance put that idea into his mind, this idea of so peculiar danger? |
16726 | Why in the world did he hesitate and shrink? |
16726 | Why not? |
16726 | Why should not a man want a compass? |
16726 | Why was it that the presence of this silent, watching personality in the chair beside him kept caution still alive, with warning close behind? |
16726 | You draw, I mean?" |
16726 | You find here what you expected?" |
16726 | You must have tons of it, I suppose?" |
16726 | You must not be too close--""Why not too close?" |
16726 | he began;"to fix it, rather?" |
16726 | he whispered, looking about him, as though to see who it was had joined them;"you mean a-- soul? |
37231 | ( 1) He then proceeds to meet possible objections:But does not( it may be asked) the very statement of the proposition imply a contradiction? |
37231 | ( 1) In thathigher and purer nature"can a grain of wheat issue in a loaf of bread? |
37231 | ( 2) Now, interpreted even by the rules laid down( xxiii) by Dr. Lightfoot himself, what does this silence really mean? 37231 ( 2) What was the writers authority for this statement? |
37231 | ( 3) Dr. Mansel asks:Is matter or mind the truer image of God? |
37231 | ( 3) Paley states the case with equal clearness:In what way can a revelation be made but by miracles? |
37231 | ( 4) Why, then, does he call it an assumption? 37231 For if he had not come in the flesh, how could men have been saved by beholding him? |
37231 | If I by Beelzebub cast out the demons[--Greek--] by whom do your sons cast them out? 37231 If ye love them which love you, what_ new_ thing do ye? |
37231 | ( 1)"Why, then, say they, do these miracles which you declare to have taken place formerly, not occur now- a- days?" |
37231 | ( 2) What reply, for instance, can reason give to any appeal to it regarding the doctrine of the Trinity or of the Incarnation? |
37231 | ( 3)"Again, he refers to the Cross of Christ in another prophet saying:''And when shall these things come to pass? |
37231 | 13,"For I came not to call the righteous but sinners"? |
37231 | 41. ff, before them, and does not such a supposition likewise infer the actual authority of Matthew''s Gospel? |
37231 | And what is the value of any evidence emanating from the Ignatian Epistles and martyrologies? |
37231 | And what more shall I say? |
37231 | Are we to believe ignorance and superstition or science and unvarying experience? |
37231 | As Justin introduces them deliberately as quotations, why should they be excluded simply because they are combined with a historical statement? |
37231 | At this starting- point of nature what would a man know of its future course? |
37231 | Because it has not happened before? |
37231 | Because we can not explain its cause? |
37231 | But I must ask upon what ground he limits my remark to those who absolutely admit the genuineness? |
37231 | But how do we know that that communication of what is undiscoverable by human reason is true? |
37231 | But what is there to show the existence of a permanent cause? |
37231 | But what purpose was served by thus importing into his notes a mass of borrowed and unsorted references? |
37231 | Can the doctrine of His justification of us and intercession for us, be disjoined from another?... |
37231 | Can the doctrine of our Lord''s Incarnation be disjoined from one physical miracle? |
37231 | Could it with any reason be affirmed that he was acquainted with Matthew and not with Mark? |
37231 | Did Eusebius intend to point out mere quotations of the books which he considered undisputed"? |
37231 | Did they ever really take place? |
37231 | Does the agreement of the quotation with a passage which is equally found in the three Gospels prove the existence of all of them? |
37231 | Does the word Xoyta, however, mean strictly Oracles or discourses alone, or does it include within its fair signification also historical narrative? |
37231 | Dr. Mozley then asks:"What would be the inevitable conclusion of sober reason respecting that person? |
37231 | Had the quotation agreed with our Gospels, would it not have been claimed as a professedly accurate quotation from them? |
37231 | He inquires:"Is the suspension of physical and material laws by a Spiritual Being inconceivable? |
37231 | How can I place any reliance upon it in the other? |
37231 | How can we have a right to declare the induction complete, while facts, supported by credible evidence, present themselves in opposition to it? |
37231 | How, then, according to divines, does it attain any potentiality? |
37231 | If there be a moral at all to the parable, it is the justification of the master:"Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own?" |
37231 | If this point be, for the sake of argument, set aside, what is the position? |
37231 | In how many more may not the same passage have been found? |
37231 | Is it legitimate to accept its evidence when we please, and reject it when we please?" |
37231 | Is it not, then, a_ petitio principii_ to say, that the fact ought to be disbelieved because the induction to it is complete? |
37231 | Is the order of nature, which it is asserted is under the personal control of God, at the same time at the mercy of the Devil? |
37231 | Jesus replies,"In what way have I sinned that I should go and be baptized by him? |
37231 | Justin likewise mentions the cry of Jesus on the Cross,"O God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" |
37231 | Mark has the expression:"Is not this the carpenter, the son of Mary? |
37231 | Moreover, the expression:"What new thing do ye?" |
37231 | Notwithstanding all this persistent and unanimous confirmation, we ask again: What has now become of the belief in demoniacal possession and sorcery? |
37231 | Now what has been the result of this minute and prejudiced attack upon my notes? |
37231 | Now, unless there be an actual order of nature, how can there be any exception to it? |
37231 | Now, what has become of this theory of disease? |
37231 | The first of these is the reply which James is said to have given to the Scribes and Pharisees:"Why do ye ask me concerning Jesus the Son of Man? |
37231 | We would ask, however, what verification of the death have we in the case of the widow''s son which we have not here? |
37231 | What, then, is the position of the so- called Ignatian Epistles? |
37231 | Whence this terrible blow but from the wrath of the Gods, who must be appeased by unusual sacrifices? |
37231 | Who knows of the miraculous cure of cancer, he continues, in a lady of rank in the same city? |
37231 | Who knows of the next case he mentions in his list? |
37231 | Who would believe, or would be justified in believing, the great facts which constitute its substance on the_ ipse dixit_ of an unaccredited teacher? |
37231 | Why send the prisoner to Rome? |
37231 | Why should Ignatius have been so exceptionally treated? |
37231 | Why should the whole phrase not be equally an interpolation? |
37231 | and Mk.)? |
37231 | and how, except by miracles, could the first teacher be accredited? |
37231 | and if not, how is the Gospel from which it was actually taken to be distinguished? |
37231 | and in thy name cast out devils? |
37231 | and in thy name done many wonderful works?" |
37231 | for even,"& c. Here, in the same verse, we have:"If ye lend to them from whom ye hope to receive, what_ new_ thing do ye? |
37231 | or do the fanatical believers who cast themselves under the wheels of the car of Jagganath establish the soundness of their creed? |
37231 | or with Mark and not with Matthew and Luke? |
37231 | or with the third Gospel and{ 281} not with either of the other two? |
45964 | A night and a day,he laughed, while his lips cracked smartingly with the stretching of the skin,"what is it? |
45964 | Am I influenced by her money, then? |
45964 | And he brings no kind of introduction to me-- no letter or anything? |
45964 | And his words? |
45964 | And that might be a mistake, you mean? |
45964 | And where is the gentleman now? |
45964 | And who brought him here? |
45964 | Are n''t you hiding something from me? |
45964 | Are they just sorts of dozes, you think? |
45964 | But are we_ quite_ safe? 45964 But how, in the name of space, is that to be done?" |
45964 | But that does n''t matter a bit, does it? 45964 But was that all, Jim?" |
45964 | But why in the hall, Barker? 45964 But would he marry her?" |
45964 | Did he frighten you? |
45964 | Did you hear that? |
45964 | Do you not hear it, too? |
45964 | Drowning? |
45964 | Eh? |
45964 | Hear what? |
45964 | How is this concentration to be effected? |
45964 | How''s that? |
45964 | How? |
45964 | I beg your pardon, but you_ are_--Uncle Jim, are n''t you? |
45964 | I only meant,he answered slowly,"whether you really_ saw_--anything?" |
45964 | I say, Uncle Jim,he began presently,"it_ was_ you-- just now-- in the wood-- wasn''t it?" |
45964 | In loneliness? |
45964 | Is n''t it a game? |
45964 | Lady Hermione will be asking for an explanation-- eh? |
45964 | Look here, Arthur,I said in a lower voice,"what is it, and what do you mean? |
45964 | Or a great deal longer,she added slowly--"for ever?" |
45964 | Or have you seen the ghost that was paid for with the house? |
45964 | So the gentleman made you feel queer, did he? |
45964 | The heights have no attraction for you? |
45964 | Then the light you saw, and came to----? |
45964 | Then the other thing-- the little ones? |
45964 | Then the quicker you get to sleep the better, is n''t it, Master Tim? |
45964 | Then what on earth was it? |
45964 | Then you actually penetrated far enough into that state to experience yourself as a normal portion of it? |
45964 | There it is-- don''t you hear? 45964 They are?" |
45964 | Was it worth while? |
45964 | Well, what is it this time? |
45964 | Well,he asked,"what would you like to do, Uncle Jim? |
45964 | Well,_ what_ do you think? |
45964 | What can it be? |
45964 | What does it matter, even if we''re not? |
45964 | What does that mean-- drowning in no ordinary way? |
45964 | What is it I really feel? 45964 What kind of things?" |
45964 | What the devil''s the matter with you to- night? |
45964 | Where? 45964 Who is this being that he should use such language?" |
45964 | Why''extraordinary''? |
45964 | Why''extraordinary,''Barker? |
45964 | Will you take me-- some day soon? |
45964 | Yes, dear, I know-- I mean, I know you do, but----"But what? |
45964 | Yes? |
45964 | Yes? |
45964 | You feel tired? |
45964 | You heard----? |
45964 | You know this neighbourhood, perhaps? 45964 You know where I mean, do n''t you?" |
45964 | You mean that Binovitch did for a moment-- hang-- in the air? |
45964 | You mean there''s danger? |
45964 | You''ll have more of him than you can do with-- eh? 45964 You''ll stay here some time, Uncle Jim, wo n''t you?" |
45964 | Your first trip? |
45964 | _ What_ do you hear? |
45964 | A party? |
45964 | And for himself, what in the world was the good of all the labour and drudgery he went through in that preparatory school where he was junior master? |
45964 | And the change in himself?--that sentence on the Californian fruit- farm-- what did they mean? |
45964 | And why?" |
45964 | Are you sure?" |
45964 | Better, at any rate, than I can know it?" |
45964 | But a decoy for what? |
45964 | But again-- who said the words? |
45964 | But who, in the name of Wall Street, said it? |
45964 | But why? |
45964 | Ca n''t you believe me?" |
45964 | Ca n''t you see it? |
45964 | Can you understand that? |
45964 | D''you really believe it was heaped- up sand and ropes and clumsy leverage and all our weary and laborious mechanical contrivances? |
45964 | D''you think they swing on wires? |
45964 | Did you see,"he asked suddenly;"did you see-- anything?" |
45964 | For--"Who can by searching find out God?" |
45964 | Had he not felt he ought to let her fade-- release her that way? |
45964 | Had he not, after all, deceived himself? |
45964 | Had she ever really"faded"at all? |
45964 | Have I really got''em again----?" |
45964 | He heard him swear out aloud:"What''s the d----d thing doing here? |
45964 | He spoke more formally, although laughter, due to his happiness, lay behind:"They have n''t asked you to the party, then? |
45964 | How are you, boy?" |
45964 | How did you guess I was coming back to- night?" |
45964 | I asked,"because you saw me there?" |
45964 | I felt-- well, what did I feel? |
45964 | In the name of the Stock Exchange and Wall Street, what was the cash surrender of amazing feelings? |
45964 | May I call for you?" |
45964 | Now, do you think you can help me with_ that_?" |
45964 | Once every five hundred years, you see----""What did?" |
45964 | Only the anchor had previously been loosened a little by his own unconscious and restless efforts.... Where was she taking him to? |
45964 | Or was it merely the image and the memory he loved"again"? |
45964 | Or you do n''t care about it? |
45964 | Otherwise"--he looked extraordinarily impressive--"there is bound to be sooner or later----""Madness?" |
45964 | Palmer had said an amazing truth, only-- people would hardly understand and believe him.... Would they? |
45964 | Some scrap of talk he had overheard from us,"she added,"when we discussed the traffic once....""But you heard nothing?" |
45964 | That sentence:"Why does n''t she marry-- some one else?" |
45964 | The pony had long ago found its stable, or-- had it run madly in another direction altogether? |
45964 | They chattered gaily:"You_ are_ going, are n''t you? |
45964 | This was, it seemed, the_ feeling_ in him:"What could such details matter to her_ now_? |
45964 | Upon what island would they land? |
45964 | Was"what"worth while? |
45964 | Well-- how''s everything at home-- eh? |
45964 | Were there flowers to be had in the village anywhere? |
45964 | What are you doing in my study? |
45964 | What could it lead to? |
45964 | What d''you mean by-- did I see anything?" |
45964 | What do I mean? |
45964 | What had come over me? |
45964 | What in the name of heaven did he mean? |
45964 | What is it?" |
45964 | What kind of flowers? |
45964 | What raised the enormous stones of ancient Egypt? |
45964 | What was it? |
45964 | What was it? |
45964 | What was the use of them all? |
45964 | What''s happened to his face?" |
45964 | What''s that?" |
45964 | What''s the use? |
45964 | What, then, can he do? |
45964 | Where? |
45964 | Wherein lay the value of so much uncertain toil, when the ultimate secrets of life were hidden and no one knew the final goal? |
45964 | Which had been true, the fading or the love? |
45964 | Which is it?" |
45964 | Who can he be?" |
45964 | Who is he? |
45964 | Why did no one come? |
45964 | Why had he not always known really that the stick was not a stick, but a thin and hollow reed...? |
45964 | Why not do the same? |
45964 | Why not in the waiting- room?" |
45964 | Why should I ask my deity to persuade your scoffing little minds by any miracle? |
45964 | Why should I show you? |
45964 | Why were you so long?" |
45964 | Why, indeed, should he give to them a single thought? |
45964 | You follow me? |
45964 | You noticed what occurred last night?" |
45964 | _ Then why wait for it to come?_ He sprang out of bed, thoroughly frightened. |
45964 | _ You_ were n''t there, were you?" |
45964 | and then-- but how in the world describe what is indescribable? |
10624 | ''_ à � cause du sommeil et à cause des chats''?_repeated Dr. |
10624 | A face you would recognise again? |
10624 | A fire- elemental,he cried,"a fire- elemental of the most powerful and malignant kind--""A what?" |
10624 | A good woman? |
10624 | A very singular incident indeed,he made answer slowly,"and one I can only explain on the basis of a highly improbable coincidence--""Namely?" |
10624 | And Miss Wragge--? |
10624 | And fires? |
10624 | And has M''sieur not even yet come to a decision? |
10624 | And how do you propose to make it visible? 10624 And how is it that you know so much about him?" |
10624 | And how long altogether,asked John Silence quietly,"do you think you stayed in the town of the adventure?" |
10624 | And how long did you take getting downstairs? |
10624 | And how would you describe it, perhaps? |
10624 | And it provoked laughter again, did it? |
10624 | And my duties? |
10624 | And now can you tell me,he said presently,"what your own feeling about it is-- your general impression?" |
10624 | And personal experiences of your own, Colonel Wragge? |
10624 | And that mark on his skin, for instance? |
10624 | And the effect? |
10624 | And the lightning? |
10624 | And the nature of this-- er-- invasion? |
10624 | And the place to dig in,I asked, unable to restrain my curiosity,"will you find it by some process of divination or--?" |
10624 | And the presence of this-- this--? |
10624 | And the result of your investigations-- these stories, I mean? |
10624 | And the stories? 10624 And this evidence you spoke of?" |
10624 | And this happened to you last year, since when you have never been back to the place? |
10624 | And this material? |
10624 | And this sentence that he hurled at you after the bag? |
10624 | And what do you make of the Frenchman in the train? |
10624 | And what form, if I may ask, did this interference take? |
10624 | And what was it he_ did_ that you thought strange? |
10624 | And when you saw him--? |
10624 | And why,he began, savage with the desire to find something visible he could fight--"why, in the name of all the blazes--?" |
10624 | And why? |
10624 | And you get no clue from these facts? |
10624 | And you have it still, this hair? |
10624 | And you think,asked Pender hastily,"that it is all primarily due to the_ Cannabis_? |
10624 | And you,he whispered tremblingly--"you child of visions and enchantment, how is it that you so bewitch me that I loved you even before I saw?" |
10624 | And your brother? |
10624 | And your experiment with the house? |
10624 | And, meanwhile, did the presence of this person leave you? |
10624 | Any impression who it could have been? |
10624 | Are you aware yet of anything-- odd here? |
10624 | As utterly alien to your own mind and personality? |
10624 | But what is its object? |
10624 | But''it''--what is''it''? |
10624 | Can you explain to me what you felt was the source of her power? |
10624 | Can you show me this writing? |
10624 | Colonel Wragge-- or the sister? |
10624 | Did it control me-- take possession of me? 10624 Egypt?" |
10624 | Eh? 10624 Fear gone, too?" |
10624 | Has he tried any one at all--? |
10624 | Haunted house? |
10624 | He still writes, then? 10624 Humour restored?" |
10624 | I had never given a thought to such matters so far as I know--"Or to the question of reincarnation, perhaps? |
10624 | I know Mrs. Pender well-- I knew her before she married him--"And is she a cause, perhaps? |
10624 | I may first have to make one or two experiments--"On me? |
10624 | I pray to Heaven you will not undertake this experiment alone, will you? |
10624 | I think not; though how can I say? 10624 In the asylum?" |
10624 | Incendiarism? |
10624 | Incidents, you mean? |
10624 | Is this why they wait and watch? |
10624 | Like a cat, you said? |
10624 | May I ask what was the cause of death? |
10624 | Not directed by a living being, a conscious will, you mean? |
10624 | Nothing happened in the night, for instance? 10624 Obliterated,"she went on, after a moment to weigh the word,"merely obliterated by something else--""By some one else?" |
10624 | On pourrait faire un p''tit tour ensemble, n''est- ce pas? 10624 Physical fear?" |
10624 | Putting what? |
10624 | Smoke, you mysterious beastie, what in the world are you about? |
10624 | So that, in reality, you had only stayed a night or two in the inn? |
10624 | So there may be excitement, after all? |
10624 | Terror, was it? |
10624 | That''s it exactly,said Vezin;"which, I take it, means something like''because of sleep and because of the cats,''does n''t it?" |
10624 | Then that awful figure in the laundry? |
10624 | There was nothing to alarm? |
10624 | What in the world---? |
10624 | What, in the name of all that''s dreadful,_ is_ a fire- elemental? |
10624 | Which is likely? |
10624 | Why does it come from that plantation? 10624 Why should you?" |
10624 | With blank cartridges, I suppose? |
10624 | Yes? |
10624 | You are sure of your clue, then? |
10624 | You destroyed that, too? |
10624 | You had no reaction of any sort-- for instance, of alarm? |
10624 | You know what it is? |
10624 | You love me, then? |
10624 | You saw nothing-- no one-- all this time? |
10624 | You see-- what? |
10624 | You still have no strong impressions? |
10624 | You think not? 10624 You will take a companion with good nerves, and reliable in case of disaster, wo n''t you?" |
10624 | _ Now_ do you guess? |
10624 | And why is it that the people watch me from morning to night? |
10624 | And why should it attack us, or any one in particular?" |
10624 | And why, if he was not afraid, should the wisdom of staying indoors after sundown have suddenly occurred to him as eminently desirable? |
10624 | And you?" |
10624 | And, tell me,"he added more quickly with passion in his voice,"what you really are-- yourself?" |
10624 | Besides which, I feel sure from all I''ve heard, that you are really a soul- doctor, are you not, more than a healer merely of the body?" |
10624 | But how was it, then, that the moment his eye fell upon this ungainly woman, the pair of them appeared suddenly as other than they were? |
10624 | Did I talk nonsense?" |
10624 | Did_ They_ stand also in the hall? |
10624 | Does the decision rest with me after all, and not with them?" |
10624 | Have they the souls of night- things, and is the whole blessed town in the hands of the cats?" |
10624 | He writes humorous stories-- quite a genre of his own: Pender-- you must have heard the name-- Felix Pender? |
10624 | Horrible? |
10624 | How capture and confine it? |
10624 | I asked further--"the man who warned him against the place,_ à cause du sommeil et à cause des chats?_ Surely a very singular incident?" |
10624 | I asked further--"the man who warned him against the place,_ à cause du sommeil et à cause des chats?_ Surely a very singular incident?" |
10624 | I can see no possible objection, but--""But what?" |
10624 | Is n''t that it?" |
10624 | Is that understood between us?" |
10624 | It is''Doctor,''is it not?" |
10624 | It was like a douche of icy water, and in the middle of this storm of laughter--""Yes; what?" |
10624 | My husband''s case is so peculiar that-- well, you know, I am quite sure any_ ordinary_ doctor would say at once the asylum--""Is n''t he in, then?" |
10624 | No vivid dreamings?" |
10624 | Now, do you begin to see what I am driving at a little?" |
10624 | So the stars the man saw blazing--""But burying what?" |
10624 | Tell me what it all means? |
10624 | That during the day they make a sham though brave pretence, and after the sun is down their true life begins? |
10624 | The force has not gone?" |
10624 | There is nothing radically amiss with myself-- nothing incurable, or--?" |
10624 | Was the whole house crowded from floor to ceiling? |
10624 | Was, then, even the staircase occupied? |
10624 | What d''ye mean, Dr. John Silence?" |
10624 | Whence came that transforming dignity and sense of power that enveloped them both as by magic? |
10624 | Who will you bring, then?" |
10624 | Why otherwise should he have suddenly taken to walking stealthily, silently, making as little sound as possible, for ever looking behind him? |
10624 | Why, indeed? |
10624 | Would M''sieur like me to be his guide, perhaps? |
10624 | Would it rub against his leg, too? |
10624 | asked John Silence, smiling that peculiarly sympathetic smile that always melted the prejudices of his patient,"were you unable to follow it exactly?" |
10624 | he added,"that lightning out of a clear sky-- that flashing-- did you notice_ that_?" |
10624 | he asked himself with rather a shaking heart,"for the time when I shall join them-- or refuse to join them? |
10624 | he asked, still dazed,"there''ll be no more fires?" |
10624 | he called again,"Smokie, you black mystery, what is it excites you so?" |
56101 | ''Seems''? |
56101 | A farther- on consciousness? 56101 A new consciousness?" |
56101 | A new man is born? |
56101 | Ai n''t this a lovely place? |
56101 | And happy? |
56101 | And of reason? |
56101 | And that is still inward? |
56101 | And the gloom and storm of our day? |
56101 | And then, in Richmond, you heard about Sweet Rocket? |
56101 | And then? |
56101 | And when the last human being has crossed? |
56101 | And wherever I go I shall find the seeking and the greatness? |
56101 | Are you gwine take company? |
56101 | Do I speak to Mr. Linden? 56101 Do n''t you want to buy a basket? |
56101 | Do they write? |
56101 | Do you call that something God? |
56101 | Do you like farming better than forestry? |
56101 | Do you love him, Marget? |
56101 | Do you mean that you remember actually thinking, feeling, doing what men say your ancestors did? |
56101 | Do you mind listening? |
56101 | Do you not see that you can, that you will, recover it all? 56101 Do you see that piece just thar?" |
56101 | Do you think we can be reassured about the dead-- all the dead-- and ourselves when we die? |
56101 | Effort does not cease? |
56101 | From Sweet Rocket? |
56101 | Have you caught any? |
56101 | He is one, then, that may be loved? |
56101 | He never married? 56101 How about Randall?" |
56101 | How can he see? |
56101 | How could one help but love it? 56101 How did you come? |
56101 | How old a man is he? |
56101 | I hope you like Sweet Rocket? |
56101 | I shall see you again? |
56101 | If one grows, all things and all places grow with that one? |
56101 | Is it infectious? 56101 Is it you, Drew? |
56101 | Is that mysticism? |
56101 | Is that the house? |
56101 | Just So? |
56101 | Love him? 56101 May I look?" |
56101 | Miss Ellice? |
56101 | Mr. Morrowcombe, when we join God, do n''t you think we shall say''I''? |
56101 | No check rein? |
56101 | O God,_ how_ can you be still and ageless? |
56101 | Of course you have help about the house? |
56101 | Of course you will? |
56101 | Oh, was n''t it lovely? |
56101 | Or hell? |
56101 | She has had hers? |
56101 | Tam? 56101 The new consciousness that we feel is a pale film to what will be?" |
56101 | This morning? 56101 Truly, truly, Marget?" |
56101 | We shall move then in four- space? |
56101 | Well? |
56101 | What are you reading?--_Pilgrim''s Progress?_"Yes''m,said Zinia, in her rich voice. |
56101 | What do you think is going to happen now, Linden? |
56101 | What do you think sugar is? 56101 What have you been doing, Marget?" |
56101 | What is that house? |
56101 | What is your healing herb? |
56101 | What is your name? |
56101 | What kind of a general world are we coming into, Linden? 56101 What of those who neither dream, nor divine, nor wish, who come on so slow?" |
56101 | When God enters life there will still be said I? |
56101 | Where do you meet the dead? 56101 Where does Just So come in?" |
56101 | Where does Mancy live? |
56101 | Where is heaven? |
56101 | Who built the Ark? 56101 Who is Julia?" |
56101 | Why do you put it that way? |
56101 | Why not ride with him? |
56101 | Why? |
56101 | Will any never cross? |
56101 | Will you walk with me? 56101 You and Richard Linden both have that assurance?" |
56101 | You call it that-- hurting oneself? |
56101 | You cut it in prison? |
56101 | You do n''t know where she went? |
56101 | You feel it, do n''t you? |
56101 | You know people all over the earth? |
56101 | You mean that as the Great Consciousness expands it becomes aware of itself there, too? 56101 You mean that you perceive the dead, Richard?" |
56101 | You remember my tellin''you about that feeling I had? 56101 You were with Baker and Owen?" |
56101 | You would say it is a great age? |
56101 | ''Do n''t you hear that one?'' |
56101 | ''Whar was she going to live?'' |
56101 | A sugar maple, is n''t it? |
56101 | After all, what are you but your parents, your grandparents, your great- grandparents, and so on? |
56101 | An''what you got to give fer a pair of shoes? |
56101 | And alike, what are they but you? |
56101 | And that one?" |
56101 | And then--""This was actuality, while your hands swept and dusted the parlor there?" |
56101 | Anna thought,"Is it only the sun shining on her?" |
56101 | At last Curtin said, abruptly,"Had you ever thought of humanity moving on into superhumanity?" |
56101 | But what are words? |
56101 | Can you hear the water?" |
56101 | Can you tell me how far I am from Sweet Rocket farm?" |
56101 | Can you walk?'' |
56101 | Could he even have helped-- put a shoulder to the wheel, seeing that I was grieved and uncertain?" |
56101 | Could you not sleep?" |
56101 | Curtin asked Robert Dane,"Forth from here you go on with the work you are doing?" |
56101 | Did you ride from Rock Mountain this morning?" |
56101 | Do not you?" |
56101 | Do you ever feel the Indians by these streams? |
56101 | Do you mean that when I think of them suddenly and strongly, feel them as it were, that_ they_ are doing part of it, that there_ is_ intercourse? |
56101 | Do you remember it, too? |
56101 | Do you remember music?" |
56101 | Do you remember the Story of Rhodope? |
56101 | Do you see yon clearing on mountain? |
56101 | For instance, Athens and some dim, northern forest-- and a lot of islands with palms? |
56101 | Had he touched all those in one life or had it been in many lives? |
56101 | Had you not better do so?" |
56101 | Have you the time?" |
56101 | He got about thirty men and boys together at John Williams, and a lot of them had had whisky-- I do n''t know that this air interestin''? |
56101 | He said,''I thought it would catch you, and I tried to thrust you out of its way--''"I said:''Are you badly hurt? |
56101 | Her face of a subtle, moving beauty, more of look than of feature, did not turn upon them with a"Do you remember?" |
56101 | How long have we done this?" |
56101 | How much time had passed, or how little, or how widely could you live in no time at all? |
56101 | How should it not be so?" |
56101 | How would it be if all were truly interested in all? |
56101 | I hope you slept well? |
56101 | I lock with it.... What was I saying? |
56101 | If there were general recognition? |
56101 | In this space?" |
56101 | Is it because in some sort Drew remembers, or is it because I have been-- and surely I_ have_ been-- in all the forests of the world? |
56101 | Is it the Principle of Sensibility-- the Buddhic plane?" |
56101 | Is n''t it strange and sweet the way things come about? |
56101 | Is n''t it strange-- living? |
56101 | Linden asked,"Like whom, then?" |
56101 | Linden said,"Had n''t you rather not read, to- night?" |
56101 | Linden?" |
56101 | Linden?" |
56101 | Major Hereward spoke abruptly:"Where are the dead? |
56101 | Mimy was singing:"Swing low, sweet chariot, Coming for to carry me home--""You gwine back inter the troubled world?" |
56101 | Miss Land, do you think that is true?" |
56101 | Mr. Smith said:"Have you ever seen a stiller day? |
56101 | Nothing wrong?" |
56101 | Once Robert said, abruptly,"And all the effort of the world is to stand and grow in grace?" |
56101 | Or I can tell outward things-- how we live?" |
56101 | Over the mountain?" |
56101 | Said Anna Darcy, presently:"Do you know Morris''s_ Earthly Paradise_? |
56101 | Said Curtin,"When we come and come, what do you do at last?" |
56101 | Said he was an example, sure enough, and a shower of the way, and who could help loving and wondering? |
56101 | She thought:"What is happening? |
56101 | That that realm becomes open?" |
56101 | Then a Ford came along and said,''Hey, Brother Robinson, are you going as far as Llewellyn?'' |
56101 | There''s a principle of induction, do n''t you think, sir? |
56101 | They say it''s getting late, and they say, could we take them in for the night?" |
56101 | They were going to drive Miss Ellice off the mountain?" |
56101 | Was the whole texture coming alive, and in effect did it include the whole past, the whole dead and gone? |
56101 | What do you call it?" |
56101 | What do you mean by your looking- glass?" |
56101 | What does it matter now if your name is or is not on the register of a church? |
56101 | What kind of a political, social, economic world? |
56101 | What were true books? |
56101 | When God enters how shall he not say I? |
56101 | When it was sold there was hardly anything to divide among us--""The Lindens did n''t buy it back, then?" |
56101 | Where are my brother Dick, my son Walter, my mother and father?" |
56101 | Where were they all? |
56101 | Who is not in some way aware of it? |
56101 | Will you come, too?" |
56101 | You know how folk used to prove a witch? |
56101 | You''re from the city, are n''t you?" |
56101 | Your quilts are for warmth and beauty, Julia, are n''t they? |
9964 | A drink to the gods of the Future, and till we meet again, on your return journey, eh? |
9964 | An inhabitant of the ether--? |
9964 | And as regards yourself? |
9964 | And in their place? |
9964 | And it is--? |
9964 | And of which there may be here and there some fearful exquisite survival? |
9964 | And the alarm you said you felt? |
9964 | And the boy? |
9964 | And the effect upon yourself-- at its worst? |
9964 | And this man, you think,he asked with outward calmness,"is of-- of my kind?" |
9964 | And why, pray? |
9964 | And you mean his mere presence conveyed all this without speech almost? |
9964 | And your Russian friend-- your leader? |
9964 | And yourself--? |
9964 | Another glass? |
9964 | Another-- horse? |
9964 | Anybody interesting on board? |
9964 | As an animal, you mean? 9964 As you felt at Marseilles, a clue-- a vital clue?" |
9964 | Been further east, I suppose? |
9964 | But Stahl, perhaps-- if I could get him here? |
9964 | But there_ is_ danger-- in your opinion? |
9964 | But what were they saying? |
9964 | But, why in particular_ me_? |
9964 | Ca n''t everybody know these cosmic reactions you speak of? |
9964 | Conversion? |
9964 | D''ye mind the light for a bit while I read in bed? |
9964 | D''ye see, now? 9964 Dancing?" |
9964 | Did you mean that others acknowledged this influence as well as yourself? |
9964 | Each soul may find faith to her mind, Seek you the peace of the groves Elysian, Or the ivy twine and the wands of vine, The Dionysian, Orphic rite? 9964 Following those lights that do mislead the morn?" |
9964 | From--? |
9964 | Get a few of that sort to draw the millionaires in, eh? |
9964 | He said nothing-- that referred to it directly? |
9964 | How should they listen, much less understand? 9964 If a man of your imagination sees nothing, what shall a poor exact mind like myself see?" |
9964 | In which case--? |
9964 | Is that true? |
9964 | Is there no one you would like to see? |
9964 | It is merely a question of the swing of the pendulum? |
9964 | Natives, travelers like ourselves, or-- something else? |
9964 | One asked,''What does it say?'' 9964 So my friend-- this big''Russian''--?" |
9964 | So speech unnecessary? |
9964 | So that you engineered our sharing a cabin with a view to putting him again-- putting us both-- under the microscope? |
9964 | Still? |
9964 | Temporarily? |
9964 | That time,he heard Stahl saying in an oddly distant voice from across the cabin,"you were nearly-- out--""You heard? |
9964 | The abnormal states you mean are a symptom of disorder then? |
9964 | The awful, primitive beauty--? |
9964 | The greatest Teacher we ever had,I once heard him say,"ignored the intellect, and who, will ye tell me, can by searching find out God? |
9964 | The simple life,I said in a low tone;"the Call of the Wild, raised to its highest power?" |
9964 | There_ is_ danger--"That his influence may make me as himself-- an_ Urmensch_? |
9964 | This stranger, then, may really lead me forward and not back? |
9964 | This superiority, though? |
9964 | To a dream? |
9964 | To which the scholars and professors of today,I suggested,"would think reply not even called for?" |
9964 | To you, doctor, too? |
9964 | We are literally a part of her, then-- projections of her immense life, as it were-- one of the projections, at least? |
9964 | We shall see from here, eh? 9964 Well, but Fechner-- and his great idea?" |
9964 | Well-- and the bigness? |
9964 | Well--? |
9964 | Well? |
9964 | What are they, do you suppose: Finns, Russians, Norwegians, or what? |
9964 | What are_ you_ doing here? |
9964 | What do you mean? |
9964 | What else, then? |
9964 | What is it marks them off so from the rest? |
9964 | What is it that_ you_ hear? |
9964 | What is it you''re talking about so foolishly? |
9964 | What is it? 9964 Where are you_ really_ then?" |
9964 | Where, I ask ye, did the philosophies and sciences of the world assist the progress of any single soul a blessed inch? |
9964 | While others--? |
9964 | Who is it? 9964 Why do you fear?" |
9964 | Why not? |
9964 | With the discharge of your patient the trouble ceased at once, then? |
9964 | Yes, and''quite simply''it was--? |
9964 | Yet mentally,I asked,"there''s nothing actually wrong?" |
9964 | You also see them-- big, then? |
9964 | You dreamed that he was coming, then? |
9964 | You feel it? |
9964 | You formed any idea what kind of-- of survival? |
9964 | You go-- so? |
9964 | You have studied him closely then-- had him, too, under the microscope? 9964 You have your passport with you?" |
9964 | You know all that; have n''t I told you often enough? 9964 You mean that I might go insane?" |
9964 | You mean you''d rather not--? |
9964 | You mean, of course, that this Double in me would escape and build its own heaven? |
9964 | You moved actually, though, over country--? |
9964 | You push on tomorrow, I suppose? 9964 You really felt the Earth about and in you,"I had asked,"much as one feels the presence of a friend and living person?" |
9964 | You really mean that you detect nothing? |
9964 | You really mean that? |
9964 | You refer, of course, though I hardly follow you quite-- to our big friends? |
9964 | You think harm might come to me? |
9964 | You think he remembers you? |
9964 | You think he''s dying? |
9964 | You think so? 9964 You wished to warn me?" |
9964 | You''re coming back on our steamer? |
9964 | You''ve done your letters for the papers,he questioned him,"and now, perhaps, you''ll write a book as well?" |
9964 | Your sense of extended consciousness,asked his listener,"was this continuous, once it had begun?" |
9964 | ''What is it?'' |
9964 | A man does n''t argue about his love, does he?" |
9964 | All the world akin-- that seeking for an eternal home in every human heart explained...? |
9964 | And he would like it-- not object, I mean?" |
9964 | And might they be known and felt in the heart if not actually in some suggested form? |
9964 | And yet what else is worth finding out...? |
9964 | Are you afraid of a gust of wind?" |
9964 | But how did they breathe in so small a world at all? |
9964 | But if you are prepared, we''ll go--""What kind of shock?" |
9964 | Can there be really men who are thus children of the earth, fruit of pure passion-- Cosmic Beings as you hinted? |
9964 | Could it be that this idea-- the idea of"the gods"--was thus forever true and vital...? |
9964 | D''ye see now?" |
9964 | D''ye see what I mean? |
9964 | D''ye see, now?" |
9964 | Did not his own mind hold thoughts of various kinds that could not readily mingle? |
9964 | Do n''t you hear it now?" |
9964 | Do you hear...?" |
9964 | Do you, too, see them''big''?" |
9964 | Eh?" |
9964 | For had they not charged full into himself the instant he came on board, bringing an intimacy that was immediate and full- fledged? |
9964 | For it would draw the entire personality with it....""The soul?" |
9964 | Going Trebizond this time?" |
9964 | Had this"modern"man, after all, a flaming volcano of ancient and splendid belief in him, akin to what was in himself, yet ever fighting it? |
9964 | How could any thinking man hold up his head and walk along the street with dignity if that was what he believed? |
9964 | How could it be otherwise? |
9964 | How could it be, in any permissible sense of the word-- alive? |
9964 | How could they ever have devised such wild and childish efforts-- all in the wrong direction? |
9964 | How, then, could speech be possible, since both shared this common life? |
9964 | I asked, seizing on a practical point after listening to his dreaming,"what do you make of that? |
9964 | I ventured,"And where is it you go to?" |
9964 | I''ve tried to smother it a bit sometimes--""Have you?" |
9964 | II"The friendly and flowing savage, who is he? |
9964 | IX"Is it not just possible that there is a mode of being as much transcending Intelligence and Will as these transcend mechanical motion?" |
9964 | If that outer life were the real one how could any intelligent being think it worth while to live? |
9964 | In this short time?" |
9964 | Instinctively--?" |
9964 | Is he waiting for civilization, or is he past it, and mastering it?" |
9964 | Is it merely the influence of inertia?" |
9964 | Is n''t it only by becoming as a little child-- a child that feels and never reasons things-- that any one shall enter the kingdom...? |
9964 | Is not our planet in the Milky Way?" |
9964 | Is that it?" |
9964 | Is there anything wrong?" |
9964 | Is this one finer than the others?" |
9964 | It must have had some definite cause surely?" |
9964 | It''s made me an alien and-- and--""Something far stronger than the Call of the Wild, is n''t it?" |
9964 | Kars, Tiflis, Erzerum, or somewhere a little wilder in the mountains, eh?" |
9964 | Latent in her did they still exist as moods or Powers-- true, alive, everlasting, but unmanifest? |
9964 | Mrs. Heath stopped me in the hall to inquire whether I could say"anythink abart the rent per''aps?" |
9964 | Of a neck with no head to carry? |
9964 | Oil?" |
9964 | Or do they merely see a yellow sun that dips beneath a violet sea...?" |
9964 | Or to what World- Soul art thou entered in? |
9964 | Perhaps, later, you will feel able to speak of it-- to tell me in detail a little--?" |
9964 | See something at last?" |
9964 | She bruised you, and you knew--""''Bruised''?" |
9964 | Still knowable to simple men and to Children of Nature? |
9964 | Tell me_ exactly_ what he is?" |
9964 | That very afternoon Stahl had said--"Greece will betray them,"and he had asked:"Their true form and type?" |
9964 | The Earth is no such cripple; why should she who already possesses within herself the things we so painfully pursue, have limbs analogous to ours? |
9964 | They go alzo to Batoum?" |
9964 | Was a man satisfied with it worth keeping alive at all? |
9964 | Was he, then, literally, a child of the Earth, mothered by the whole magnificent planet...? |
9964 | Was it all imagination that a breath of flowers came with him? |
9964 | Was loveliness, as men know it, a revelation of the Earth- Soul behind? |
9964 | Was this a result of his study of the big man two years ago? |
9964 | Was this the giant truth that Stahl had built on Fechner? |
9964 | Was this the true explanation of his being no longer an assistant at the H-- hospital, but only a ship''s doctor? |
9964 | Was this, then, the type of cosmic life to which his companions, and himself with them, inwardly approximated...? |
9964 | Was thus the thrill of beauty then explained? |
9964 | Were these then projections of her personality-- aspects and facets of her divided self-- emanations now withdrawn? |
9964 | What bigger scheme could ever use him? |
9964 | What could it matter to him, who in a few hours would land at Batoum and go off with his guide and comrade to some place where--? |
9964 | What do you see about them that is unusual? |
9964 | What is Reality, in the last resort,"he asked,"but the thing a man''s vision brings to him-- to believe? |
9964 | What is it?" |
9964 | What is the use, I ask you? |
9964 | What is the use?" |
9964 | What need has she of arms, with nothing to reach for? |
9964 | What was it? |
9964 | When we drive out, from the cloud of steam, majestical white horses, Are we greater than the first men who led black ones by the mane?" |
9964 | Where will the giant intellects be before the Great White Throne when a simple man with the heart of a child will top the lot of''em?" |
9964 | Who cares for Carlyle''s reasons, or Schopenhauer''s, or Spencer''s? |
9964 | Who else among his acquaintances would have listened at all, much less admitted its possibility? |
9964 | Why came there with it both happiness and fear? |
9964 | Why do you bring me back to all these little pains? |
9964 | Why not? |
9964 | Why should I feel lonely? |
9964 | Will you...?" |
9964 | With which portion should he identify himself? |
9964 | XXXIII"Why, what is this patient entrance into Nature''s deep resources But the child''s most gradual learning to walk upright without bane? |
9964 | You did not find your friend, then?" |
9964 | You know the picture, perhaps?" |
9964 | You mean the''astral''?" |
9964 | You saw it all?" |
9964 | You saw me?" |
9964 | You would prefer it perhaps?" |
9964 | he asked again;"as''doctor and scientist,''you mean it?" |
9964 | in what world, then, spirit, vast thou born? |
9964 | of stories, notes, and episodes I found, almost carefully piled and tabulated with titles, in a dirty kitbag of green Willesden canvas? |
9964 | us?" |
41619 | A thousand? |
41619 | Am I seriously considering the possibility of a blue porcelain monkey having come to life? 41619 Am I?" |
41619 | And are you afraid? |
41619 | And now,said the Major, sighing loudly as he filled his tumbler with plain soda- water--"what have you to tell me?" |
41619 | And the others? |
41619 | And this Arab Sheikh is a_ welee_? |
41619 | And to what does all this point? |
41619 | And--Dillon hesitated--"were they in love with you?" |
41619 | Anything missing? |
41619 | Are they a Bedouin tribe? |
41619 | Are you lying to me? |
41619 | Are you speaking of our old friend, the pedlar? |
41619 | Are you sure she was strong enough for travel? |
41619 | But does it alarm you? |
41619 | But what did Wales see-- eh? 41619 But what_ is_ the secret of the Riddle?" |
41619 | But where is the connection? |
41619 | But would that rule apply to medià ¦ val English? |
41619 | But, Addison...."You know the compact, Major? 41619 But,"persisted Dillon, patiently,"what became of this particular young man, the one who was staying at the Vicarage?" |
41619 | But-- whatever were you doing there by the Black Gap? |
41619 | By the way,I said,"whilst I remember-- was Sir Jeffrey carrying a cane at the time of his death?" |
41619 | By what means? |
41619 | By what, Addison? 41619 Did I frighten you?" |
41619 | Did he see you? |
41619 | Did you hear it blowing? |
41619 | Did you notice if this parcel was there,East had inquired eagerly,"when you discovered him?" |
41619 | Do n''t you believe it at all, then? |
41619 | Do you hear it? |
41619 | Do you know of anything in the neighbourhood which might answer to the description of a''strypped tree''? |
41619 | Do you know to whom this amulet belongs? |
41619 | Do you know--she still hesitated to broach this subject with the man--"do you know where-- Major Fayne has gone?" |
41619 | Do you mean that they die in the night, Ramsa Lal? |
41619 | Do you think--again she hesitated--"that Major Fayne is afraid of something? |
41619 | For God''s sake, Addison,he said,"what does it mean? |
41619 | For Heaven''s sake, what has happened to him? 41619 For me?" |
41619 | From what? |
41619 | Has he fallen asleep? |
41619 | Has it ever occurred to you,asked Hulme,"that the writing might be of a very much later date-- late Stuart, for instance?" |
41619 | Have you come so far? |
41619 | Have you seen-- him, again? |
41619 | Hollow Grange? |
41619 | How do you know? |
41619 | How do you propose to begin? |
41619 | How long is she gone? |
41619 | I remember your mentioning,I continued, smiling at his excitement,"that it was a very hot month?" |
41619 | I suppose,said Colonel Reynor to my friend,"a number of your father''s drawings are there?" |
41619 | I suppose,said our host, the Colonel,"most of the material will be used for the forthcoming book?" |
41619 | I swear it is the truth: why should I lie to you, Sahib? |
41619 | In the first place-- have you definitely decided to leave Low Fennel, for good? |
41619 | Indeed,said Graham;"by whom?" |
41619 | Into your father''s studio? 41619 Is n''t it quiet enough for you?" |
41619 | Is the late Stuart period a sore point with the Colonel? |
41619 | Low Fennel has been empty for many years then? |
41619 | Major Fayne? |
41619 | My darling, are you hurt? |
41619 | My dear Lorian,said Hulme,"are you certain that Miss Reynor was awake?" |
41619 | My ramble concluded, I will rejoin Mrs. Dale and yourself-- say on the lawn? |
41619 | On what grounds? |
41619 | She denied this? |
41619 | Since the other day at the bridge? |
41619 | So you noticed that? |
41619 | Stole what, Harry? |
41619 | Suppose we explore the scene of the trouble? |
41619 | Tell me,she whispered--"what must we do?" |
41619 | Tell them what? |
41619 | Thank God it means that I have got her back, but how was it done? 41619 That is my room,"she said to me;"is n''t it delightfully situated? |
41619 | That is, close beside this house? |
41619 | The gentlemen who were advertised as''chiefs from the Arabian Desert''? 41619 The haunted Grange?" |
41619 | The monkey? 41619 The pedlar?" |
41619 | The sirens? |
41619 | Then is the place haunted by the spirit of some uneasy Ancient Briton or something of that sort, Addison? 41619 Then what the-- what the-- is the true one?" |
41619 | Then where do you believe it comes from? |
41619 | Then why should they undertake the duty? |
41619 | Then you intend to study it? |
41619 | These wild native legends appeal to you, do n''t they? |
41619 | Was it upon a pedestal? |
41619 | Wedge- shaped holes, you say? |
41619 | Well, Addison? |
41619 | Well,the Major continued,"you''ve heard how that blackguard Ellis let me down over those shares? |
41619 | Well? |
41619 | Well? |
41619 | Well? |
41619 | What about your things, sir? |
41619 | What do the figures mean? |
41619 | What do you mean? |
41619 | What do you mean? |
41619 | What does it all mean, Mohammed? |
41619 | What does it say? |
41619 | What for? 41619 What has occasioned your sudden interest in the thing?" |
41619 | What is a_ welee_, exactly? |
41619 | What is the meaning of this outrage? |
41619 | What now? |
41619 | What of this torn brown paper? |
41619 | What riddle? |
41619 | What shall we do? |
41619 | What the blazes have they to do with it? |
41619 | What the devil''s the matter? |
41619 | What then? |
41619 | What was the unhappy fate,he asked, masking his intolerance,"of the young man staying at the Vicarage?" |
41619 | What''s the disturbance? |
41619 | What''s the matter? |
41619 | What,he continued, finding some and striking one,"is Felix Hulme''s little game?" |
41619 | What_ are_ our suspicions? |
41619 | Whatever do you want with this photograph, anyway,I said,"when the original is available?" |
41619 | When did you see Baxter? |
41619 | Where is that? |
41619 | Where is the box? |
41619 | Where,inquired East deliberately,"is the Burmese porcelain ape of which we have heard? |
41619 | Where? 41619 Where?" |
41619 | Who is he, then? |
41619 | Who knows? |
41619 | Who told you? |
41619 | Who''s there? |
41619 | Why do n''t you? |
41619 | Why do you think so? |
41619 | Why? 41619 Why?" |
41619 | Why? |
41619 | You are certain? |
41619 | You are quite sure you are not hurt? |
41619 | You do n''t feel unwell, darling? |
41619 | You do n''t happen to be stopping at Hainingham Vicarage? |
41619 | You do n''t think they were the burglar''s objective? |
41619 | You heard it? |
41619 | You knew where to find him, then? |
41619 | You must be Jack Dillon? 41619 You remember the Arabs whom we saw at the exhibition in London?" |
41619 | You were alone? |
41619 | _ Alf?_ Somebody''s name! |
41619 | _ Allah el-''Azeen!_groaned one of the party--"what is that?" |
41619 | ... to what fate? |
41619 | Addison?" |
41619 | Again the Major became speechless, but finally:"What d''you mean, Addison?" |
41619 | Again-- why? |
41619 | All but immediately it was lost in the quick gliding shadow-- yet I could be sure that I had seen-- what? |
41619 | Allah preserve us, what shall we do? |
41619 | An heirloom, I suppose?" |
41619 | And Phrynà ©? |
41619 | And he?... |
41619 | Because I very much doubt if the place could ever be rendered tenable....""Then it''s really haunted?" |
41619 | Burglars?" |
41619 | But have you got a camera here?" |
41619 | But how to classify it? |
41619 | But in which direction should he pursue? |
41619 | But what else?" |
41619 | But what immediately preceded its appearance? |
41619 | But what machinery, save that of the Omniscient, could avail him now? |
41619 | But who was she?--and in what spirit should he receive her bewildering coquetries? |
41619 | But why should it affect the fortunes of Sir Julius?" |
41619 | Can anybody lend me one?" |
41619 | Could he have mistaken the path and be proceeding, not toward the house, but away from it and into the midnight of the woods mantling the hills? |
41619 | D''you think the chap who surveyed the ground for me knew of it?" |
41619 | Dale?" |
41619 | Damopolon?" |
41619 | Damopolon?" |
41619 | Did you hear his awful cries?" |
41619 | Do you hear me? |
41619 | Do you recall the shape of the bezel? |
41619 | Do you understand? |
41619 | Has our Ragstaff ghost started walking again, I wonder? |
41619 | Have you formed any theories since wiring me?" |
41619 | He stepped from beside the body on to the image, which he had placed at a convenient distance?" |
41619 | Here, or in Cairo?" |
41619 | His joy was genuine enough, Dillon determined; but from what source did it actually spring? |
41619 | His own words increased his irritability; for were they not in the nature of an apology on behalf of his silent and unseen host? |
41619 | How can I describe the loathing, the repulsion which I experienced? |
41619 | How could the old pedlar, however strong in his queer gratitude, save her now? |
41619 | I cried,"how had it come there?" |
41619 | I stopped dead, and"Who are you? |
41619 | I thought in the circumstance our inspection might be a hurried one; therefore:"Should you mind very much if I sought it out for myself?" |
41619 | If the blessed place is haunted, why have we seen nothing of the ghost during the two months or so we have lived at Low Fennel? |
41619 | Is there any point, Mr. Damopolon, which I have not made clear? |
41619 | Lorian said:"Colonel, d''you mind my taking a picture of the Riddle?" |
41619 | May I examine it for a moment?" |
41619 | Maybe you was wounded in France, and you''re down here to get well, like?" |
41619 | Might I come up with you for a moment?" |
41619 | Might it not fairly be supposed that ignorant superstition and the ravings of unrequited passion accounted for the rest? |
41619 | Monkish whisper? |
41619 | Not drowned?" |
41619 | Of something-- where we have come from?" |
41619 | Regarding what, or regarding whom, had he given his word? |
41619 | Still"--he shrugged his shoulders ponderously--"the people declined to remain in the place, so what could I do? |
41619 | Suppose we go in?" |
41619 | Tell me that!--by what?" |
41619 | That is a passage----""Yes?" |
41619 | That means the device of leaves, twigs, and acorns-- stripped_ from_ a tree-- see? |
41619 | The Riddle of Ragstaff I"Well, Harry, my boy, and what''s the latest news from Venice?" |
41619 | Then chokingly he spoke:"So you carry one of his letters about with you?" |
41619 | Then:"You think Hulme discovered this?" |
41619 | To my fate? |
41619 | Was it not in the month of August that he was done to death here?" |
41619 | Was this distrust becoming an obsession? |
41619 | Were they not a concession to that nameless query in the man''s stare? |
41619 | What could it mean? |
41619 | What d''you mean?" |
41619 | What did it mean, this sudden dash from the bungalow into the hills? |
41619 | What does he go to look for? |
41619 | What has happened to him?" |
41619 | What is it?--what is it?" |
41619 | What monster has struck him down? |
41619 | What shall I do? |
41619 | What shall I offer him?" |
41619 | What the devil has the heat to do with the haunting?" |
41619 | What then?" |
41619 | What unholy thing haunts Low Fennel? |
41619 | What was the explanation lying at the back of it all? |
41619 | What was the nature of the doctor''s studies? |
41619 | What were these experiments? |
41619 | What, in God''s name, would be the end of it? |
41619 | What, roughly, were the dimensions of this Burmese idol?" |
41619 | Where are you leading me?" |
41619 | Which phenomenon was the more remarkable? |
41619 | Why did I fly? |
41619 | Why does he not return?" |
41619 | Why had he set out alone that day, when all other days had been spent in the girl''s company? |
41619 | Why should I attempt such a thing? |
41619 | Why should a modern architect introduce such a device? |
41619 | Why should he eternally be seeking an ulterior motive for every act in this man''s life? |
41619 | Why? |
41619 | Why? |
41619 | Will you join me in developing?" |
41619 | You can no doubt enlighten me, Mr. Damopolon? |
41619 | You will find him, will you not? |
41619 | cried East, springing up--"Sir Jeffrey-- dead? |
41619 | exclaimed the other,"you mean that inscription on the panel-- which means nothing in particular? |
41619 | he cried;"what''s everybody up for?" |
41619 | he demanded,"are you lying?" |
41619 | he ran on volubly--"who can overtake the horsemen of the Bishareen?" |
41619 | he said hoarsely,"it''s young Wales, by the Lord Harry!--what''s he doing here?" |
41619 | he said hoarsely;"d''you mean to tell me the house is built on a dam''burial ground?" |
41619 | he said--"where the devil are you? |
41619 | said he,"do you not miss something that you anticipated finding?" |
41619 | said the Major as I entered,"have you got the facts you were looking for?" |
41619 | she cried tremulously,"what is it? |
41619 | she cried,"what had my poor father done to merit such an end? |
41619 | she said firmly,"and what has happened to him?" |
41619 | what have we here?" |
41619 | where are you?" |
41619 | why ca n''t you give me a drink?" |
36518 | ''And what are you thinking about while all those people are making such a fuss?'' 36518 ''Are you ill?'' |
36518 | ''Are you quite sure you see me_ now_?'' 36518 ''But how did you know I had arrived?'' |
36518 | ''Do you believe in the Immortality of the Soul?'' 36518 ''Do you not see something on yonder chair?'' |
36518 | ''How is she?'' 36518 ''What is your name, my little man?'' |
36518 | ''You remember me?'' 36518 All_ what_ time?" |
36518 | And gives you plenty of pocket- money? |
36518 | And how do you know that the footman is not a ghost? |
36518 | And now,he continued,"can anyone here explain to me the strange conduct of the man with the white roses? |
36518 | And what may that be? |
36518 | And wherefore should I do this? |
36518 | And why makest thou the world that was before of more account than the world that comes after? |
36518 | Are you the new servant? |
36518 | Art thou Abdulla, the water- seller of Damascus? |
36518 | Art thou willing to think, then, that thou and I are in Paradise even at this hour? |
36518 | But did I not tell thee that as yet I have no knowledge of the world that will be? |
36518 | But how do they affect your philosophy? |
36518 | But what about his mother, and what about his mother''s father, and his father before him, and all the rest on''em? 36518 But what are we to do with them?" |
36518 | By the Inflexible Method? |
36518 | Can it be,I said aloud,"that Panhandle has taken me for an inquisitive psychologist?" |
36518 | Did they ever catch the man, sir? |
36518 | Did you discover,said the Pessimist at length,"why the two were weeping in the train?" |
36518 | Did you ever follow it up? |
36518 | Did you set your traps? |
36518 | Do many of them succeed? |
36518 | Do n''t you remember what that old Johnny told us in the Park? 36518 Do you mean''i m wi''the watery eyes?" |
36518 | Ethelberta, Ethelberta, what''s the meaning of all this? |
36518 | Half as good as what? |
36518 | Hast thou life in thee? |
36518 | Hast thou no further interpretation? |
36518 | Hast thou partaken of the intoxicating drug? 36518 Have you ever thought of trying to make a bit_ by writing_, Phip? |
36518 | Have you never thought, sir,he said, drawing near to me,"what brought the fine weather?" |
36518 | How are the root- crops? |
36518 | How came you to think that it was written by somebody else? |
36518 | How can they go down after coming up unless they stop between? |
36518 | How do you know he isn''t--_sometimes_? 36518 How do you know that?" |
36518 | How do you know that? |
36518 | How do you know that? |
36518 | How do you know,he said,"that you are not dead now, and already passed to the existence of which you speak?" |
36518 | I expect they give it''i m''ot, sir? |
36518 | I said,''If you please, sir, what o''clock is it?'' |
36518 | I say, what are you going to do with all those tramcar tickets? |
36518 | I was so startled by this unexpected answer that, without thinking, I blurted out the question,''Why?'' 36518 If you please, sir,"said Billy in his singing voice,"would you mind telling us the time?" |
36518 | If you please,said Billy,"would you mind telling us the time?" |
36518 | In the way of confirmation or otherwise? |
36518 | Is it Gray Muff? |
36518 | Is that an original remark? |
36518 | Is there anything I can do for you, sir? |
36518 | Is there no hope,I asked,"that you will be able one day to communicate the reasons to_ us_?" |
36518 | May I ask,said my companion,"for the grounds of your statement that so far the ghost has failed to appear?" |
36518 | May it not be,I asked myself,"that Primitive Religion is the only religion that has ever existed, or will exist, in the world?" |
36518 | More certain than the Inflexible----? |
36518 | O thou that dwellest alone,cried Selim,"hast thou taken to thyself a wife? |
36518 | Of which kind? |
36518 | Put a_ knife_ into you, did he? |
36518 | Scattergood,I once asked him,"what do you_ do_ to that young mare of yours when you meet a traction engine or a military band?" |
36518 | Shall we talk? |
36518 | So it was a bit o''bad luck after all, sir? |
36518 | The man is mad,said some;"will no one warn him of his danger?" |
36518 | The time, laddie? |
36518 | Then how do you manage it? |
36518 | Then what do you_ say_ to her? |
36518 | Then where do the seconds come in? |
36518 | Then you are not an unhappy boy? |
36518 | Then you mean to say that you have better reasons for trusting your beast than we have for trusting your system? |
36518 | Then,said I,"what do you make of the Ghost''s words in_ Hamlet_:''I am thy father''s spirit''? |
36518 | Thy name? |
36518 | Well, what of that? |
36518 | Well, young hopefuls,he said,"and who have you been asking the time of to- day?" |
36518 | What aileth thee, O Abdulla? |
36518 | What are they? |
36518 | What did you say to the old beast? |
36518 | What do you mean? |
36518 | What has happened to Billy? |
36518 | What is it? |
36518 | What is it? |
36518 | What is she like, Billy? |
36518 | What of that? 36518 What precisely do you mean?" |
36518 | What shall we do with those half- sovereigns? |
36518 | What was it you asked me just now? |
36518 | What, for example, became of the young girl? |
36518 | What,_ the whole of it_? |
36518 | Wherefore hast thou not reported thyself? |
36518 | Which bit is that? |
36518 | Which never became the religion of the future after all? |
36518 | Who are you that haunt me night and day with this horrible fear? |
36518 | Who are you? |
36518 | Who are you? |
36518 | Who art thou? |
36518 | Who is this that feels the thunder leap beneath him like a living thing? |
36518 | Who is this that leads the chase? |
36518 | Who is yonder rider? |
36518 | Who''ll hear me? |
36518 | Whose philosophy are you? |
36518 | Why do you ask? |
36518 | Will Billy burst again? |
36518 | You are quite serious? |
36518 | You mean that your philosophy is already conclusively proved, and yet made more conclusive by Ethelberta? |
36518 | _ Those are the wrong words._ If you''d said,''Would you mind telling me the time?'' 36518 _ When_ did Billy burst?" |
36518 | _ Why_ did Billy burst? |
36518 | ''Are they livin''or dead?'' |
36518 | ''Sir,''said I, knowing him to be an old friend whom I had met in unknown regions,''sir,''I said,''may I offer you a glass of brandy and water?'' |
36518 | ''Well, then,''says he,''who paid for the horses and the clothes?'' |
36518 | ''Well,''says he,''who paid for the horses and the clothes-- and the paint?'' |
36518 | ''What''s that for, my Lord?'' |
36518 | ... How had I come to know him, to divine him? |
36518 | ALL MEN ARE GHOSTS PANHANDLE AND THE GHOSTS"''Oh,''dissi lui,''Or se''tu ancor morto?'' |
36518 | And how is it that, once started on that line, I am unable to prevent myself going further? |
36518 | And if it stopped, did_ time_ stop with it? |
36518 | And what about''i m bein''robbed of his winnings just as''e was gettin''''ome? |
36518 | And what are they doing?" |
36518 | And what difference did that make? |
36518 | And what do you think I hear him say when he come through last Thursday? |
36518 | And what else can you expect in view of the conditions under which we all arrive on the planet?" |
36518 | And what if this be hell? |
36518 | And what logical mind could resist arguments like the following, back- views though they be? |
36518 | And what safeguard have you when fellers like Prendergast begin buying up the land? |
36518 | And where are we both now after thirty years? |
36518 | Are not a hundred pieces of artillery sufficient to rouse one solitary man from his dreams? |
36518 | Are the names worthy of being recorded? |
36518 | As they passed down the street, Piecraft said:"Would you mind telling me as we walk along what you think of the story you read just now? |
36518 | At the same time, my only chance of making you relent is to earn some money.--What the deuce is all this about novel- writing?" |
36518 | But wait-- what''s this on page 32? |
36518 | But what else can you expect,_ with all them gigglin''wenches at the back of the church_?" |
36518 | But who on earth brought me here? |
36518 | But who pays for your schooling?" |
36518 | But who selects the crew? |
36518 | But who''ll ever keep step with Prendergast? |
36518 | But wo n''t we scald ourselves?" |
36518 | But would n''t you like to take a turn round the old town first? |
36518 | Ca n''t you see how the big hand goes jerk, jerk?" |
36518 | Can you read aloud?" |
36518 | Cyril Puttock, M.A., who"took"us in Divinity, saw written large on the blackboard in front of him these words:"What burst Billy?" |
36518 | Did I not say we were on the eve of great discoveries? |
36518 | Did I not tell you that I am revising my lectures?" |
36518 | Did it pause before beginning the descent? |
36518 | Did the stoppage at the end of the swing make the second, or was the second made by the swing, the movement between the two points of rest? |
36518 | Did we consider it conduct worthy of gentlemen? |
36518 | Did we cover ourselves with confusion? |
36518 | Did we quail and cower at the mention of that mighty name? |
36518 | Did ye''ear''i m talkin''to''er, Bill? |
36518 | Did you not cite instances from Dickens himself and say that Sam Weller and Mr Micawber were more real to you than Louis XIV or George Washington?" |
36518 | Do n''t you remember what bully stories you used to tell me when I was a kid? |
36518 | Do you know who_ he_ is?" |
36518 | Do you mind shaking me? |
36518 | Doth he live in his dying, and, taking note of his last breath, say within himself,''Lo, now I am dead''? |
36518 | For how shall a man know when he is now dead and come to Judgment? |
36518 | Has Zobeida proved gracious?" |
36518 | Has the Evil Eye encountered thee? |
36518 | Hast thou life in thee to stand upright and do a thing? |
36518 | Have n''t I always said that he must''a been a warm''un in his young days? |
36518 | Have we not heard on high authority that no philosophy is complete until it has explained its own presence in the universe? |
36518 | Have you ever seen a wild beast suddenly grow tame? |
36518 | Have you found a magic formula?" |
36518 | He was lost in a steamer whose name I ca n''t remember-- when was it? |
36518 | He''adn''t got''is white tie on then, Bill, eh? |
36518 | Here, old chap"( addressing the pendulum),"you know us, do n''t you? |
36518 | His seat, like his philosophy, was a trifle stiff; but what else could you expect in one who had passed his sixtieth year? |
36518 | How did you acquire it?" |
36518 | How does that come about? |
36518 | I cried;"are the reasons_ taboo_? |
36518 | I have but dreams to tell thee; and if thou wantest dreams, hast thou none of thine own? |
36518 | If so, is it so much worse than earth? |
36518 | In London? |
36518 | In Paris? |
36518 | In heaven''s name, what am I to do?" |
36518 | In the name of all the secret Powers that guide the fates of men-- whom am I haunting?''" |
36518 | In the purpose of his life he had failed; was it likely, he asked himself, that he would do any better in romance? |
36518 | Indeed I had to run, and was out of breath when, coming up alongside, I popped out my question,"If you please, sir, what o''clock is it?" |
36518 | Is Abdulla a man of violence, as the driver of the donkey; or a man of no bowels, as the lender of the skin? |
36518 | Know that he to whom thou speakest is of them that walk in the light; and what have these to do with the delicacies of the Franks? |
36518 | No? |
36518 | Now are you quite sure that what you asked for is what you want? |
36518 | Now is n''t it a wonderful thing that my family and the Dook''s has kept step with one another for a matter of two hundred years? |
36518 | Now, Scattergood,"I added-- for I was an old friend,--"frankly, between you and me, do n''t you think you''re a fool?" |
36518 | Now, what on earth do you mean?" |
36518 | Now,_ how much_ of the time would you like?" |
36518 | O Billy''s mater, will these eyes ever see you again? |
36518 | Of which hast thou knowledge?" |
36518 | One night Billy and I were lying awake as usual, and the question"shall we talk?" |
36518 | One was,''What will be the price of Midland Preferred on January 1, 1915?'' |
36518 | Or sufferest thou from a visitation of God?" |
36518 | Otherwise, what is the use of the Inflexible Method? |
36518 | Our parents wanted us, did you say? |
36518 | Presently the lady said, speaking in a steady voice--"''Do you know the name of the station we have just passed?'' |
36518 | Presently the reader said:"Well, have you identified the author?" |
36518 | Said I not unto thee that I discern no more between the darkness and the light, between the shadow and the substance? |
36518 | Said a farmer to me one day:"Who''s that gentleman as has just gone up the lane on the chestnut mare?" |
36518 | Seest thou not that I have made my dwelling in the Street that is called Straight?" |
36518 | So you bred her yourself? |
36518 | Suppose you were to meet a beautiful woman--_what would you do_?" |
36518 | The other,''Will it be a boy or a girl?'' |
36518 | The question that haunted me was this: Did the pendulum_ stop_ on reaching the highest point of the ascending arc? |
36518 | The young girl who waited on me, this morning-- who is she?" |
36518 | Then, suddenly,"What''s her name?" |
36518 | Thinkest thou to stay behind, and then run away stealthily, and get thee back to thy water- selling in Damascus and to thy dallyings with a woman? |
36518 | This is the sort of thing that would go on:"Billy, are you awake?" |
36518 | To be sure, he had long abandoned the quest for happiness as a thing unworthy of a Systematic Theologian-- what else, indeed, could he do? |
36518 | Tom, you''re a great boy for choosin''a stick; but what''s become o''that big fellow?'' |
36518 | Was it a dream? |
36518 | Was n''t his Lordship''s father a brewer? |
36518 | Well, could you''ear what''e said? |
36518 | Well, then, what was a_ second_? |
36518 | Were his eyes deceiving him? |
36518 | Were we the culprits? |
36518 | What about''i m puttin''his money on that''oss as won the Buddle Stakes? |
36518 | What are your names, and how old are you, and what school do you belong to, and who are your fathers?" |
36518 | What business have I to be constructing these ridiculous plots? |
36518 | What could he mean? |
36518 | What did the Professor mean by apostrophising himself in the strong language overheard by the farmer? |
36518 | What did we mean by it? |
36518 | What do I think about in that quarter of an hour? |
36518 | What do you say to going up the river first? |
36518 | What do you think of that for a noble act? |
36518 | What followed? |
36518 | What have you done with the manuscript I gave you?" |
36518 | What if I am wakened already? |
36518 | What is the title on the outside?" |
36518 | What on earth does it all mean?" |
36518 | What reasons can you have, other than those you have given us, for trusting your conclusion as to the friendliness of the Universe?" |
36518 | What state must a man be in when''e comes''ome after a race and lets another feller pinch his money out of his inside pocket?" |
36518 | What the deuce is the matter with me? |
36518 | What''s happening now? |
36518 | When I had finished I said:"''Do you understand?'' |
36518 | When, I wonder, shall I have news of Jim''s arrival?" |
36518 | Where did I see one like him? |
36518 | Where did this thing come from? |
36518 | Where hast thou been? |
36518 | Where is James? |
36518 | Where is John? |
36518 | Wherefore hast thou anointed thyself with radiance, and made thyself to shine like the sons of the morning? |
36518 | Who can it be? |
36518 | Who in his senses would put to sea with such a crowd? |
36518 | Who would have believed there were so many of them? |
36518 | Who''ll ever_ want_ to? |
36518 | Why ca n''t they leave it all alone and stick to what they understand, if there''s anything they_ do_ understand, which I doubt? |
36518 | Why ca n''t they stop messing wi''things-- messing wi''the land, messing wi''the landlords, messing wi''the tenants, messing wi''the farm- labourers? |
36518 | Why can not they wake me? |
36518 | Why, if the seconds are n''t the stoppages, what becomes of time between the jerks?" |
36518 | Will you swear you did n''t_ steal_ her?" |
36518 | Would he, now? |
36518 | You know that saller- faced man as works for Bullivant--''im as limps on his left leg?" |
36518 | You remember I congratulated you on your two sweethearts?'' |
36518 | You remember that I once had a religion?" |
36518 | You''re glad to see us, are n''t you?" |
36518 | _ Bernardo._ See, it stalks away''""Now, what does that mean?" |
36518 | he said,"_ What if she has no watch?_"The little girl was running away. |
36518 | said the Interpreter,"and what is the occasion of thy coming?" |
19231 | A woman''s hand is soft and a woman''s lips are sweet, yet what so cruel or so merciless in all the world as a woman? 19231 Ah yes, vengeance,"she replied, turning towards him with a gasp in her voice,"that must come; but whose hand shall cast the spear or draw the bow? |
19231 | And if thou----"Yes, and if I too believed that this were so? |
19231 | And that, Highness? |
19231 | And the other young lady, Lester-- because, of course, she is a lady, I mean in our sense of the word, much misunderstood as it is in these days? |
19231 | And what are the orders-- I mean, of course, the private ones? 19231 And what did he say to that?" |
19231 | And what is that? |
19231 | And what might that be, Brenda? |
19231 | And what was that, Dad? |
19231 | And who might have been the other part of the subject, Dad? |
19231 | And why should it not be? 19231 Anything connected with the Marmions?" |
19231 | Are these really what you take criminals to prison with? 19231 Are you mad, Derevskin?" |
19231 | Both princes-- Good Lord, sir, what do you mean? |
19231 | But how did it go up like that? |
19231 | But is there not such a power in the world now, Dad? |
19231 | But, at least, Professor, I hope you are able to give them credit for honest intentions, however mistaken they might have been? |
19231 | But, my dear Niti, what on earth can you have to say to Lord Leighton about a-- a female mummy? 19231 By the way now, suppose that this fourth dimension that has puzzled so many of us is, after all, duration? |
19231 | Can it be true, Ma- Rim[=o]n? 19231 Dad, what do you think? |
19231 | Dad,she replied, with apparent irrelevance,"do you believe in the forgiveness of sins?" |
19231 | Dear me, who''s that? |
19231 | Did you ever see light like that come out of a sham stone? 19231 Did you hear any noises in the house last night, or were you sleeping too soundly?" |
19231 | Do n''t look half dead, do I? 19231 Do you believe in ghosts, Prince?" |
19231 | Do you not kill each other fast enough now? 19231 Eh? |
19231 | Excuse me, but tennis without a racquet, you know-- are you going to play with your hands? |
19231 | Ghosts? 19231 Good morning, Niti; what is yours?" |
19231 | Have not the Paraschites done their work on his body? 19231 How were you going to do this?" |
19231 | I know that voice, or at least I seem to know it, and it is very like Niti''s and her mother''s; but where can it have come from? 19231 I wonder if I could persuade the dear Prince-- what a charming man he is!--to bring him to my next At Home day?" |
19231 | I wonder if there is any more of that wine left? |
19231 | I wonder what Her Majesty would really think of it? |
19231 | I? |
19231 | If is very, very good of you, Miss Marmion; but do you think you could-- well, help me a little? 19231 Indeed?" |
19231 | Is it so long ago that thou hast forgotten how we tried to rescue her mummy from the hands of these infidels? 19231 Is not that rather an ungracious speech, Niti, seeing that one of the said acquaintances has only just chanced to join us?" |
19231 | Is that all? |
19231 | Marmion, what is this white magic that you have been springing upon us? |
19231 | May I ask what the Doctrine is? |
19231 | May I come below with you, sir, and explain? 19231 Me? |
19231 | No, Highness, I hope not: but did you hear-- or, rather, did you not hear? |
19231 | Nothing happened during the night worth reporting, I suppose? |
19231 | Now, I wonder what that man Marmion''s going to let loose on us to- morrow night? |
19231 | Now, who is it? |
19231 | Oh, but, Niti-- what do you mean? |
19231 | Oh, is that all-- just the stealing of what was perhaps a very valuable relic? 19231 Real?" |
19231 | Really? 19231 Rescued?" |
19231 | So that is the sort of thing we''ve got to fight, is it? 19231 Suppose you go and interview this modern Mephistopheles yourself?" |
19231 | The Doctrine, Miss Marmion? |
19231 | The brute? 19231 Then what will satisfy you?" |
19231 | There are no suspicions attaching to any of these people, I suppose? |
19231 | They''re down below; shall I send''em up? |
19231 | Those are what you call the bracelets in England, are they not? 19231 Thou art not only a dealer in gems and curious things: thou art also a spy of the police; is not that so?" |
19231 | Walked overboard, Miss Marmion? |
19231 | Well, Dad,she asked, as she put the letter down,"what do you say?" |
19231 | What do you mean by that, Phadrig? |
19231 | What do you mean, Derevskin? 19231 What does it matter whether we live again or not as long as we live cleanly and do our work honestly while we are alive? |
19231 | What is the matter, Niti? |
19231 | What is the matter, my dear Mr Josephus? |
19231 | What is your opinion of the European situation now? |
19231 | What on earth is the matter with me? |
19231 | What on earth is the matter, Niti? |
19231 | What was I saying only just now about personal intrigues and ambitions that make war? 19231 What were his orders?" |
19231 | What, you fool? |
19231 | What? |
19231 | Who am I that I should bring a curse upon humanity, Prince? |
19231 | Who am I that I should know the secrets of another woman''s soul? |
19231 | Why not? |
19231 | Will you ask Miss van Huysman if she will be kind enough to serve? |
19231 | Will you be good enough to walk in? 19231 Will you come with me if I do?" |
19231 | Will you excuse me for a couple of minutes, Miss Marmion? |
19231 | Will you, really? |
19231 | Would you have had one of those roses, Brenda, if the Prince''s miracle- worker had offered you one? |
19231 | Yes, Highness-- but who or what was that man? 19231 Yes, I wonder?" |
19231 | Yes, yes, of course,said the Egyptian, once more in his gentle voice;"would not be likely, would it? |
19231 | You have seen Niti, I suppose? |
19231 | You mean about Professor Marmion and his mathematical miracles? |
19231 | You mean as regards the Prince? |
19231 | You-- yes, you, Ma- Rim[=o]n, you too love me, do you not-- truly? 19231 _ I_ trust myself to his tender mercies, Dad?" |
19231 | _ The_ Huysman: the Professor''s most doughty antagonist in the arena of symbols and theorems? 19231 ( Supernatural and occult fiction) Reprint of the 1906? 19231 *****Why, where''s the Mummy, Dad?" |
19231 | A surprise, eh?" |
19231 | Abduct my daughter at the dead of night, would you, you scoundrels? |
19231 | After he had gone, Franklin Marmion said to Nitocris:"Well, Niti, what do you think of our gimlet- eyed friend? |
19231 | Ah well, be it so or be it not, are not the fates of all men in the hands of the High Gods who see all things? |
19231 | And Miss Marmion?" |
19231 | And now, as I have had a glimpse of the past, I wonder what this place would be like in ten thousand years? |
19231 | And now, may I ask you why you found it necessary to set these spies of yours to watch my every movement night and day? |
19231 | And thou, too, Menkau- Ra the Mighty, hast thou slain thy thousands, and yet fearest to look upon the face of one dead man? |
19231 | And what does Professor Hartley say about it?" |
19231 | And what if they should have ordained that his soul should have thus returned? |
19231 | And who are you to advise me thus? |
19231 | And, by the way, what is to become of me in the carrying out of this little scheme of yours? |
19231 | And, if either, was she herself near enough to the dividing line between the two worlds for him to tell her the truth? |
19231 | And, if so, has he attained while I have lost? |
19231 | Are the men below?" |
19231 | Are you acquainted with His Highness?" |
19231 | Are you content with the bargain?" |
19231 | Are you ready?" |
19231 | Are your ears keener for my voice than for that of any other woman-- tell me?" |
19231 | As he had asked, what could such a man as he be watched for by this thousand- eyed organisation of which he himself was one of the supreme Directors? |
19231 | As he said the last word, his voice rose a little, and, as it seemed, an echo came back from one of the corners of the room:"Impossible, impossible?" |
19231 | As she dropped back in her chair, she said to Lord Leighton:"That was pretty wonderful, was n''t it? |
19231 | But did you, Dad? |
19231 | But why should he of all men on earth want to unravel the Zastrow mystery? |
19231 | But why shouldst thou turn pale and tremble, thou the holiest man in the land? |
19231 | But, of course, Dad, you wo n''t let your-- well, your scientific feelings get mixed up with social matters, will you? |
19231 | By the way, I wonder whether that flagon was really there, and whether there_ was_ any wine in it? |
19231 | Can the All- Father have given His Chief Minister to be the instrument of such a foul crime and monstrous impiety as this?" |
19231 | Can the gods indeed have permitted such a thing to be? |
19231 | Did he not claim the fulfilment of the promise of the great king?" |
19231 | Do you not see her? |
19231 | Do you quite understand me?" |
19231 | Does your blood throb in your veins when I touch you? |
19231 | Does your heart beat quicker when you come near me? |
19231 | For him, then, there was evidently no danger-- but Niti----? |
19231 | Had his connection with that, by any extraordinary chance, come to the knowledge of the International? |
19231 | Had you a very pleasant evening yesterday at''The Wilderness''? |
19231 | Has Miss Marmion revoked her decision after all?" |
19231 | Hast thou not learned wisdom yet, after so many lives? |
19231 | Have you any idea of it? |
19231 | Have you got it here?" |
19231 | Have you seen anything of the Professor?" |
19231 | He held it towards his visitor, and said:"What do you think of that as a specimen of ancient art, Mr Josephus?" |
19231 | He turned a white, scared face with fear- dilated eyes upward, and said in a half- choked voice:"What''s the matter? |
19231 | He walked another two or three hundred yards in silence; then he recommenced his spoken argument with himself:"Limits of human knowledge? |
19231 | He was anything but a coward, but he was thinking of Niti-- and what if a knife- stab left her undefended? |
19231 | Her late Majesty? |
19231 | How can it be? |
19231 | How could I take it from you-- I who can give nothing in exchange for such a treasure? |
19231 | How could any one who holds the Doctrine do that? |
19231 | How did your sudden enlightenment on that interesting subject come about?" |
19231 | How long shall thy bright wings lie folded and idle, O Necheb, Bringer of Victory?" |
19231 | How on earth am I to tell poor Mark? |
19231 | How''s the Professor? |
19231 | How''s the Professor? |
19231 | I hope you wo n''t mind the exposure taking place in your own garden and among your own guests?" |
19231 | I mean, would n''t she, if we had both been dead as long?" |
19231 | I suppose you have no idea on the subject, have you?" |
19231 | I wonder if the drama will begin to- night? |
19231 | I wonder what he is doing here? |
19231 | I wonder what he is really going to do? |
19231 | I wonder what it all means? |
19231 | I wonder what the Museum would give me for them if they were not, as I think they are, the unsubstantial fabric of a vision?" |
19231 | I wonder what the deuce he''s been doing with that cruiser since he took her away without leave? |
19231 | I wonder why those people who are on the war- path in his country ever let him out of it alive?" |
19231 | I? |
19231 | Is everything ready for us to go away?" |
19231 | Is he not on deck?" |
19231 | Is it allowed to ask the name of the great millionaire for whom it is destined?" |
19231 | Is it not enough for you?" |
19231 | Is not his mummy even now resting in the City of the Dead? |
19231 | Is not that enough for you, a penniless seller of curios?" |
19231 | Is not that so, Neb- Anat?" |
19231 | Is not the Princess Hermia noble and fair enough?" |
19231 | Is that so?" |
19231 | Is that so?" |
19231 | Is the inmost chamber of thy soul still closed in rebellion against the precepts of the High Gods? |
19231 | Is there no other way?" |
19231 | Is this a conjuring trick? |
19231 | It is only a little word, dearest, only a little word-- will you not say it, and be my Princess, my Queen, my Empress?" |
19231 | It is something connected with that wonderful Adept''s marvels, perhaps? |
19231 | It is the same family, I suppose?" |
19231 | It must be something else: and yet what? |
19231 | Just fancy!--the poor thing-- dead how many years? |
19231 | May I ask for your assistance?" |
19231 | May I ask if you have translated the cypher?" |
19231 | May I hope that you will be able to dine?" |
19231 | May I take this with me?" |
19231 | May it not be that the gods, who foresee all things, made thee in the same image, perchance to this very end?" |
19231 | Might I have a look at that gem? |
19231 | Mr Phadrig, is it-- is it real?" |
19231 | Muvver told me ter bring it up, and wot''ll yer want for supper, and will yer give me the money?" |
19231 | Nefer is dead, yet is not Nefer re- incarnated in another form, another man of another build, but yet Nefer that was-- and is beside me now?" |
19231 | Nicol Hendry held out his hand, and said:"And is it really you, Professor? |
19231 | No doubt the man was armed, and perhaps the woman also, and what would a knife- stab mean to them on such a desperate quest? |
19231 | Now tell me: do you know how to use a revolver?" |
19231 | Now what is your pleasure, Miss Marmion? |
19231 | Now, granted that he has done so, what does it amount to as regards our world-- the world of practical thought and real action, I mean?" |
19231 | Now, if they were, I suppose you can explain Professor Marmion''s?" |
19231 | Now, may I risk the suspicion of presumption and offer an alternative proposition?" |
19231 | Now, what is it to be? |
19231 | Now, what is the news?" |
19231 | Now, what is your idea?" |
19231 | Now, will you come quietly, or shall we take you? |
19231 | Of course she might----""Do you really think she might-- I mean in that way?" |
19231 | Oh, Brenda, is it really true?" |
19231 | Only his eyelids lifted a little as he replied:"Ah, indeed? |
19231 | Pent- Ah, didst thou not even see her laugh as she rode past us? |
19231 | Professor Marmion, would you have the goodness to ask one of the young ladies to bring me one of those beautiful white roses of yours?" |
19231 | Say now, thou who sittest feasting between my murderers, how much longer must I wait for thee and them?" |
19231 | Shall I?" |
19231 | Shall it be for this afternoon?" |
19231 | She glanced round the table and rose, saying:"Do n''t you think we''ve had polemics enough for one little dinner, Dad? |
19231 | She leaned back in her chair again, and whispered:"Is it really mine now, Prince? |
19231 | She looked at him with a sideway glance, and said, almost in a whisper:"Yes?" |
19231 | Should he turn the light on and alarm the house? |
19231 | Something like five thousand, is n''t it? |
19231 | Suppose we go back and try to assist the kindly Fates a little bit?" |
19231 | Surely, Professor, that is a little quixotic, is it not?" |
19231 | Tell me, do you love me? |
19231 | Tell me, my beloved, hast thou the courage to tread it with me?" |
19231 | Tell me: whom did thy business with him concern?" |
19231 | The Prince caught Phadrig''s eye for an instant, and said:"Miss Marmion, will you confound the wisdom of the wise and bring the ball here?" |
19231 | The captain started up, clasped his hands to his forehead, and said in a gasping whisper:"Holy God, Highness, what have we done?" |
19231 | The only question that he had to ask himself was: How? |
19231 | The question was whispered, and he replied in a whisper:"Yes; do you think I have any chance?" |
19231 | The question was, who? |
19231 | Then he looked at his daughter, and as their eyes met, she said in the most commonplace tones:"My dear Dad, what_ is_ the matter with you? |
19231 | Then you know His Highness?" |
19231 | Then, of course, you''re going to marry him?" |
19231 | Was he really a man?" |
19231 | Was it not as easy to get rid of a woman as a man? |
19231 | Was not the fatal beauty of the Horus Stone at his command now that he was its possessor for good or evil? |
19231 | Was there just the faintest suspicion of a sneer in his voice as he said this? |
19231 | We claim kinship with the gods, but we are not the gods, and what mortal hand could avenge a crime like this?" |
19231 | Well, you certainly have a right to know, because, curiously enough, I might never have got to know her but for you----""Is it Brenda?" |
19231 | What am I to do with it? |
19231 | What can I do to serve you?" |
19231 | What do you propose to do? |
19231 | What do you think, Marmion? |
19231 | What do you think, Professor?" |
19231 | What does he mean?" |
19231 | What has changed you? |
19231 | What has made you faithless to the promise that you gave me in exchange for mine? |
19231 | What hast thou to fear, even if my vision came true? |
19231 | What hath he done that he should be once more so highly honoured?" |
19231 | What have I always thought about war? |
19231 | What have I done to bring myself within the four corners of your English law?" |
19231 | What have I done to make this outrage on English law possible?" |
19231 | What if he demonstrated that even the axioms of Euclid could, under different conditions, be both true and false at the same time? |
19231 | What if she had not locked her door securely, or if they had some means of opening it? |
19231 | What if we were to do wrong? |
19231 | What interest save the merest curiosity could he have in the matter? |
19231 | What is it? |
19231 | What is it?" |
19231 | What is the use? |
19231 | What magic have these heathens used?" |
19231 | What might it be?" |
19231 | What news of the Queen? |
19231 | What on earth can be the matter with me?" |
19231 | What on earth, literally, would happen if he came back and found me standing here alone?" |
19231 | What possible interest can a five- thousand- year- old corpse have for him?" |
19231 | What should I be watched for?" |
19231 | What sort of nonsense am I talking? |
19231 | What was that?" |
19231 | What was this horrible thing lying where_ she_ should have been? |
19231 | What, for instance, would happen to Nitocris in her temporal state if even only Merrill came to know it? |
19231 | What, then, shall we do?" |
19231 | Where had he heard it before? |
19231 | Where was the lovely bride he had wedded only a few hours before? |
19231 | Where''s Niti? |
19231 | Who am I that I should abet you in defying their decrees? |
19231 | Who has not? |
19231 | Who is this Franklin Marmion, this wise man of the infidels? |
19231 | Who would have thought of finding you in Copenhagen?" |
19231 | Why do you ask?" |
19231 | Why in the soul of every true man and woman is Love, when it comes, made Lord of all, and all in all? |
19231 | Why, how should I know a great man like the noble Prince? |
19231 | Why? |
19231 | Will he do?" |
19231 | Will that satisfy you?" |
19231 | Wo n''t you join us in a little run round town?" |
19231 | Would she flinch or faint, or cry out with fear? |
19231 | Would these new- found, strangely- given powers of his suffice to protect her? |
19231 | Yes, that sounds all very well in ordinary language, but are there any? |
19231 | You ca n''t give me any idea of the subject, I suppose?" |
19231 | You have the line?" |
19231 | You say you would n''t care to be present and help me with your opinion?" |
19231 | You want me to pick that ball up?" |
19231 | [ 1] Is it not from ignorance of this truth, or wilful denial of this law, that all the miseries of mismarriage come forth? |
19231 | and what is that, Niti?" |
19231 | the Professor heard himself say as he sat up and rubbed his eyes,"what on earth can be the matter with me? |
19231 | there is the famous fortress, is it not? |
37233 | ( 1) And, after a few words, he proceeds:What then? |
37233 | ( 1) Which of these accounts are we to believe? 37233 ( 2) 1 Can the author of the Apocalypse, or Paul, ever have heard of the raising of Lazarus? |
37233 | ( 2) As one condition is here mentioned, why not the others, had any been actually imposed? 37233 ( 2) Can this be considered a"very circumstantial account"? |
37233 | ( 3) What was the use of the angel''s message since Jesus himself immediately after appears and delivers the very same instructions in person? 37233 Am I not an Apostle? |
37233 | Am I not free? 37233 Have I not seen Jesus our Lord?" |
37233 | Truly the signs of the apostle were wrought,but how wrought? |
37233 | What then is the advantage of the Jew? 37233 & c. Did all the multitude say this? 37233 ( 1) If the introduction of the angel be legendary, must not also his words be so? 37233 ( 1) Is it not palpable that the whole story is legendary? 37233 ( 1) What title will adequately represent the contents of the book? 37233 ( 2) Are we to regard the mention of these doubts as aninestimable proof of the candour of the Evangelists"? |
37233 | ( 3) Are we to accept it as such? |
37233 | ( 3) How, we might ask, could it be known to the writer that all who sat at the Council saw this? |
37233 | ( 3) Now, how came this doxology to be placed at all at the end of chapter xiv.? |
37233 | ( 3) Supposing that the use of Acts be held to be thus indicated, what does this prove? |
37233 | ( 3) What Scriptures, however, are fulfilled? |
37233 | ):"But the other answering rebuked him and said: Dost thou not even fear God seeing thou art in the same condemnation? |
37233 | 1 in any way justify or prepare(3) the way for the{ 45} sudden and unexplained introduction of the first person in the sixteenth chapter? |
37233 | 1),"who bewitched you?" |
37233 | 10"... to another kinds of tongues; and to another interpretation of tongues;"and again, v. 30:"do all speak with tongues? |
37233 | 1:"Eli( or Mk., Eloi), Eli, lema sabacthani? |
37233 | 30. have all gifts of healings[------]? |
37233 | 30? |
37233 | 30? |
37233 | 5:"Is it so that there is not even one wise man among you who shall be able to discern[------] between his brethren?" |
37233 | 6):"... What shall I profit you, except I shall speak to you either in revelation or in knowledge[------], or in prophecy, or in teaching?" |
37233 | 7f:"And they were all amazed and marvelled, saying, Behold, are not all these which speak Galilaeans? |
37233 | 9, Paul says:"So likewise ye, unless ye utter by the tongue[------] words{ 382} easy to be understood, how shall it be known what is spoken? |
37233 | Am I not an Apostle? |
37233 | And I said: Who art thou, Lord? |
37233 | And as they were afraid, and bowed their faces to the earth, they said unto them: Why seek ye the living among the dead? |
37233 | And he said, Who art thou, Lord? |
37233 | And how hear we every man in our own{ 375} language wherein we were born?" |
37233 | And what was the main difference between the persecutor and the persecuted? |
37233 | And when we all fell to the earth, I heard a voice saying unto me in the Hebrew tongue: Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? |
37233 | And while they yet believed not for joy, and wondered, he said unto them: Have ye here any food? |
37233 | Are all apostles? |
37233 | Are they Abraham''s seed? |
37233 | Are they Abraham''s seed? |
37233 | Are they Israelites? |
37233 | Are they Israelites? |
37233 | Are they ministers of Christ? |
37233 | Are we to assume that these things were really said? |
37233 | Are we to regard the Transfiguration as a subjective vision? |
37233 | Are we to suppose that an opportunity to bestow the Holy Spirit was selected when one of the Apostles was not present? |
37233 | Are we to suppose that the Apostle took no trouble to convince himself of the facts before he began to persecute? |
37233 | Believing Jesus to have been the Messiah, how could they interpret his death on the cross? |
37233 | Besides, what evidence is there that even a single indifferent person found the sepulchre empty? |
37233 | But agreeing that the Hebrew is erroneously rendered,(2) the only pertinent question is: by whom was the error in question committed? |
37233 | But can this argument bear any scrutiny by the light of Paul''s own writings? |
37233 | But if he was supplicating for those who stoned him, how much more for the brethren? |
37233 | But in what does the personal edification of the individual consist? |
37233 | By whom were these letters written? |
37233 | Can Truth by any means be made less true? |
37233 | Can any one doubt that this was nearly akin to the state of ecstatic trance in which he spoke with tongues more than all the Corinthians? |
37233 | Can any unprejudiced critic deny that the ideas in the speeches we are considering are also substantially the same? |
37233 | Can it be maintained that there are comparative degrees in salvation? |
37233 | Can reality be melted into thin air? |
37233 | Can the Acts of the Apostles, in short, be considered a sober and veracious history of so important and interesting an epoch of the christian Church? |
37233 | Can the belief of such men, in such an age, establish the reality of a phenomenon which contradicts universal experience? |
37233 | Can there be any doubt that the whole episode is legendary? |
37233 | Can we imagine that this Spirit can actually have prompted many people to speak at one and the same time to the utter disturbance of order? |
37233 | Did Paul intentionally omit all mention of the appearances to the women, or did he not know of them? |
37233 | Did any two receive precisely the same impressions? |
37233 | Did he ascend to heaven after each appearance? |
37233 | Did he depart like other men? |
37233 | Did he not then know that Jesus had appeared to Paul on the way? |
37233 | Did he vanish suddenly? |
37233 | Did he vanish suddenly? |
37233 | Did she not inquire why he did not join the brethren? |
37233 | Did the 500 originally think anything of the kind? |
37233 | Did they die again? |
37233 | Do we acquire any additional assurance as to the reality of the angels and the historical truth of their intervention from this narrative? |
37233 | Do we not get an instructive insight into the nature of the other Charismata from this suggestive fact? |
37233 | Does Paul himself ascribe his conversion to Christianity to the fact of his having seen Jesus? |
37233 | Does any one suppose that Paul,"whether in the body or out of the body,"was ever actually caught up into"the third heaven,"wherever that may be? |
37233 | Does he refer to the Christian community of Jerusalem, or to the Apostles themselves? |
37233 | Does not such sarcasm as the following seem extremely indecorous when criticising a result produced directly by the Holy Spirit? |
37233 | Does this, however, guarantee the truth of the reports or inferences of those who informed the Apostle? |
37233 | Even if this were so, it could not do away with the actual irony of the expressions; but do the facts support such a statement? |
37233 | Finally we might ask: What became of these saints raised from the dead? |
37233 | For whereas there is among you envying and strife; are ye not carnal?" |
37233 | For[------] what is there wherein ye were inferior to the other Churches, except it be that I myself was not burdensome to you?" |
37233 | From whom did he get it? |
37233 | Further on, the writer adds more of the same kind, v. 12, 13:"And they were all amazed and were in doubt, saying one to another: What may this mean? |
37233 | Had his normal custom been to live like the Gentiles, how is it possible that he could, on this occasion only, have feared those of the circumcision? |
37233 | Hath any man been called in uncircumcision? |
37233 | Have I not seen Jesus our Lord?" |
37233 | He does not pretend to teach them from his own knowledge, and the question naturally arises: From whom did he"receive"them? |
37233 | He was in the confidence of the high priests it seems, can he ever have heard the slightest doubt from them on the subject? |
37233 | How again did they know that the hundred and twenty or more brethren were Galilaean? |
37233 | How can I declare stocks and stones to be gods?... |
37233 | How could Paul use the expression"by the tongue"if he meant a foreign language in v. 2 and elsewhere? |
37233 | How could he argue in such a way with the Lord? |
37233 | How could the announcement of that event by the angels to the women seem to them as an idle tale, which they did not believe? |
37233 | How could this be said if[------] meant merely speaking a foreign language? |
37233 | How did Ananias know that Paul had authority from the chief priests to arrest any one? |
37233 | How did he get that information? |
37233 | How did he who spoke with a tongue edify himself? |
37233 | How did the multitude so rapidly know of what was passing in a private house? |
37233 | How does this accord with the whole tone of the account in the Acts? |
37233 | How often are these inferences correct? |
37233 | How then, we may inquire, could two accounts of the same event differ so fundamentally? |
37233 | How, and upon what principle, were these singular conditions selected? |
37233 | I ask, therefore, for what reason ye sent for me?" |
37233 | I)r. Farrar, somewhat pertinently, asks:"Why did they( the disciples) not go to Galilee immediately on receiving our Lord''s message? |
37233 | If Paul preached the same Gospel as the rest, what necessity could there have been for communicating it at all? |
37233 | If Paul says:"Am I not an apostle? |
37233 | If Pilate had already given the order to break the legs, how is it possible he could have marvelled, or acted as he is described in Mark to have done? |
37233 | If he was the Messiah could he thus die? |
37233 | If miraculous powers of healing existed, why were they not exerted in this case? |
37233 | If the Gospel be a power of God unto salvation"to every one that believeth"[------], in what manner can it possibly be so"to the Jew first"? |
37233 | If they were exerted and failed for special reasons, why are these not mentioned? |
37233 | If this were the case, our information would be further reduced; but supposing that the same Luke is referred to, what does our information amount to? |
37233 | If we suppose it to refer to the community of Jerusalem, taking thus the more favourable construction, how would this affect the question? |
37233 | In addressing God in some unintelligible jargon, in the utterance of which his understanding has no part? |
37233 | In all this, however, is there anything miraculous? |
37233 | In employing language, which he does not comprehend, in private prayer and praise? |
37233 | In that case, bow can it be supposed that he ever went at all up to Jerusalem to the Apostles and elders about this question? |
37233 | In v. 28 he again uses the expression[------], and in a following verse he inquires:"do all speak with tongues"[------](1)"do all interpret"[------]? |
37233 | In what does this opposition consist? |
37233 | In what language must we suppose that the Epistle was originally written? |
37233 | Is it conceivable that he would not relate the circumstance that Jesus breathed upon them, and endowed them with the Holy Ghost? |
37233 | Is it conceivable that, if such an episode had ever really occurred, the Apostle Paul would not have referred to it upon this occasion? |
37233 | Is it not an extraordinary thing that Paul never mentions Ananias in any of his letters, nor in any way refers to these miracles? |
37233 | Is it not reasonable to suppose that they did not form part of his copy? |
37233 | Is it permissible to suppose that the Holy Spirit could inspire speech with tongues at an unfitting time? |
37233 | Is it possible that he should, to such an audience, have translated the word Acheldamach? |
37233 | Is it possible that the vision of the 500, for instance, had escaped the maturing influence of time? |
37233 | Is it possible to suppose that Paul really indicated by this expression a distinct order of"miracles"properly so called? |
37233 | Is it probable that Jesus appeared twice upon the same evening to the eleven disciples? |
37233 | Is not such a gift of tongues more like the confusion of tongues in Babel(1){ 389} than a christian Charisma? |
37233 | Is there any appreciable trace of the originality of Paul in his discourses? |
37233 | Is this possible? |
37233 | Jesus saith unto her: Woman, why weepest thou? |
37233 | May we not ask what was the use, in this narrative, of the removal of the stone at all? |
37233 | Must we then understand that the dogmas of all religions which have been established must have been objective truths? |
37233 | Need we argue that the earthquake(1) is as mythical as the resurrection of the saints? |
37233 | Now the first thought which presents itself is: How can a gift which is due to the direct working of the Holy Spirit possibly be abused? |
37233 | Now what was the actual operation of this singular miraculous gift, and its utility whether as regards the community or the gifted individual? |
37233 | Now why all this mystery? |
37233 | Now, therefore, why tempt ye God, to put a yoke upon the neck of the disciples which neither our fathers nor we were able to bear? |
37233 | On closer examination, one of the first questions which arises is: how could such a speech have been reported? |
37233 | On the other hand, can we suppose that the fourth Evangelist would have ignored the walk to Bethany and the solemn parting there? |
37233 | One might ask, indeed, why such an angelic interposition should have taken place? |
37233 | Or did they also"ascend into Heaven? |
37233 | Or is not this the writer ascribing, according to his view, probable sentiments to them? |
37233 | Or must we conclude that the sayings are simply the creation of later tradition? |
37233 | Paul, therefore, in saying:"Why compellest thou[------] the Gentiles to adopt the customs of the Jews? |
37233 | Reference is frequently made to the passage in the so- called Epistle of James as an illustration of this, v. 14:"Is any sick among you? |
37233 | So far, is there and utility in the miracle? |
37233 | Sun and moon are made for us: how, therefore, shall I worship my own servants? |
37233 | The high priest asks:"Are these things so? |
37233 | The high- priest asks him: Are these things so? |
37233 | The question is-- does internal evidence confirm or contradict this tradition? |
37233 | The question is: Does the Apocalypse contain any reference to the Apostle Paul, or throw light upon the relations between him and the elder Apostles? |
37233 | The question, therefore, arises: Was the appearance to Paul of the same character as the former? |
37233 | Then answered Peter: Can any one forbid the water that these should not be baptized, which have received the Holy Spirit as well as we? |
37233 | Then are we to suppose that the chief priests and council believed this story of the earthquake and angel, and yet acted in this way? |
37233 | Then why not equally so the appearances of Jesus after his passion? |
37233 | They say unto her: Woman, why weepest thou? |
37233 | Verse 11,[------] Acts 1? |
37233 | Was Thomas excluded? |
37233 | Was he thus punished for his unbelief? |
37233 | Was it not necessary that the Christ should suffer these things, and enter into his glory? |
37233 | Was it not needful that the Christ( Messiah) should suffer these things and enter into his glory? |
37233 | What amount of evidence would be required before such a statement could be pronounced sufficiently attested? |
37233 | What became of Jesus, for instance? |
37233 | What could be the object of such a resurrection? |
37233 | What do we really know of the phenomena supposed to have characterized the Apostolic age, and which were later, and are now, described as miraculous? |
37233 | What doubt that by any means he might be running, or had run, in vain? |
37233 | What evidence could be regarded as sufficient to establish the reality of such supposed occurrences? |
37233 | What evidence is there that Jesus was seen, or supposed to have been seen, on the third day? |
37233 | What impression did the individuals receive? |
37233 | What is such belief worth? |
37233 | What is the meaning of such a limitation? |
37233 | What is the value of this evidence? |
37233 | What kind of evidence then are we permitted decorously to require upon so momentous a subject? |
37233 | What occurred in the interval between the burial and the supposed apparition? |
37233 | What then are these Charismata? |
37233 | What then does Paul himself tell us of the circumstances under which he saw Jesus? |
37233 | What was it the 500 really saw? |
37233 | What was the private utility or advantage of the supernatural gift? |
37233 | What weight can we, then, attach to the representation in the Acts of the Apostles of the conversion of Paul? |
37233 | What were the"Scriptures,"according to which"Christ died for our sins,"and"has been raised the third day?" |
37233 | When Paul says he went up to Jerusalem and communicated"to them"his Gospel, but privately[------], whom does he mean to indicate by the[------]? |
37233 | When he has commenced his own public ministry, Jesus is represented as asking his disciples:--"Who do men say that I am?" |
37233 | Where could so many as 500 disciples have been collected at one time? |
37233 | Where did he get his information regarding the 500 brethren at once? |
37233 | Where, however, are the consequences of this marvellous recognition of the Gentiles? |
37233 | Whose fault is it that two and two do make four and not five? |
37233 | Whose folly is it that it should be more agreeable to think that two and two make five than to know that they only make four? |
37233 | Why did he not consort as before with his disciples? |
37233 | Why should we suppose that which we can not compare more accurate? |
37233 | Why, we may inquire, did Jesus not appear to his{ 550} enemies as well as to his friends? |
37233 | Would anyone believe the affirmation that Alfred the Great, for instance, did not die at all? |
37233 | Would it have been the view of anyone else if it were not that, so far as any external trace of the decree is concerned, it is an absolute myth? |
37233 | and that he who supplies the Spirit"and worketh powers"in them does so? |
37233 | and that this is a necessary inference from their wide adoption? |
37233 | are all powers[------]? |
37233 | are all prophets? |
37233 | are all teachers? |
37233 | are we better? |
37233 | do all interpret?" |
37233 | do all interpret[------]?" |
37233 | do all speak with tongues[------]? |
37233 | have I not seen Jesus our Lord? |
37233 | have I not seen Jesus our Lord?" |
37233 | have we not rather a paraphrase of the words in the Epistle to the Galatians? |
37233 | he continues:"Are ye not my work in the Lord? |
37233 | he indignantly exclaims,"have ye not houses to eat and to drink in? |
37233 | or am I seeking to please men? |
37233 | or despise ye the Church of God?" |
37233 | or did he bid Mary farewell, and leave her like one in the flesh? |
37233 | or did he remain on earth? |
37233 | or doubt that this was simply one of the pious hallucinations which visit those who are in such a state? |
37233 | or that of the Eleven? |
37233 | or the injunction to remain in Jerusalem? |
37233 | or what the profit of circumcision?" |
37233 | that is to say: My God, my God, why didst thou forsake me?" |
37233 | whither he was going? |
37233 | whom seekest thou? |
37233 | why make"as though he would go further?" |
37233 | why pretend ignorance? |
37233 | why were their eyes holden that they should not know him? |
4078 | Ah, what is impossible? |
4078 | Am I really like that? |
4078 | And how did Lady Brandon describe this wonderful young man? 4078 And what do you propose to do?" |
4078 | And what is that? |
4078 | Appreciate it? 4078 At what particular point did you mention the word marriage, Dorian? |
4078 | Before which Dorian? 4078 But do n''t people say that he was murdered?" |
4078 | But do you approve of it, Harry? |
4078 | But suppose, Harry, I became haggard, and gray, and wrinkled? 4078 But surely she did?" |
4078 | But what about my man at the Orleans? |
4078 | But what is the matter? 4078 But why not?" |
4078 | But why should you be annoyed? 4078 But you do n''t really worship him?" |
4078 | But you wo n''t sit to me again? |
4078 | Ca n''t you see your romance in it? |
4078 | Can you move it, covering and all, just as it is? 4078 Did any one call this evening?" |
4078 | Do n''t you like it? |
4078 | Do you mean to say you do n''t like what I did of you? 4078 Do you still refuse to do this, for me?" |
4078 | Do you think my nature so shallow? |
4078 | Dorian Gray? 4078 Five minutes past two? |
4078 | Harry,cried Dorian Gray, coming over and sitting down beside him,"why is it that I can not feel this tragedy as much as I want to? |
4078 | Has he never let you know that? |
4078 | Have you seen her to- day? |
4078 | How did you come across her? |
4078 | How do you mean? |
4078 | How long will your experiment take, Alan? |
4078 | I really want to be alone.--Basil, you do n''t mind my asking you to go? 4078 I shut the window?" |
4078 | I wonder is that really so, Harry? |
4078 | If it is not, what have I to do with it? |
4078 | In this fog, my dear Basil? 4078 Is it really finished?" |
4078 | Is it the real Dorian? |
4078 | Is there a fire in the room up- stairs? |
4078 | Might one look at the work of art, sir? |
4078 | My dear Basil, how do I know? |
4078 | My dear Basil,cried Dorian,"what have you told me? |
4078 | My dear Harry, why? |
4078 | Not send it anywhere? 4078 Remembered what, Harry?" |
4078 | Shall I leave the things here, sir? |
4078 | Sibyl? 4078 So you think that it is only God who sees the soul, Basil? |
4078 | That was at''Lohengrin,''Lady Henry, I think? |
4078 | The old school- room, Master Dorian? 4078 Then why wo n''t you exhibit his portrait?" |
4078 | Then you shall come; and you will come too, Basil, wo n''t you? |
4078 | To whom? |
4078 | Too cold for Monsieur? |
4078 | Understand what? |
4078 | Well, Master Dorian,she said,"what can I do for you? |
4078 | Well, what night shall we go? |
4078 | Well, you do n''t mind my looking at it now? |
4078 | What do you think has happened to Basil? |
4078 | What does it matter? |
4078 | What does this mean? |
4078 | What has the actual lapse of time got to do with it? 4078 What is it all about?" |
4078 | What is it that one was taught to say in one''s boyhood? 4078 What is it? |
4078 | What is that, Harry? |
4078 | What is that? |
4078 | What o''clock is it, Victor? |
4078 | When is she Sibyl Vane? |
4078 | Where shall we put it, sir? |
4078 | Where was it? |
4078 | Where were you yesterday? |
4078 | Who is she? |
4078 | Who would n''t like it? 4078 Whom are you in love with?" |
4078 | Whose house is that, constable? |
4078 | Whose property is it? |
4078 | Why have you changed your mind? 4078 Why have you stopped playing, Dorian? |
4078 | Why, Harry? |
4078 | Why, what did you expect, Dorian? 4078 Why?" |
4078 | Why? |
4078 | Why? |
4078 | Why? |
4078 | Yes, Basil? |
4078 | You are not serious, Dorian? |
4078 | You call yesterday the past? |
4078 | You can dine with me to- night, Dorian, ca n''t you? |
4078 | You do n''t mean to say that Basil has got any passion or any romance in him? |
4078 | You insist on knowing, Basil? |
4078 | You refuse absolutely? |
4078 | You think so? |
4078 | You went to the Opera while Sibyl Vane was lying dead in some sordid lodging? 4078 You went to the Opera?" |
4078 | You will have tea, of course, Dorian? 4078 You will some day, surely?" |
4078 | You wo n''t forget? |
4078 | You wo n''t? 4078 Your letter? |
4078 | Your life? 4078 ''''Ave a box, my lord?'' 4078 ''A dream of form in days of thought,''--who is it who says that? 4078 A sort of brother, I suppose? |
4078 | A wonderful tragic figure? |
4078 | After a few moments he said to him,"Have you really a very bad influence, Lord Henry? |
4078 | After all, what right had he to pry into the life of Dorian Gray? |
4078 | After the coffee had been brought in, he stopped, and, looking over at Lord Henry, said,"Harry, did it ever occur to you that Basil was murdered?" |
4078 | And now tell me,--reach me the matches, like a good boy: thanks,--tell me, what are your relations with Sibyl Vane?" |
4078 | And so will you, Harry? |
4078 | And this murder,--was it to dog him all his life? |
4078 | And why is it so? |
4078 | And, besides, might not his nature grow finer, after all? |
4078 | And, yet, what did it matter? |
4078 | And, yet, what was there to be afraid of? |
4078 | Are they true? |
4078 | Are you ill? |
4078 | Art sounds better, does n''t it?" |
4078 | As bad as Basil says?" |
4078 | At what time shall I be back?" |
4078 | Besides, how do you know that Hetty is n''t floating at the present moment in some mill- pond, with water- lilies round her, like Ophelia?" |
4078 | Besides, was it really under his control? |
4078 | Besides, who would believe him, even if he did confess? |
4078 | But I suppose you will be back soon?" |
4078 | But how are you going to begin?" |
4078 | But the picture? |
4078 | But was it all irretrievable? |
4078 | But what did she say about Mr. Dorian Gray?" |
4078 | But what if, by some fate or deadlier chance, other eyes than his spied behind, and saw the horrible change? |
4078 | But what was that loathsome red dew that gleamed, wet and glistening, on one of the hands, as though the canvas had sweated blood? |
4078 | But when did you first speak to Miss Sibyl Vane?" |
4078 | But where were you? |
4078 | But who could tell? |
4078 | But who drove him to it? |
4078 | But who had done it? |
4078 | But wo n''t you miss your train?" |
4078 | But you do n''t think of living up there, Master Dorian, and you so comfortable here?" |
4078 | But you understand now, do n''t you?" |
4078 | CHAPTER IV[... 32]"I suppose you have heard the news, Basil?" |
4078 | Ca n''t you forgive me for to- night? |
4078 | Ca n''t you see what I am going through? |
4078 | Can she feel, or know, or listen? |
4078 | Can they be true? |
4078 | Can they feel, I wonder, those white silent people we call the dead? |
4078 | Confess? |
4078 | Could it be that what that soul thought, they realized?--that what it dreamed, they made true? |
4078 | Curiosity? |
4078 | Did Sibyl--? |
4078 | Did any one see you going round to her room? |
4078 | Did he leave any message?" |
4078 | Did it mean that he was to confess? |
4078 | Did it merely take cognizance of what passed within the soul? |
4078 | Did n''t you get my letter? |
4078 | Did n''t you recognize me?" |
4078 | Did you go down and see the girl''s mother? |
4078 | Did you make a scene with her?" |
4078 | Did you really see it?" |
4078 | Do n''t you understand? |
4078 | Do you think I am going to peril my reputation for you? |
4078 | Do you think this girl will ever be really contented now with any one of her own rank? |
4078 | Do you?" |
4078 | Even if he told them, would they believe it? |
4078 | Even those that are born in England become foreigners after a time, do n''t they? |
4078 | Evidence? |
4078 | Finally he murmured, in a stifled voice,"Harry, did you say an inquest? |
4078 | Good God, Dorian, is that what you have come to? |
4078 | Gray?" |
4078 | Gray?" |
4078 | Gray?" |
4078 | Gray?" |
4078 | Gray?" |
4078 | Gray?'' |
4078 | Had he been cruel? |
4078 | Had he something of her temperament in him? |
4078 | Had it been merely vanity that had made him do his one good deed? |
4078 | Had it hit the mark? |
4078 | Had it indeed been prayer that had produced the substitution? |
4078 | Had she cursed him, as she died? |
4078 | Had some strange poisonous germ crept from body to body till it had reached his own? |
4078 | Had the lover of Giovanna of Naples bequeathed him some inheritance of sin and shame? |
4078 | Had the portrait really changed? |
4078 | Had there been nothing more in his renunciation than that? |
4078 | Hallward?'' |
4078 | Harry, what shall I do? |
4078 | Have another brandy- and- soda? |
4078 | Have they summoned you?" |
4078 | Have you any reason? |
4078 | His sin? |
4078 | How dare you ask me, of all men in the world, to mix myself up in this horror? |
4078 | How had she played that dreadful scene? |
4078 | How long have you known her?" |
4078 | How long will you like me? |
4078 | How often do you see him?" |
4078 | How should I know? |
4078 | Hypocrisy? |
4078 | I have been right, Basil, have n''t I, to take my love out of poetry, and to find my wife in Shakespeare''s plays? |
4078 | I shall probably have to give it another coat of varnish before that, so I must see it some day, and why not to- day?" |
4078 | I suppose you think me awfully foolish about it?" |
4078 | I wonder can you realize all that that means? |
4078 | I wonder did Chopin write it at Majorca, with the sea weeping round the villa, and the salt spray dashing against the panes? |
4078 | I wonder do I know you? |
4078 | I wonder shall I always be glad?" |
4078 | If it was not true, why trouble about it? |
4078 | If thought could exercise its[ 52] influence upon a living organism, might not thought exercise an influence upon dead and inorganic things? |
4078 | In the present case, what is it that has really happened? |
4078 | Is insincerity such a[ 75] terrible thing? |
4078 | Is n''t there a verse somewhere,''Though your sins be as scarlet, yet I will make them as white as snow''?" |
4078 | Is that very vain of me? |
4078 | Is there a single decent woman in London now who would drive with her in the Park? |
4078 | It seems silly of the French, does n''t it? |
4078 | It was curious my not wanting to know her, was n''t it?" |
4078 | Know you? |
4078 | Makes it quite cosmopolitan, does n''t it? |
4078 | Might there not be some curious scientific reason for it all? |
4078 | Months? |
4078 | My dear fellow, why? |
4078 | Not that you were not always a good boy, sir; but boys will be boys, Master Dorian, and jam is a temptation to the young, is n''t it, sir?" |
4078 | Nothing about politics, I hope? |
4078 | Oh, Dorian, Dorian, you understand now what it all means? |
4078 | Or did you say you had done more than one?" |
4078 | Or had his choice already been made? |
4078 | Or had it been simply his own imagination that had made him see a look of evil where there had been a look of joy? |
4078 | Or shall I write to him?" |
4078 | Or that passion to act a part that sometimes makes us do things finer than we are ourselves? |
4078 | Or the desire of a new sensation, as Lord Henry had hinted, with his mocking laugh? |
4078 | Or was it indifferent to results? |
4078 | Or was that only his fancy? |
4078 | Or was the body really in the soul, as Giordano Bruno thought? |
4078 | Or was there some other, more terrible reason? |
4078 | Or would you like hock- and- seltzer? |
4078 | Or, perhaps, all these? |
4078 | Shall you see Basil between this and then? |
4078 | Should he move it aside, after all? |
4078 | So what does it matter if she plays Juliet like a wooden doll? |
4078 | Somewhere in the Euston Road, is n''t it? |
4078 | Surely a painted canvas could not alter? |
4078 | Surely his prayer had not been answered? |
4078 | Surely it was not still so horrible as it had been? |
4078 | Surely you do n''t think it was a vulgar accident? |
4078 | Tell me, did you go behind and see her after the play was over?" |
4078 | Tell me, is Dorian Gray very fond of you?" |
4078 | The one who is pouring out tea for us, or the one in the picture?" |
4078 | There was nothing else to see?" |
4078 | They all are, are n''t they? |
4078 | To give himself up, and be put to death? |
4078 | Vanity? |
4078 | Was he never to get rid of the past? |
4078 | Was he really to confess? |
4078 | Was it all true? |
4078 | Was it not Gautier who used to write about la consolation des arts? |
4078 | Was it really true that one could never change? |
4078 | Was it to alter now with every mood to which he yielded? |
4078 | Was it young Herbert''s life that he sometimes led? |
4078 | Was that one of the things that life had in store? |
4078 | Was the face on the canvas viler than before? |
4078 | Was the soul a shadow seated in the house of sin? |
4078 | Was the world going[ 56] to be shown his secret? |
4078 | Was there anything so real as words? |
4078 | Was there no hope for him? |
4078 | Was there some subtle affinity between the chemical atoms, that shaped themselves into form and color on the canvas, and the soul that was within him? |
4078 | Were his own actions merely the dreams that the dead man had not dared to realize? |
4078 | Were people to gape at the mystery of his life? |
4078 | What about Adrian Singleton, and his dreadful end? |
4078 | What about Lord Kent''s only son, and his career? |
4078 | What about the young Duke of Perth? |
4078 | What about your country- house, and the life that is led there? |
4078 | What are you now? |
4078 | What are you without your art? |
4078 | What could he do then? |
4078 | What did it matter what happened to the colored image on the canvas? |
4078 | What did it matter? |
4078 | What did it mean? |
4078 | What did it mean? |
4078 | What did she say about it all?" |
4078 | What did you mean by that? |
4078 | What do you think the play was, Harry?" |
4078 | What do you want?" |
4078 | What evidence was there against him? |
4078 | What gentleman would associate with him? |
4078 | What had Dorian Gray to do with Sibyl Vane''s death? |
4078 | What had happened? |
4078 | What had this man''s legacy been? |
4078 | What has become of the Frenchman, by the bye?" |
4078 | What have I to do with the puppets of a play? |
4078 | What if Alan Campbell should be out of England? |
4078 | What if it should be stolen? |
4078 | What is going on in town? |
4078 | What is it but canvas and color? |
4078 | What is it to me what devil''s work you are up to?" |
4078 | What is it to me where she came from? |
4078 | What is marriage? |
4078 | What is the name of the man at Richmond who supplies Selby with orchids?" |
4078 | What is the number of your sister''s box?" |
4078 | What matter what the cost was? |
4078 | What more can you want?" |
4078 | What of George Willoughby, with his powdered hair and fantastic patches? |
4078 | What passions had he bequeathed? |
4078 | What should he do if Basil Hallward came and asked to look at his own picture? |
4078 | What should they know of love? |
4078 | What sort of life has he got now? |
4078 | What then?" |
4078 | What time is it?" |
4078 | What was he doing there? |
4078 | What was he to say of that? |
4078 | What was it to him how vile and full of shame it looked? |
4078 | What was the use of knowing? |
4078 | What was your reason for refusing to exhibit my picture?" |
4078 | Where had they gone to? |
4078 | Where is it? |
4078 | Where was the great crocus- colored robe, on which the gods fought against the giants, that had been worked for Athena? |
4078 | Which is the work of art, sir?" |
4078 | Who could say where the fleshly impulse ceased, or the psychical impulse began? |
4078 | Why did n''t you tell me that the only thing worth loving is an actress?" |
4078 | Why did you paint it? |
4078 | Why do you ask? |
4078 | Why had he been made like that? |
4078 | Why had he kept it so long? |
4078 | Why had he not known it? |
4078 | Why had it altered? |
4078 | Why had it been left for a stranger to reveal him to himself? |
4078 | Why had such a soul been given to him? |
4078 | Why have you pulled the screen in front of it? |
4078 | Why inquire too closely into it? |
4078 | Why is it that so many gentlemen in London will neither go to your house nor invite you to theirs? |
4078 | Why is it, Dorian, that a man like the Duke of Berwick leaves the room of a club when you enter it? |
4078 | Why is your friendship so fateful to young men? |
4078 | Why not let it stay there? |
4078 | Why not? |
4078 | Why should I not love her? |
4078 | Why should he be murdered? |
4078 | Why should he trouble about Sibyl Vane? |
4078 | Why should he watch the hideous corruption of his soul? |
4078 | Why should it keep what I must lose? |
4078 | Why should n''t I look at it?" |
4078 | Why should n''t you look at it? |
4078 | Why was the red stain larger than it had been? |
4078 | Will it always be so? |
4078 | Would he ever look at it again? |
4078 | Would it teach him to loathe his own soul? |
4078 | Would there ever be some one who would fill him with a strange idolatry? |
4078 | Would you think it awfully rude of me if I asked you to go away?" |
4078 | You are dining out, I suppose? |
4078 | You are not jealous of material things, are you?" |
4078 | You can talk to me of other women being charming, and of Patti singing divinely, before the girl you loved has even the quiet of a grave to sleep in? |
4078 | You did n''t see anything else in the picture, did you? |
4078 | You do n''t imagine I let him arrange my room for me? |
4078 | You do n''t really mind, Basil, do you? |
4078 | You have never been to any of my parties, have you, Mr. Gray? |
4078 | You know her shrill horrid voice?" |
4078 | You know her, at any rate, I suppose?" |
4078 | You remember Sibyl, do n''t you? |
4078 | You remember that landscape of mine, for which Agnew offered me such a huge price, but which I would not part with? |
4078 | You shrug your shoulders? |
4078 | You smile? |
4078 | You want to exhibit it?" |
4078 | You wo n''t? |
4078 | [ 20]"My doing?" |
4078 | [ 23]"Not twenty- seven, Lady Henry?" |
4078 | [ 46]"Do you mean about Sibyl Vane?" |
4078 | [ 50]"What was that, Harry?" |
4078 | and what did she say in answer? |
4078 | ca n''t you see that my heart is breaking?" |
4078 | do n''t you see that accursed thing leering at us?" |
4078 | is that his name?" |
4078 | is there no doubt about that?" |
4078 | that is one of Harry''s views, is n''t it, Mr. Gray? |
47555 | A bit of a country town like this, what can you expect from it? 47555 Am I deep?" |
47555 | Am I to be a dustman, or a scavenger, or-- what? |
47555 | And did Erradeen,said Colin to Mrs. Forrester,"let out any of the secrets of his prison- house?" |
47555 | And do you really, really believe in the light? |
47555 | And is Walter one of the disagreeables you would go through? |
47555 | And wha has a word to say gainst that? |
47555 | And wha says that I canna help ye? 47555 And what am I to do? |
47555 | And what did he say to you? 47555 And what is that in a family?" |
47555 | And what was the harm? 47555 And who is Hamish, and who is the leddy? |
47555 | And who''s to carry up my lord''s portmanteau? |
47555 | Are there? 47555 Are we to pass the night here?" |
47555 | Are you packing for me? |
47555 | Ay, sir-- so that''s your opinion? 47555 But I suppose,"said the factor somewhat severely,"that the heir to such a fine property has had some kind of a little training?" |
47555 | But no doubt you have heard of your great ancestor, the warlock- lord? 47555 But that is a false way of speaking too, is n''t it? |
47555 | But you-- can scarcely remember the old coach journeys? 47555 But, Jenny, have you nothing to think of but the cow? |
47555 | Can I tell what that means? 47555 Can you imagine what has happened?" |
47555 | Can you not get at him to speak to him? |
47555 | Dear me,said the lady,"do you mean to tell me that John Bannatyne had that sense in him? |
47555 | Did you ever hear anything so wonderful? |
47555 | Did you ever see so spiritual a night? |
47555 | Do you believe then in-- ghosts? |
47555 | Do you form any theory in your own thoughts, Shaw,said the minister,"as to what it is that makes them so apt to change?" |
47555 | Do you hear that, my lord? |
47555 | Do you mean to say you want to have nothing to do with me? |
47555 | Do you see the chimneys yonder, and the gable end with the crow steps, as they call it, just pushing out among the trees? 47555 Do you think she has indulged him in everything?" |
47555 | Do you think we have a store of young lads like you, that you will risk your life like yon? 47555 Do you think,"she said,"that it would be possible for you to write that letter to Mr. Milnathort of which I have spoken so often, to- day?" |
47555 | Do you want me to begin to do something now,said Walter,"when you have just told me everybody was going to bed?" |
47555 | Do, mamma? 47555 Does this belong to me?" |
47555 | Expected? 47555 For as much as you know, perhaps; but go back three or four generations and how can you tell? |
47555 | Has anything been heard,she said,"of the new lord?" |
47555 | Has he come to bide? |
47555 | Has mamma missed me-- much? |
47555 | Have you got Lord Erradeen with you, Alison? 47555 Have you?" |
47555 | Hoo was I to ken? 47555 How can we do it?" |
47555 | How can we tell? 47555 How could I have any opinion when I have only seen Lord Erradeen twice-- thrice?" |
47555 | How is it done? |
47555 | I do n''t know any of them, unless by work: and how am I to work? 47555 I have never seen it; but you do n''t suppose I am ignorant of the subject, Lord Erradeen? |
47555 | I might with more reason cry out, Is it you, Lord Erradeen? 47555 If I do n''t understand you, I should like to know who does? |
47555 | If I refuse, what then? |
47555 | Is it all my humble history you want me to tell you? |
47555 | Is it you, Miss Forrester? |
47555 | Is n''t it rather late for that? |
47555 | Is that all? |
47555 | Is that why you have said so many things to me about seeing life? 47555 Is that, then,"cried the mother quickly,"the reason of his being here?" |
47555 | Is there anything special in you to disqualify you for doing a disagreeable duty? |
47555 | It is possible, though he did not say so; but even if he does, what can I do? 47555 It will take you from me-- but what of that, if it makes you happy and good? |
47555 | It''s none joking, say ye? 47555 John Shaw, John Shaw,"shrieked Nancy,"do ye see what they''re doing? |
47555 | Lord Erradeen, a minute since you said, was that all? 47555 MOTHER?" |
47555 | May I ask you-- to withdraw or to tell me who you are? |
47555 | My dear, you will be just wet through; and are you sure your boots are thick enough? 47555 Now you will know why I asked you yesterday, Was there any news----""Now I shall know? |
47555 | Oh, Miss Oona, to ask that,cried the woman;"how should we no miss you?" |
47555 | Oh, Nelly, where are you going? |
47555 | Oh, but I want a little more,cried Marjorie Campbell;"that tells nothing; is he fair, or is he dark? |
47555 | Oh, is that you, Jack? |
47555 | Oh, it''ll be my Lord Erradeen? |
47555 | Oh, what would you do being sorry for him? 47555 Oona, my dear, will ye come and tie my bonnet? |
47555 | So then you actually saw something of it yourself? |
47555 | So you object to that? |
47555 | So you''ve come to that already, have you? |
47555 | Suppose young Glenearn should refuse when he comes of age to hear a word about that secret cha''mer----"What would happen? |
47555 | Thank you, Macalister, you shall find me grateful,said Walter;"but who was this lady? |
47555 | That is Miss Oona of the Isle,said the landlady;"but as I was saying, sir, about the beds----""Are the islands inhabited then?" |
47555 | The light? |
47555 | There''s my father with the factor and twa- three strange men,said the girl,"and oh, what will they be wanting here?" |
47555 | They will tell ye it can not be-- so how can you see it? 47555 To whom am I supposed to be about to yield?" |
47555 | To work on-- whose imagination? 47555 Very little, Miss Oona, only that he''s a young lad from the south with no experience, and didna even know that he was the heir; so how could he ken? |
47555 | Was I a simpleton? |
47555 | Well, what does that matter? 47555 What are ye biding there for in the dark?" |
47555 | What are you going to do? 47555 What can prevent? |
47555 | What crofters? 47555 What do you mean by a phenomenon?" |
47555 | What do you want with cards? |
47555 | What does it matter about to- morrow? |
47555 | What does it mean? |
47555 | What has become of the young man? 47555 What is he saying?" |
47555 | What is it for? 47555 What is it supposed to mean?" |
47555 | What is the meaning of all this? |
47555 | What is there about to- morrow? 47555 What is there to settle?" |
47555 | What kind of person is he, Mrs. Forrester? 47555 What penalties? |
47555 | What was the cause of his death? 47555 What will we do with the bairns? |
47555 | Where are you going, my young gentleman? 47555 Where did you hear?" |
47555 | Where the lady fell? |
47555 | Who are you? |
47555 | Who are you? |
47555 | Who is that young lady that has just gone away? |
47555 | Who says they can not see it? |
47555 | Why did n''t you tell me then? |
47555 | Why did you let it be done? |
47555 | Why do you stop here, then? |
47555 | Why must you always have something to say to him when every one else is going to bed? |
47555 | Why should you think I am an authority on the subject? |
47555 | Why should your mamma faint when she heard of it, July? 47555 Will ye no''be letting him see''t?" |
47555 | Will you be going north, sir? |
47555 | Will you do it, then? 47555 Will you excuse my rising-- for I''m a great invalid-- and come and sit down here beside me? |
47555 | Would it be for my good to be an unnatural cad? |
47555 | Would it be he by any chance of whom Mr. Bannatyne was discoursing to me,said Walter,"under the title of the warlock- lord?" |
47555 | Ye would pass her by upon the road, Miss Oona,the old woman said,"and how would ye think she was looking? |
47555 | Years-- years; did I no say years? 47555 You are not a sceptic then?" |
47555 | You are very sure that it is your own house? 47555 You believe in things you can not see? |
47555 | You do n''t like your privileges invaded? |
47555 | You need not wait,Walter said; and then, with an instinct which he was half ashamed of, he asked hurriedly,"Whereabouts do you sleep?" |
47555 | You thought it might keep others off that were more eligible? 47555 You were not in the secret that it was you who were the kin? |
47555 | Your family then is a Scotch family? |
47555 | Your lordship will be wanting something? |
47555 | _ My_ coming? |
47555 | And do you mean to say they_ live_ there, on that rock, in winter, so far north?" |
47555 | And he''s feared ill will come of it; but I say the new lord, no''bein''here away nor of this country at all, how is he to ken?" |
47555 | And his? |
47555 | And may I always speak to you when I meet you, though you are such a grand personage? |
47555 | And so you saw the lodging of Methven? |
47555 | And where is Hamish? |
47555 | And you will have time to think and answer this question: Is it too late now?" |
47555 | Angry, baffled, helpless, what could she do? |
47555 | Are there giants to encounter or magicians? |
47555 | Are you sure it will be for your comfort to have me with you at all? |
47555 | Are you sure you will not take a cup of tea before you go? |
47555 | But has there not been trouble, Jenny, about your rent or something?" |
47555 | But how find his way out of the perplexity? |
47555 | But she answered very steadily, with much suppressed feeling in her tone--"What do you call believing?" |
47555 | But what does it mean, when all''s done? |
47555 | But what was the use of making a fuss and betraying himself to a stranger? |
47555 | But who are they, and what are they? |
47555 | Could anybody suppose he could do it? |
47555 | Dear me, they will all be saying who has Mrs. Forrester got with her?" |
47555 | Did Underwood,_ too_, think him a child not able to guide himself? |
47555 | Did he ever speculate upon Walter as Walter was now doing upon him? |
47555 | Did it not make your heart sick to see all the poverty and misery in that awful street? |
47555 | Did she intend to strike that_ coup_ for herself which her mother was not to be trusted to make? |
47555 | Did that unknown know who was to succeed him? |
47555 | Did ye never hear the tale of the leddy that fell off the castle wall?" |
47555 | Do n''t you remember? |
47555 | Do ye hear me speak? |
47555 | Do ye think then, Oona, that he has no manners, or that he''s ignorant how to behave? |
47555 | Do you ever get frozen here?" |
47555 | Do you know I have been here stretched out in my chair these thirty years? |
47555 | Do you mean me to believe that_ you_ had any hand in it?" |
47555 | Do you really think it is too late? |
47555 | Do you think you would care to go there now, or wait till the weather is better? |
47555 | Does one go there by water too?" |
47555 | He asked himself again what would come of it? |
47555 | He came half way up the stairs and called"Mother, where are you?" |
47555 | He cast a look at Oona, in which with more reason than usual his eyes said, How could you do it? |
47555 | He is Lord Erradeen----""Lord what?" |
47555 | He longed to take her by the shoulders, and cry,"What is it? |
47555 | He said quickly--"That does not please you? |
47555 | He said, almost with awe--"Is this supposed to be done by me? |
47555 | He said, half to himself,"What would my mother say?" |
47555 | He stepped in front of the man and asked,"What does this mean?" |
47555 | He turn the cottagers out of their poor little homes for the sake of a few pounds more or less of which he stood in no need? |
47555 | He was no better than they were-- who could tell? |
47555 | He''s just got it on him----''""What does that mean?" |
47555 | How am I to give him the message when it was never given to me? |
47555 | How could you let me do such a silly thing, Oona, my dear?" |
47555 | How did you leave the old ladies, my excellent boy?" |
47555 | I do n''t a bit; what do you mean? |
47555 | I know all that as well as you; but what can I do? |
47555 | I never catch cold; and besides, if I did, what would it matter? |
47555 | I should like to know in the first place what there is in you which makes it impossible to act with justice in certain circumstances?" |
47555 | I wonder you do: why do you? |
47555 | If he had come in would she have been able to restrain herself? |
47555 | Is everything the same-- one way or another-- and nothing to show for it all, when it is over, but tediousness and discontent?" |
47555 | Is there nothing but dulness in life? |
47555 | It is all very well to speak, but what is a poor girl to do? |
47555 | It is such an auld, auld story; how can the like of you say what should be done?" |
47555 | It must be disinterested, for what could he do for anybody? |
47555 | It roused-- was it a faint thrill of hope in the general despair? |
47555 | It will not be true then, that the time of grace is over, and that the sheriff''s officers are coming to turn you all out?" |
47555 | It''s Dumas''s you''re reading? |
47555 | John Bannatyne took that upon him?" |
47555 | Letters? |
47555 | Loafing means no harm, does it, Colin? |
47555 | Miss Oona, Miss Oona, will you just be standing by, like nothing at all, and letting them tak''my coo? |
47555 | Moral applause, indeed, may be taken with composure, but who could hear himself applauded for his whist- playing without an exhilaration of the heart? |
47555 | Mr. Shaw wishes, if Lord Erradeen comes to bid us good- bye that we should tell him----""Yes?" |
47555 | No doubt he would come back some time and see her; but after all why should her life be unsettled because his was changed? |
47555 | Now that one that they tell me is in the Canongate-- that about''Live, Me''even--''""I thought you said you did n''t know it?" |
47555 | Oh, Oona, my dear, is that you? |
47555 | On one occasion he even went so far as to ask sharply,"Is it you, Symington?" |
47555 | Perhaps it has not struck you? |
47555 | Pull down the house, said he? |
47555 | Should he voluntarily make himself a party to it, and walk into the snare with his eyes open? |
47555 | Simon Fraser''s wife, she who had been washing, called out that it was Duncan talking to the factor; but who were those other men? |
47555 | So are there corpse- candles, if I''m not mistaken, seen by the initiated upon your burial isle-- what do you call it?" |
47555 | Speak plainly, I want to know what the mystery is; why am I here in this tumble- down old place?" |
47555 | Supposing, for the sake of argument, you were to come in to your fortune more speedily, I wonder what you would do with it-- eh? |
47555 | The letter was not written, but what did that matter? |
47555 | The messenger was gone; the thing which he had brought with him, did that remain? |
47555 | The rent had failed, for how was money to be had on these levels? |
47555 | The turf?" |
47555 | Then he added hurriedly with a slight swerve aside, and trembling in his voice,"Do you think I might come with you? |
47555 | Then it is all true?" |
47555 | There is a mysterious house they have-- You would think I was an idiot if I told you half the stories I have heard----""About the Erradeens?" |
47555 | They asked"_ What_ was he going to do?" |
47555 | This the proud woman had made up her mind to, with what depth of wounded tenderness and embittered affection who could say? |
47555 | Was Walter going unwarned, in the elation and happy confidence of his heart, into some danger unknown and unforeseen? |
47555 | Was it conceivable that it was now fixed and certain not to be affected by anything that could be done or said? |
47555 | Was it his jokes? |
47555 | Was it possible that somebody was there? |
47555 | Was it possible? |
47555 | Was it to light the lights? |
47555 | Was it worth while for this to waste his time, to offend the opinion of all his friends? |
47555 | What am I to do? |
47555 | What am I to do?" |
47555 | What am I to do?" |
47555 | What can I work at? |
47555 | What can you know about them? |
47555 | What could be expected? |
47555 | What did they take him for? |
47555 | What has spelling to do with it? |
47555 | What have you got to say to me? |
47555 | What if he broke the spell peremptorily and retired to the ruddy fireside of the inn and defied family tradition? |
47555 | What is it for, and who has the doing of it? |
47555 | What is it to him? |
47555 | What is the reason? |
47555 | What law could force him to observe an antiquated superstition? |
47555 | What news should there be in this dead- alive place?" |
47555 | What right have ye in my hoose? |
47555 | What says he? |
47555 | What thoughts, what suggestions, were being placed before him? |
47555 | What wad I be thinking about but the coo? |
47555 | What was it? |
47555 | What would I care if it was just to me? |
47555 | What would happen, I wonder, if I did n''t?" |
47555 | What would have become of me if they had ta''en the coo? |
47555 | What would have come of you yoursel'', that is the maister of a'', if auld Sandy Macalister had not been there?" |
47555 | What would you have me to do?" |
47555 | What, out of his great fortune, his peerage, his elevation in the world? |
47555 | When he came in sight of the house, however, he became aware insensibly, he could scarcely tell how, of some change in its aspect: what was it? |
47555 | When the son of a cobbler is just as likely to come to high command as your son or mine, what is to become of the country?" |
47555 | Which was it? |
47555 | Who might be with him at that moment in the ghostly quiet? |
47555 | Who should prevent him from doing what he liked with his old house? |
47555 | Who was he? |
47555 | Who will tell you if it''s one or if it''s the other? |
47555 | Who would joke on such a subject? |
47555 | Why should I send that obsolete old flag to Windsor?'' |
47555 | Why should he be afraid? |
47555 | Why should they? |
47555 | Why should we call the poor people so who are only-- dead?" |
47555 | Why should you insist so upon it now?" |
47555 | Why, indeed, should she change her home at her time of life? |
47555 | Why? |
47555 | Will I wait upon your lordship till you''re inclined for your bed? |
47555 | Will you really do it, and do it to- day?" |
47555 | Wish him well out of it? |
47555 | Would Miss Oona like to go? |
47555 | Would Mrs. Forrester have me at the Isle?" |
47555 | Would it have been better if he had told her? |
47555 | Would n''t you rather be free, and make your own arrangements, and leave me-- as I am?" |
47555 | Would she not have fallen upon him, either in anger or in grief, holding up to him the examples of young Wynn and young Jeremy and the little doctor? |
47555 | Would you turn the weans out on the hill and the auld folk? |
47555 | Yes? |
47555 | You are just going across by the ferry, and then driving? |
47555 | You are not quite the simpleton you used to be, do you think you are?" |
47555 | You do n''t want any more of my revelations? |
47555 | You have never been here before? |
47555 | You mean to have it restored and made into a piece of sham antiquity-- if nothing prevents?" |
47555 | You never heard of that? |
47555 | You will come back to me with a heavy cold, and then what shall we all do? |
47555 | You will perhaps be more interested in the family legends, Lord Erradeen?" |
47555 | Your name, your object?" |
47555 | and how are you and he getting on together?" |
47555 | and the bits of plenishing?" |
47555 | and then of course he would be piqued( for he''s very generous), and say,''Why?'' |
47555 | and then?" |
47555 | and to what purpose? |
47555 | and what else could I give my attention to, considering all things? |
47555 | and what is he intending? |
47555 | and what is the question and where is the Truach- Glas?" |
47555 | and why does he shut himself up and let all the business hang suspended like yon fellow Machomet''s coffin?" |
47555 | and with what object?" |
47555 | any news?" |
47555 | are you here?" |
47555 | by whom? |
47555 | can your young eyes not read the motto that many people have found so significant? |
47555 | could it be? |
47555 | cried Mysie,"but would you wait for that? |
47555 | cried Oona;"how are we to see Lord Erradeen? |
47555 | cried the factor, suddenly,"what are you doing? |
47555 | do n''t you know why? |
47555 | he said,"then it was not such a surprise to you as people thought? |
47555 | he said;"do you mean the sort of thing that happens in Ireland?" |
47555 | hoo was I to ken? |
47555 | or rather what are crofters? |
47555 | said Miss Milnathort, with a tone of surprise,"and how may that be? |
47555 | said Walter, not paying much attention;"and where is she going? |
47555 | said Walter;"and where is Kinloch Houran? |
47555 | said the young man, with rising indignation--"a heartless, ill- conditioned whelp, with no sense and no feeling? |
47555 | she said;"or will you be biding for the night? |
47555 | she shrieked,"will ye break into my hoose? |
47555 | that there''s a queer kind of a glimmer up upon the auld tower? |
47555 | two or three days ago, did you say?" |
47555 | what will we do with Granny? |
47555 | where would you have them get the siller? |
47555 | would anybody believe it? |
47556 | Ah, is n''t it? 47556 Am I Scotch?" |
47556 | And I,said the young man in the same suppressed voice,"shall I too fall into a melancholy way?" |
47556 | And Mr. Williamson-- no, it is not distinguished as names go-- has a daughter, Lord Erradeen? |
47556 | And do you mean to say,cried Katie, with indignation,"that an old silly story will bring him-- and not me? |
47556 | And does your lordship think,he said,"that it would be befitting to take a young lad, ignorant of the family,_ up yonder_?" |
47556 | And if he is afraid why should not he turn to a woman? |
47556 | And may I ask why you did that without consulting me; and what you are doing here? |
47556 | And to which class does Miss Williamson belong? |
47556 | And what good has it all done? |
47556 | And what happens? |
47556 | And what have ye been making of yourself all this time? |
47556 | And what is the ordinary lot of mankind? |
47556 | And when shall I see this-- nymph is she, or water goddess? |
47556 | And why? |
47556 | Are you going with us to the theatre to see the_ Falcon_, Lord Erradeen? |
47556 | Are you happy yourself,he said, suddenly,"that you recommend this to me?" |
47556 | At school, at home, abroad, in all relations? 47556 But-- what you expected has not been realised? |
47556 | Can I tell? 47556 Can a grandfather inherit what was given to his descendants?" |
47556 | Can anything be better than friendly? |
47556 | Did you hear papa? |
47556 | Do n''t you hear that? |
47556 | Do n''t you know that it will never come to an end unless you stand by me? |
47556 | Do ye think so, my young lord? 47556 Do you call this a wild part of the country, Miss Williamson? |
47556 | Do you expect Miss Forrester this afternoon? |
47556 | Do you know,he said at last,"what I have come from to your kind, sheltering house, Mrs. Forrester? |
47556 | Do you mean to say that I too have been in a woman''s hands? 47556 Do you mean-- that there has never been such a pair to do what you say?" |
47556 | Do you not see,he said,"that he wants to take you from me, to drive you away, to have me at his mercy? |
47556 | Do you think so, Lord Erradeen? 47556 Do you think so?" |
47556 | Do you think we may say she is a nymph, Lord Erradeen? 47556 Have ye not enough grouse of your own, Tom Campbell?" |
47556 | Have you been home to see your mother? |
47556 | How can I tell you now while he sits there? |
47556 | How could she think of me at all? 47556 How did you like Kinloch Houran?" |
47556 | How do you do? 47556 How is it possible you have not heard? |
47556 | How should it be in order with so much to think of? 47556 I am called--?" |
47556 | I have heard all this before,said Katie, with a slight impatience,"but what has that to do with it? |
47556 | I suppose you are of a different opinion? |
47556 | I think you will-- for why? 47556 I wonder,"he said,"if I pretend to be better than I am? |
47556 | I, Walter? |
47556 | In God''s name,he exclaimed,"what have you to do here?" |
47556 | Is it any one I know? 47556 Is it not instinctive in us to know that if we behave badly, the consequences will be bad one way or another? |
47556 | It is all these boys are ever good for,she said,"and why would you stop them? |
47556 | It was lovely enough if you like, but I hate the place; is n''t that enough? 47556 Lord, man, take a special!--what need to hurry? |
47556 | My good Symington,said Mrs. Methven,"do you think it is necessary to excuse my son to me? |
47556 | Of Lord Erradeen? |
47556 | Of whom are you speaking, Walter? |
47556 | Oh yes, a lady in Scotland, whose wealth is untold; has n''t Lord Erradeen told you? 47556 Oh, do you think so? |
47556 | Perhaps you believe in the Warlock lord? |
47556 | Perhaps_ he_ believes in him? 47556 Punishment-- who can punish you? |
47556 | Supposing ye were rich and great that are at present nobody in particular, what would ye do? 47556 Tell me, have you seen a great deal of her? |
47556 | There is a party, I suppose? |
47556 | To betray me into wickedness? |
47556 | To get away from-- whom? |
47556 | Walter, what is this? 47556 Well, Walter?" |
47556 | What did he deserve? 47556 What do you mean by courting? |
47556 | What do you think? |
47556 | What do you want my opinion about? |
47556 | What have you to do with my going north? |
47556 | What is it? |
47556 | What is the best he could have done? |
47556 | What is the joke? |
47556 | What is the use of being a poet, as you call it, if ye can not find some other way and not break their hearts? 47556 What is the_ Falcon_?" |
47556 | What must I do then? |
47556 | What sort of thing? |
47556 | What was you saying about a gentleman, Miss Oona? 47556 Where has he gone?" |
47556 | Which is the vulgar expression? |
47556 | Who are you,his antagonist said, or seemed to say,"to take refuge with a pure woman, you who have never been pure? |
47556 | Who are you? |
47556 | Who can tell? |
47556 | Who do you suppose that will be at this time of the year? |
47556 | Who is he? 47556 Who is it?" |
47556 | Why not give Tom Patterson his farm too? 47556 Why should it not be I? |
47556 | Why should you think I can get my way? 47556 Why?" |
47556 | Will I keep you for the night? 47556 Will not be_ allowed_? |
47556 | Will she touch your hand when she knows what it has clasped before? |
47556 | Will you come with me outside? |
47556 | You are not going to wash your hands of it, after all? |
47556 | You are-- Fraser-- of that glen up there? 47556 You have not seen it nor heard of it? |
47556 | You know her? |
47556 | You think then that I stand in need of a good influence? |
47556 | You will bid me tell Boccaccio next? |
47556 | You''ll no be going north again, my lord, as well as I can reckon, for nigh upon another year? |
47556 | You? 47556 ''Where are you, where are you? 47556 A little of his favourite cheese? 47556 A little salad? 47556 A lovers''quarrel, that was what the man meant; and who was he that he should venture to assume that Lord Erradeen was his daughter''s lover? 47556 About what? 47556 After all, why should he be his own master, why claim the right to judge for himself? 47556 Afterwards you may ask yourself, have you really heard and seen? 47556 Ah, I wonder if this was part of the penalty? 47556 Ah, what preacher can know that as he does? 47556 All her urgency about his dinner, was it not to spare him the questions which she knew he did not love? 47556 And his mother-- what would she do? 47556 And how are you this morning, my Lord Erradeen? 47556 And how could a man who has any sense allow himself to be led into that? |
47556 | And how do you like Auchnasheen? |
47556 | And if he made up his mind to a step which had so many advantages, would it not in some sort be the signing of a treaty, the establishment of peace? |
47556 | And if this was absurd to think of in any case, how much more in her own? |
47556 | And is everything made smooth for you by the remittal of the rent?" |
47556 | And now he had escaped-- had he escaped? |
47556 | And now what was to be his next step? |
47556 | And she turned to Walter with equally marked meaning,"Have you seen the Forresters since you came, Lord Erradeen?" |
47556 | And so you have come home?" |
47556 | And the last night we met another girl, who took hold of him as some girls do-- you know? |
47556 | And things are so funny in this world: everything about ourselves is so droll--""What is that you are saying about being droll, Katie?" |
47556 | And what could he do? |
47556 | And what if Lord Erradeen had a few hundred crofters instead of half- a- dozen? |
47556 | And what was it they thought of you?" |
47556 | And what was our pickle siller to the like of you? |
47556 | And where did you foregather, you two? |
47556 | And where have you been, and what have you been doing? |
47556 | And why is it? |
47556 | And would God attend to that coward''s appeal made only when everything else failed? |
47556 | And would she understand him if he did so? |
47556 | Applaud what? |
47556 | Are you better?" |
47556 | Are you coming with us? |
47556 | Are you engaged out to your dinner, gentlemen, may I ask, or are ye free to take pot luck? |
47556 | Are you satisfied with your position now? |
47556 | Are you stepping my way? |
47556 | Are you unhappy too, Lord Erradeen? |
47556 | Are you well? |
47556 | As for me-- what am I that I should express any feeling? |
47556 | At last"Why should she be sorry?" |
47556 | Auchnasheen is very nice, and you ought to know your neighbours, do n''t you think, Lord Erradeen? |
47556 | Auchnasheen, then, was that better? |
47556 | But I said all through that it was impossible, and I just wrote to you last night( you would get my letter?) |
47556 | But Lord Erradeen, since you are here, will you not stay a little longer, and get your dinner before you go? |
47556 | But how could I help him, lying crushed and broken here? |
47556 | But how-- but how? |
47556 | But if he brought Katie into the family, what would it matter about these small things? |
47556 | But oh, how hard to be like that and to find the other? |
47556 | But what am I to do? |
47556 | But what did that matter to him who knew nobody? |
47556 | But whether it was a demon or an angel that had thus got entrance into that little home of peace and security-- who could tell? |
47556 | But why should she be pretty? |
47556 | But why, why should a thing so simple have brought upon her all this that followed? |
47556 | But you will stay to your lunch? |
47556 | Can we go out the other way?" |
47556 | Contempt, envy, the wonder of the wise over the everlasting, inexplicable superiority of the innocent, were these the sentiments with which he gazed? |
47556 | Could he do nothing without having this family mystery-- family absurdity-- thrust into his face? |
47556 | Did I tempt you to evil before ever you heard of me?" |
47556 | Did he think it likely that he, a stranger, a person whom the better people disapproved, should be chosen as the confidant of Lord Erradeen? |
47556 | Did she ever think of him now? |
47556 | Did she remember him at all? |
47556 | Did she? |
47556 | Did you ever hear of a similar case? |
47556 | Did you laugh? |
47556 | Do n''t you feel alarmed lest we should rush at you and tear you to pieces, and divide your spoils? |
47556 | Do n''t you know it''s always like that in life?" |
47556 | Do n''t you know that lovely story? |
47556 | Do n''t you know that the aim and object of every rational being now is to make a little Victorian house look like a big Queen Anne one? |
47556 | Do n''t you see there is a tiff, a kind of a coolness, and it is just making matters worse? |
47556 | Do n''t you think she is the very person, Lord Erradeen? |
47556 | Do n''t you think so, Lord Erradeen?" |
47556 | Do you feel up to it?" |
47556 | Do you know that he is a man like ourselves? |
47556 | Do you know what everybody, even your daughter, thought of me two hours ago?" |
47556 | Do you think it is agreeable to me to be the progenitor of a race of nobodies? |
47556 | Do you think otherwise that they would be allowed to breed like_ that_, and eat up everything that grows?" |
47556 | Do you think that is too easy? |
47556 | Duncan''s first impulse was to say, What is that to you, I would like to ken? |
47556 | Everything is ready: if it''s not all spoiled?" |
47556 | Give them their land if you like( if it was not criminal to cut a slice out of an estate), it does not matter much; but if there were a hundred? |
47556 | God''s will, what had that to do with petty schemes to enrich a family? |
47556 | Had Katie had a mother, perhaps it would not have been; but even in that case, why not? |
47556 | Had ever any young peer with means to keep up his rank, been in such a position before? |
47556 | Had he exercised no coercion over the race, had the Methvens been left to their own devices, how much of them would have remained now? |
47556 | Had he seen Jeremy''s new turn- out? |
47556 | Had she not rather dismissed that little episode from her mind like a dream? |
47556 | Has it been raining all the way? |
47556 | Have you ever come to a blank wall like me-- have you ever been abandoned by every hope? |
47556 | He asked in a hesitating manner,"Did ye ring, my lord? |
47556 | He could not go to her; and to whom could he go? |
47556 | He said after a pause,"And Walter--? |
47556 | How could I tell from that how he would behave to a girl? |
47556 | How do you do, Cousin Sophy? |
47556 | How many names would you like me to produce? |
47556 | How was it possible then that she could have come to any permanent harm in two or three days? |
47556 | How was it to be done then? |
47556 | How was it? |
47556 | I hear it''s a fine hunting country: and for a young gentleman like you with nothing to do----""Do n''t you think I can manage my own affairs best?" |
47556 | I mean her no harm-- why should I harm her? |
47556 | I suppose you know them? |
47556 | I want you to tell me if you are contented now, and happy in your glen-- now that you are free of all your trouble about rent?" |
47556 | If he had fallen in love, did not that account for everything? |
47556 | If he had this freedom fully, what would he do with it? |
47556 | If love had, indeed, done all this for him, struggling against every vulgar influence, must it not, then, be capable of much more-- indeed, of all? |
47556 | If, as you say, you have lived for centuries impossibly, how have you done it? |
47556 | Indeed, now that I think of it, it would have been mean of her to be pretty-- and is it all settled?" |
47556 | Is Circe''s island shut to all footsteps save yours? |
47556 | Is it all settled? |
47556 | Is it worth living so long only to know that you are embracing mediocrity after all, that you have nothing to rise to? |
47556 | Is that all you know?" |
47556 | Is thy servant a dog that he should do this thing?" |
47556 | It is a horror to me; and then if all that is true----How is it possible that one man should lord it over an entire race for so long? |
47556 | It is not often that a man is equally intimate with two distinct branches of a family, is it? |
47556 | It was he, not she, who wanted help-- what did it matter which it was? |
47556 | It was not love: what was it? |
47556 | It was not the fashion, he said to himself, with a laugh; but what did the young fellow come for so constantly if it were not Katie? |
47556 | It was only when her father called loudly,"Katie, Katie, do you not see Lord Erradeen?" |
47556 | It''s all entailed, every inch of the land, and he can not do it; but supposing he could, and that he were treating them all equally? |
47556 | Katie, was that her name? |
47556 | Neither God''s nor Oona''s-- and who, then, was to help him? |
47556 | No? |
47556 | No? |
47556 | Not afford it? |
47556 | Now how is that? |
47556 | Now what does it mean? |
47556 | Of course you were at Auchnasheen? |
47556 | Oh yes-- what do you call those classical ladies that take care of the water-- Naiads? |
47556 | Oh, do n''t you know about Miss Williamson? |
47556 | Oh, more than well!--for was not this the thing of all others that was good for her, that would put the matter on the easiest footing? |
47556 | Oh, you are going my way? |
47556 | Oona, my dear, will you tell Mysie?--where is Mysie? |
47556 | Or was it to have another chapter? |
47556 | Perhaps you think I do n''t know? |
47556 | Shall it be medià ¦ val or renaissance? |
47556 | She asked him if he would not have a little more, just this little piece which was very nicely done? |
47556 | She said,"Did n''t you know?" |
47556 | She said,"Will you ring for dinner, papa?" |
47556 | She went on cleverly without a pause--"You wonder what I should do with it? |
47556 | So long as he is what he is-- nothing: and how shall he be made other than what he is? |
47556 | So you are coming with us, Lord Erradeen? |
47556 | Some of the vegetables which were better cooked than usual? |
47556 | Some stewed fruit with that Devonshire cream which he used to like? |
47556 | Suppose he should ask her to believe in the Warlock lord? |
47556 | Tell me, who was it?" |
47556 | That beautiful lady who is so much above me, or the great poet who is above all? |
47556 | That great ball at the French Embassy that everybody was talking about-- of course he had been one of the guests? |
47556 | That kind of story should never be brought to the literal, do you think it should?" |
47556 | The House of Commons might be something, but the House of Lords was nothing; and why should a man trouble himself to become a member of it? |
47556 | The kind water, and the daylight, and you-- but how should_ you_ feel it? |
47556 | The laughter and the noise, who was it that called them the crackling of thorns-- a hasty momentary blaze that neither warmed nor lighted? |
47556 | Then what must the cultivated portions look like? |
47556 | There is scarcely a fool in the world that does not know that-- but what difference does it make? |
47556 | They say it always rains-- and the place very dull, of course, so far in the wilds? |
47556 | This will be your first visit to the loch? |
47556 | To play with fire and Julia, or to take himself out of harm''s way? |
47556 | Two or three days-- what was that to fix the colour of a life? |
47556 | Walter cried, between laughter and wrath;"how do you know that you are to bide anywhere, or that I mean you to stay with me at all?" |
47556 | Was he a world behind his younger companion who glanced at him with a sensation of mingled shame, contempt, and respect, or was he a world above him? |
47556 | Was he only moaning as a dumb creature moans? |
47556 | Was he talking to himself? |
47556 | Was he there still, though no one could see him? |
47556 | Was it Oona''s presence that explained all, or was there something more subtle underneath? |
47556 | Was it the only alternative? |
47556 | Was it, perhaps, the beginning of the fulfilment of that threat that everything would go ill with him, which had been made at Kinloch Houran? |
47556 | Was not this the picture you wanted to see?" |
47556 | Was the decoration of the new dining- room so magnificent as people said? |
47556 | Was the weather then so bad? |
47556 | Was this spell to take possession of her again, against her will, without any wish of his, like some enchantment? |
47556 | We must get him better of his cold, or what will his mother think? |
47556 | Well, did you like Lord Innishouran? |
47556 | What are you saying, Katie, my dear? |
47556 | What could I answer to that? |
47556 | What could he say? |
47556 | What could it be else? |
47556 | What could it be else?" |
47556 | What did Lord Erradeen care for young Jeremy''s phaeton or the high- stepping mare? |
47556 | What did it all mean? |
47556 | What did it matter? |
47556 | What did it mean? |
47556 | What did that poor little woman in Edinburgh say to you?" |
47556 | What did the fellow mean? |
47556 | What do you_ think_? |
47556 | What does that mean? |
47556 | What had he to do with the best and highest things, with freedom and love? |
47556 | What is it? |
47556 | What is the etiquette on such an occasion, Miss Williamson? |
47556 | What is there in heaven or earth that will prevent him from doing all over again what he has done before, the moment his circumstances permit it? |
47556 | What right had he to think of Oona? |
47556 | What was it but a solemn farce when you came to look into it? |
47556 | What was it to her if it came to an end or not? |
47556 | What was she thinking then, he wondered? |
47556 | What was the good of going on with it day after day? |
47556 | What was the good of it, indeed? |
47556 | What was to be the next chapter in it? |
47556 | What were you before? |
47556 | What were you going to do with yourself? |
47556 | What will you do, Underwood? |
47556 | What would Julia Herbert say? |
47556 | What would Sloebury think of those things that had been so real to him, that had rent his very being asunder? |
47556 | What would remain? |
47556 | When are you going to take your seat and help to rule your country? |
47556 | When did you come? |
47556 | Where has he gone? |
47556 | Which of them, if they knew all about it, as I do, would pick up that life and unite their own to it? |
47556 | Who is your nearest neighbour in your old castle, Lord Erradeen?" |
47556 | Who knows what decayed things are there? |
47556 | Who says they do not believe in it?" |
47556 | Who was he, to expect that Oona would meet him, that the angels would come again to his succour? |
47556 | Who was he? |
47556 | Who was he? |
47556 | Who was this man then who held a sort of court in Kinloch Houran, and demanded obedience from its proprietor? |
47556 | Why should I offend you?" |
47556 | Why should he refrain from visiting his country neighbours? |
47556 | Why should it make any difference to her that he had come and gone? |
47556 | Why should n''t I? |
47556 | Why should such a thing be? |
47556 | Why should you be so anxious to go? |
47556 | Why then should Lord Erradeen take the trouble to sue and wait for admittance elsewhere with these doors so open to him? |
47556 | Why was he in Underwood''s company? |
47556 | Why was it? |
47556 | Will you keep me for the night? |
47556 | Will you take anything? |
47556 | With a slight pause of indignant yet gentle reproach, after these words, he added--"Will your lordship wear a white tie or a black?" |
47556 | Wo n''t you sit down?" |
47556 | Would Oona have given him that hand of hers, had she known how his was stained? |
47556 | Would he dine there to- morrow, next day? |
47556 | Would it be correct for me, a mere man, to introduce two ladies to each other? |
47556 | Would it have been better to be born like that to daily labour and an unawakened intelligence? |
47556 | You knew the Williamsons, I suppose, before? |
47556 | You meant to pay your respects to mamma? |
47556 | You seem to know the lady very well, Lord Erradeen?" |
47556 | You think perhaps she is too good even to wish to come? |
47556 | You will agree with me: why then should there be any controversy between us? |
47556 | You will be back no doubt, if not sooner, in time for the grouse?" |
47556 | You will come? |
47556 | You will have been travelling night and day?" |
47556 | and are you just keeping it up as it was in the old lord''s time? |
47556 | and does she love you like that?" |
47556 | and how is Mary Fleming, the housekeeper, that was always an ailing body?" |
47556 | and since when, may I ask, have you been so kind as to want to know me? |
47556 | and where are you? |
47556 | and,"according to all the rules?" |
47556 | but if there were a hundred? |
47556 | but what then? |
47556 | cried Lord Innishouran, startled,"did Katie divine that? |
47556 | cried Oona, starting to her feet,"or for the principle, as you call it? |
47556 | cried Oona, with a violent blush,"if you think that I would submit to be a candidate-- a competitor-- for any man to choose----""How can you help it?" |
47556 | cried Walter--"if you are a man-- would you hurt her for succouring me? |
47556 | has he killed the hawk? |
47556 | he cried;"and why, in the name of God, do you thus torment and afflict a whole race?" |
47556 | he would say to himself, what was happening to him? |
47556 | how did it end?" |
47556 | is it a tiff?" |
47556 | is there any one on the loch, or near it, that does n''t know her?" |
47556 | none the worse of that_ Falcon_? |
47556 | or had he departed only to return again when Symington and the meal had been cleared away, and the evening was free? |
47556 | or,"cried the young man,"am I your superior in this horrible experience? |
47556 | she said to herself with a countenance ablaze with shame, how could she love him? |
47556 | the rent, after all, made but a small difference-- the relief was not what you hoped?" |
47556 | what do you want to show me, Katie? |
47556 | what good will that do her? |
47556 | what should I see? |
47556 | you would not see a man drown and refuse to hold out your hand?" |
47557 | And is she coming soon? 47557 And so I did: and what does that matter? |
47557 | And we have been-- sorry for you because you were alone? 47557 And what kind of a person did you find her, Oona? |
47557 | Are you pleased? 47557 Are you there, Hamish?" |
47557 | Are you too an only child? |
47557 | But I put no faith in Underwood''s fair-- what was it he called her? |
47557 | But it is not my hand that can give the right touch? |
47557 | But oh, what can I do? 47557 But what? |
47557 | Can you suppose that_ I_ want you to marry, Erradeen? |
47557 | Dear me, is that Underwood? |
47557 | Did you hear, Mysie,she went on when"the tea"appeared with all its wealth of scones,"that Lord Erradeen was expecting his mother? |
47557 | Did you know, dear Lady Herbert, that Lord Erradeen lived here? |
47557 | Do they mean anything? 47557 Do ye not think, mem,"said Mysie,"that yon young lord he is very much taken up with-- the isle and those that are on it?" |
47557 | Do you know him? |
47557 | Do you remember last year when you saved me? |
47557 | Do you think I am Prospero to send you aches and stitches? |
47557 | Do you think it is He-- that has shut us up in this dungeon, to die? |
47557 | Does he know that you are here? |
47557 | For whom should I do it, but for you? 47557 Ghost-- is not a word that means much?" |
47557 | Give it to me, Oona!--will you give it to me? 47557 Have you no one with you? |
47557 | Hoots,said Mrs. Forrester, with a smile,"with you and me, Mysie, do you think? |
47557 | I might reply, if the surprise were not so delightful, who could have thought, Miss Herbert, of seeing you here? 47557 I should have come to you,"cried Walter,"I did not forget-- but for my mother''s illness----""Yes?" |
47557 | I suppose you know that he lives here? |
47557 | I think you know Lord Erradeen? |
47557 | I wonder what Erradeen''s about? |
47557 | I''m saying,said the millionnaire confidentially,"who''s this fine fellow your master''s got with him? |
47557 | If you can speak, for God''s sake speak? 47557 Is it Hamish?" |
47557 | Is it because Lord Erradeen is so bad that you are leaving him, or because he is going to be good? |
47557 | Is it saved? |
47557 | Is that all ye think of your poor young master? 47557 Is that why you are going away, Captain Underwood?" |
47557 | Is there any one in danger? |
47557 | Is this gentleman-- staying with you? |
47557 | Is this your doing, too? |
47557 | It must be delightful,she said with enthusiasm;"but do n''t you sometimes feel a little dull? |
47557 | Look at me then,she said,"for what have I suffered these thirty years? |
47557 | Lord Erradeen-- has anything-- happened? 47557 Lord bless us? |
47557 | Miss Forrester-- and her mother, no doubt? 47557 Mother,"he cried,"what must you think of me for not coming to meet you? |
47557 | Mother,he said,"you will forgive me-- it is only for a moment?" |
47557 | My dear,she said hesitating,"it is with no reproach I speak, but only----There was some reason for sending for me?" |
47557 | My lord, to make Hamish your judge, what''s that but daft too? 47557 Mysie,"cried the minister,"how am I to break it to her? |
47557 | No doubt you know Lord Erradeen? |
47557 | No, how should you? 47557 No? |
47557 | Of what? 47557 Oh, do you think I do n''t know that? |
47557 | Oh, there is plenty of time; we are going too( Bless me,he said aside,"how many visitors think you they can have had in yon old place?) |
47557 | Oh, what will be happening? |
47557 | Oh,she cried,"did you see my Oona fall? |
47557 | Oona,he cried, waking to the desperation of the position,"will you give me up, after all we have said?" |
47557 | Oona,said Walter,"you will give me your hand again before we part?" |
47557 | Shall I ask him to come? |
47557 | She would not: and then you came-- to me? |
47557 | That is----? |
47557 | The burden of-- what? 47557 The leddies are at home, and will ye no land, my lord?" |
47557 | Then what place-- have I?--what am-- I? |
47557 | Then ye have found him? |
47557 | Was it them that were seen on the walls just before? 47557 Wha''s that that''s speaking?" |
47557 | What am I to say to you? |
47557 | What are you talking loud about, you two? |
47557 | What can I do? 47557 What can I do?" |
47557 | What can you do to me? |
47557 | What did you say? |
47557 | What do you call a confounded place? |
47557 | What does it matter if I give it or hold it back? 47557 What else? |
47557 | What have I ever done that you should do this for me? 47557 What is it?" |
47557 | What more? |
47557 | What power have I? 47557 What use is it to me to forgive me? |
47557 | What were you feared for? 47557 What were you saying, sir?" |
47557 | What will she be saying to him? 47557 What would a lady have to do with the fire? |
47557 | What-- did you say? 47557 When you can do this,"she said, putting with unconscious eloquence her hand to her heart,"what do you want with things like those?" |
47557 | Where are we? |
47557 | Where is Jane? |
47557 | Where will ye be taking all thae folk? |
47557 | Where? |
47557 | Who sent you here? |
47557 | Who was he meaning with his fair Julias? |
47557 | Why do you say''oh hon?'' 47557 Why indeed? |
47557 | Why not? 47557 Why should I have you? |
47557 | Why should it have been imminent? 47557 Why then,"he said with a smile,"did you not remain among the ruins? |
47557 | Will that old body not open the door to ye when he sees ye have friends? 47557 Will you have me-- Katie?" |
47557 | Will you receive me, will you take me with you? 47557 Ye will not be doing the like of that,"he said,"without thought?" |
47557 | You are a member of the family? |
47557 | You are never walking? |
47557 | You believe in nothing of the kind-- is it not so? 47557 You do not refuse it to me, in friendship, even after all you have heard?" |
47557 | You mean Oona? 47557 You must tell me first,"she said, speaking very low,"what is become of_ him_? |
47557 | You sent for me, Walter? |
47557 | You think I want you to be miserable? 47557 You thought then, I suppose,"she said,"that one-- was as good as another?" |
47557 | You thought upon me? 47557 You wished-- to say something to me, Lord Erradeen?" |
47557 | You''ll be going-- a long journey? |
47557 | Your arm is hurt, Walter? |
47557 | _ That?_he said,"you who know so little of your own mind, how can you tell how human nature is affected?--by what poor methods, as well as by great. |
47557 | A relation, too; what relation? |
47557 | Adamson?" |
47557 | All dark; but no, half way between heaven and earth, what was that, shining steady through the gloom? |
47557 | And did you think I would lose a minute after your message, Walter? |
47557 | And do you think she will be a pleasant neighbour? |
47557 | And he was at the water- side to meet her, when he saw the boat? |
47557 | And how may it be told what was in Oona''s heart? |
47557 | And now, Lord Erradeen, I hope you will bring Mrs. Methven soon, as long as the fine weather lasts, to the isle?" |
47557 | And so you have got your mother with you, Lord Erradeen?" |
47557 | And then after a pause added, with the look of one preoccupied by her subject--"Is he there now?" |
47557 | And this life that you offer me, are you sure it is fit for an honest girl to take? |
47557 | And was he kind? |
47557 | And what could he say to her? |
47557 | And what is the use of her coming here? |
47557 | And what right have ye to call my young leddy by her name? |
47557 | And what tyrant out of the unseen could rule a man like this, or disturb his quiet mastery of himself and all that belonged to him? |
47557 | And where has she been all this weary night; and why did she leave me in this trouble? |
47557 | And why should she? |
47557 | And you ask me who?" |
47557 | And you think that such a man can stand against a purpose like mine? |
47557 | And you-- was it all for nothing that you were so soon beaten and ready to fall? |
47557 | Are they coming to- day to Auchnasheen?" |
47557 | Are ye deaf or doited that ye can not answer a simple question?" |
47557 | Are you sure that there was no one there?" |
47557 | Are you worth such a sacrifice? |
47557 | But bless me, what is that?" |
47557 | But do n''t you see it is natural that I should exaggerate his importance by way of giving myself the better reason for having come?" |
47557 | But how was he to make that clear? |
47557 | But should n''t you like to walk on to the land without always requiring a boat?" |
47557 | But then, what were those figures on the tower? |
47557 | But what can we do? |
47557 | But what could he do? |
47557 | But what could they do? |
47557 | But what if it were not Symington? |
47557 | But what is it then, Lord Erradeen?" |
47557 | But what is this about-- a lady? |
47557 | But what shall you do without a maid? |
47557 | But what was there so hard to do as that was? |
47557 | But what would he think of her-- what would everybody think? |
47557 | But who is the fair Julia, and is he really to be married to her? |
47557 | But you are not going away, Lord Erradeen? |
47557 | But you are so good?" |
47557 | But you are well, there is nothing wrong with your health?" |
47557 | Can a man enter a second time-- and be born? |
47557 | Can you imagine a man trying like a coward to escape the conflict, rather than facing it, and bringing the woman he loved into it?" |
47557 | Can you suppose that I should wish greatness to the race and misfortune to its individual members? |
47557 | Captain Underwood, I remember, told us----""Did you know Captain Underwood?" |
47557 | Come, Katie, where are your manners? |
47557 | Could he hold her though she was his life, and sacrifice hers? |
47557 | Could there be any combination more confusing? |
47557 | Could women interest themselves in all that as she had seemed to interest herself? |
47557 | Did I not say it? |
47557 | Did anybody ever find out who that fellow was that was staying with him? |
47557 | Did he go without a word?" |
47557 | Did he let himself be borne away to the clouds in yon flames? |
47557 | Did he love her? |
47557 | Did he speak a word at the end?" |
47557 | Did n''t I tell you? |
47557 | Did the minister say when she would be here?" |
47557 | Did you see my Oona? |
47557 | Do n''t you immediately think of dozens of things you want as soon as you know you ca n''t get them? |
47557 | Do n''t you know he sings? |
47557 | Do n''t you know our Lord stands at the door and knocks, till you are ready to let Him in? |
47557 | Do n''t you think it is better for them when they have been downright bad? |
47557 | Do you come from God?" |
47557 | Do you know what I mean? |
47557 | Do you know what it means to feel safe? |
47557 | Do you remember?" |
47557 | Do you see now the lights at Auchnasheen? |
47557 | Do you think I am not to be trusted with Oona?" |
47557 | Do you think I could not trust God, that has always been merciful to me and mine? |
47557 | Do you think I would harm her? |
47557 | Does our friend Walter know, Miss Herbert, what happiness awaits him in your presence here?" |
47557 | Eh? |
47557 | Everybody says it is her own fault, but still it was not nice of him, do you think? |
47557 | For the first time he behaved himself like a coward, and fled from duty and kindness; for what could he say to comfort her? |
47557 | Had Walter all at once become more friendly, more open- hearted, perhaps feeling in the company of his neighbours a certain safety? |
47557 | Had he ever said to Oona that he loved her? |
47557 | Had he rushed down to throw himself into the water, and thus end the terrible conflict? |
47557 | Had she been there all night? |
47557 | Had they carried that passenger down to the foot of the loch? |
47557 | Had this been in her thoughts though she did not know it? |
47557 | Hamish, have ye got the cushions in, and are ye all ready? |
47557 | Has he been in this country before? |
47557 | Have I seen him like that before? |
47557 | Have n''t you seen that? |
47557 | Have you anything more to say, Lord Erradeen?" |
47557 | Have you ever seen him like this before?" |
47557 | Have you not seen him? |
47557 | Have you travelled all night, and alone, mother, for me?" |
47557 | He had started to his feet when this intolerable consciousness( for was it not true?) |
47557 | He was about this house like one of our own, and no later than yesterday-- Katie, do you hear?" |
47557 | Her and me,"said Mrs. Forrester, with Scotch grammar and a smile,"we are but one; and you do not expect me to praise myself? |
47557 | How can you tell, a young man like you, how those that have been defeated, lift their hearts and give God thanks?" |
47557 | How could there be any hope? |
47557 | How could you be?" |
47557 | How could you betray me first before you told me? |
47557 | How dare you take her from those who love her, and make her your victim? |
47557 | How long is it-- near five and forty years? |
47557 | How was he to do it? |
47557 | How was she to help him? |
47557 | I cared nothing about worldly advantages; but these were henceforward to be the rule of my life-- pleasant, was it not?" |
47557 | I have just killed the poor lady down- stairs with joy; and what am I to say to your mistress? |
47557 | I hear there''s a lady-- the fair----What did he call her, Katie? |
47557 | I know, I know, it''s all done; but did you see him? |
47557 | I said what would they be doing here? |
47557 | I want you to tell me-- who was that gentleman at Kinloch Houran? |
47557 | I was afraid of Cousin Sophy; but you could not think I wanted to impair your comfort, mother? |
47557 | I was there before? |
47557 | If I accept your kindness will it be an inconvenience to you?" |
47557 | If it is a little early what matter? |
47557 | If that were so, would a woman like you stand by the wretch still?" |
47557 | If the one who had been so brave was killed by it, how encounter her whose soft nature had fallen prostrate at once? |
47557 | If you wish to sacrifice her life you can do so, but what right have you to do it? |
47557 | Indeed we will consider it a great honour-- just ourselves and a few people that are staying in the house; and as for dress, what does that matter? |
47557 | Is he paying you a visit? |
47557 | Is it a-- relation? |
47557 | Is n''t that the right way? |
47557 | Is not that in the Bible? |
47557 | Is that the_ rôle_ you want me to take up?" |
47557 | Is that true?" |
47557 | It is for her to go-- Die? |
47557 | It was I, was it not, that set before you the miserableness of the life you have been leading? |
47557 | Julia cried, with overflowing interest,"is there not some wonderful ghost story? |
47557 | Lord Erradeen would be a great match for any other young lady on the loch, no doubt: but for Oona what prince was good enough? |
47557 | Mother, vice deserves damnation; is n''t that your creed?" |
47557 | My mother will be glad----""And she is not afraid to trust you-- by yourself? |
47557 | Never tore her pinafore, or dirtied her frock? |
47557 | No gentleman in the house; and what can two ladies do to entertain a young man, unless he will be content with his tea in the afternoon? |
47557 | Oh Hamish, man, can ye not find your young lady? |
47557 | Oh how do you do, Macalister? |
47557 | Oh, Oona, where are you? |
47557 | Once upon that standing ground and who could assail you? |
47557 | Oona, if we die together, it will be all right?" |
47557 | Oona, who was he? |
47557 | Oona, will you see that Hamish is ready? |
47557 | Refusal, what was that? |
47557 | Shall I keep away from her for that-- when I am the only one that has known him all his life-- that knew him from a child? |
47557 | Shall I tell you what this good man is? |
47557 | She added, after a moment:"What did you say to Sanderson, Lord Erradeen, to induce him to bring you here?" |
47557 | She answered him as calmly as she could, but with a tremor in her voice,"Who could ask that, Lord Erradeen? |
47557 | She asked, with a trembling voice,"If this is so, how is it that you still care for him? |
47557 | She came up to him and laid her hands upon him, and cried out, What was it? |
47557 | She had helped him then, knowing nothing-- how was she to help him now? |
47557 | She had not hesitated to let him see that he had that; and with that must not all obstacles, however miserable, disappear at the last? |
47557 | She took his hands in hers, and pleaded with him--"Oh, Walter, my darling, what has happened to you? |
47557 | Sin? |
47557 | Something now and then like the movements of a bird( was it Hamish working wildly above, half- mad, half- stupefied, unable to be still?) |
47557 | That is God''s ordinance, my dear? |
47557 | The fair----Toots, I thought of it a minute ago? |
47557 | The other will come to you presently, he will lay before you--""I will not hear him-- once for all I refuse--""What, to receive your own servant?" |
47557 | The sun is getting low, and the cold----""But where is Oona?" |
47557 | Then she said drearily--"My mother-- will wonder why we do not come in--""May I speak to her-- at once? |
47557 | Then, after a pause,"What happened? |
47557 | There is no alternative, except--""Except-- if it comes to that, what can you do to me?" |
47557 | This however was curiously and suddenly penetrated by the reply which-- who?--was it Walter? |
47557 | This morning? |
47557 | To have become part of him had brought no joy to Oona, but it was done, and never could be undone; and to be part of her, what was that to Walter? |
47557 | To let_ her_ perish, was that possible? |
47557 | Vanquished? |
47557 | Was he capable of giving nothing but pain to those he loved? |
47557 | Was he mad? |
47557 | Was it a faith above the reach of souls less simple? |
47557 | Was it all a dream and a delusion from beginning to end?" |
47557 | Was it common fire, acting after the ordinary laws of nature and finding ready fuel in the dry wood and antique furniture? |
47557 | Was it for any motive but his own safety that he sought her? |
47557 | Was it for love he fled to her? |
47557 | Was it his house she was going to, his life that she was entering once more? |
47557 | Was it not a little hard, after all, that she should have nothing of her son but the schoolboy prattle? |
47557 | Was it possible that his enemy could assail him through these unsuspecting simple visitors? |
47557 | Was it too late? |
47557 | Was not I wise when I said it was a well- omened name?" |
47557 | Was she in a dream? |
47557 | Was that Walter, the vague line of darker shadow upon the shade? |
47557 | Was there nothing more to tell her? |
47557 | Was this the sort of threat he meant, or was it perhaps-- true? |
47557 | What am I meaning? |
47557 | What are ye crying for, Mysie, like a daft woman? |
47557 | What brought you here?" |
47557 | What can I do?" |
47557 | What could he say to defend himself? |
47557 | What did he mean by her prize? |
47557 | What did it mean, the lamp? |
47557 | What did she mean? |
47557 | What did there remain to say? |
47557 | What good could she do? |
47557 | What had he ever done for her? |
47557 | What had that to do with it? |
47557 | What has happened to you? |
47557 | What have I gained by it, I should like to know? |
47557 | What is his name? |
47557 | What is it you mean? |
47557 | What is it? |
47557 | What is it? |
47557 | What is this?" |
47557 | What might be about to happen to her? |
47557 | What pleasure can a spirit like yon find in the torture of his own flesh and blood? |
47557 | What was a ghost, as they said, in comparison? |
47557 | What was everything else in comparison with that? |
47557 | What was he about, poor boy? |
47557 | What was her life to her? |
47557 | What was it he saw? |
47557 | What was it you used to teach me, mother, about a new heart? |
47557 | What was that you said about Miss Oona?" |
47557 | What was the good? |
47557 | What was the use of any struggle? |
47557 | What was the use? |
47557 | What woman can bear to hear out such a confession, not to interrupt it with pardon, with absolution, with cries to bring forth the fairest robe? |
47557 | What would happen? |
47557 | What-- have you done?" |
47557 | Where had she gone? |
47557 | Where is Oona? |
47557 | Where is my Oona? |
47557 | Where was he going to in the middle of the night? |
47557 | Where was she? |
47557 | Who could be there? |
47557 | Who could have thought, Captain Underwood, of seeing you here?" |
47557 | Who could tell what turn the wheel of fortune might take? |
47557 | Who is talking of ghosts? |
47557 | Why have I put up with all that?" |
47557 | Why should I be asked to step in and save you from-- bitter folly or anything else? |
47557 | Why should he be saved who was unworthy? |
47557 | Why should the woman cry, as if her voice could reach her child under those masses of ruin? |
47557 | Why should you care for a cad like me? |
47557 | Why should you think I would injure you? |
47557 | Why trouble earth or heaven? |
47557 | Why, in the name of God, why?" |
47557 | Will this be enough?" |
47557 | Will you let that lad just wander and break his neck?" |
47557 | Will you make this more odious still?" |
47557 | Will you stay here and wait till I try if I can find a way?" |
47557 | Would he accept his defeat as the other had done, and throw down his arms and yield? |
47557 | Would yon be true?" |
47557 | Ye''ll have_ his_ authority?" |
47557 | Yet you hide and lurk in this place which no man knows; and work by spells and charms like-- like--""Like what?" |
47557 | You know how it sweeps the boat up the loch?" |
47557 | You never were naughty in your life-- was she? |
47557 | You want a little cheerful society----""Is that what you call yourself?" |
47557 | You will manage that?" |
47557 | You will never have been in the north before?" |
47557 | You will not cast me away?" |
47557 | You will spare her any-- emotion, any shock, that you can help?" |
47557 | Your mother will be going to- morrow, I should n''t wonder? |
47557 | Your servant will have gone with your baggage? |
47557 | and did he show a right feeling?" |
47557 | and what were the Erradeens to make so muckle work about, but just a mad race that nobody could understand? |
47557 | and why insult her misery with vain attempts? |
47557 | but you do----""Care for you? |
47557 | cried the young man,"ca n''t you see we have got a safe guide?" |
47557 | do you hear this terrible news? |
47557 | he cried;"who sent you here? |
47557 | how pour all the force of her life into him? |
47557 | how transfer to him every needed quality, and give him the strength of two in one? |
47557 | is it--? |
47557 | is that like a spade, an instrument in your hands?" |
47557 | not for him would be that sweet companionship, and yet of all things the world contained, was not that the best? |
47557 | or a wretch, an egotist, wanting a woman to do something for him, but without a thought for the woman? |
47557 | or had she sometimes found it a bore to have all these schoolboy experiences poured forth upon her? |
47557 | or is it only a make- believe? |
47557 | or is it only-- is it nothing but----""A pretence, do you think, to get myself a hearing-- to beguile you into a little interest? |
47557 | or was it Oona ye could not trust?" |
47557 | or was it something more mystic, more momentous? |
47557 | or was it the easy rebound of a shallow nature? |
47557 | or what was the meaning of the words? |
47557 | or, oh for the love of the Almighty, whoever is there, speak and tell me where''s my leddy?" |
47557 | said Mr. Williamson,"what is that you say?" |
47557 | she cried in the wondering self- abandonment of pain,"can you be a man, only a man, and strike so deep?" |
47557 | she cried;"who has been speaking so? |
47557 | she said,"is it I that am to maintain the conversation? |
47557 | something about his house being haunted; and he has to go and present himself and have an interview with the ghost? |
47557 | to whom?" |
47557 | was that a moan? |
47557 | what ails you? |
47557 | what did Erradeen want with a wife? |
47557 | what does that word mean between you and me? |
47557 | what is the matter, Oona? |
47557 | what is wrong?" |
47557 | what was his love? |
47557 | what was it? |
47557 | who''s staying with your master, I''m asking ye? |
47557 | why should she be here? |
47557 | why should she die? |
47557 | why should the other have that relief and she none-- nor any hope? |
47557 | why will you not answer me? |
47557 | you will not? |
47557 | you''ll maybe no have seen Miss Oona?" |
40027 | A crack? |
40027 | A good woman? |
40027 | A storm? |
40027 | About the war? 40027 About your family?" |
40027 | Afraid? 40027 After all you said?" |
40027 | Ai n''t I the one to know? 40027 Ai n''t I-- kind-- to--''em?" |
40027 | Ai n''t it making you afraid? |
40027 | Ai n''t it, maw? |
40027 | Ai n''t they had the hydrophobia;--ain''t they had the distemper;--ain''t they? |
40027 | Ai n''t we needed a scarecrow down there? 40027 Ai n''t you used to that by now;--ain''t you?" |
40027 | And now before the crucifix, Madame prays Christ for the power to kill? |
40027 | And of me, Charlie?--You had thought of me? |
40027 | And say, how do I look? |
40027 | And shall we have our supper now, petite Maman, and my little rabbit? |
40027 | And what does it matter, petite Maman, when I go? 40027 And what if I did?" |
40027 | And what if it is? |
40027 | And what was it you thought of me, Charlie? |
40027 | And what was you doing down there to the bottom of the hill? 40027 And what''ll I do if it does pay, maw? |
40027 | And when I come--"When? |
40027 | And why do you get it? 40027 And you-- could-- love-- me?" |
40027 | And your family? 40027 And-- you-- do-- understand--_now_?" |
40027 | Anything wrong, Jasper? |
40027 | Are n''t you glad to see Mutter Schwegel? |
40027 | Are n''t you happy here, Gina? |
40027 | Are n''t you having a good time, Greg? |
40027 | Are you satisfied? |
40027 | Are-- you-- sure-- you-- do-- not-- know--? |
40027 | Are-- you-- writing-- Jasper? 40027 Aw, now, James--"What''s that?" |
40027 | Away, Billy? |
40027 | Awfully? |
40027 | Because what, Gina? |
40027 | Billy, is this what you do when I come home to you? 40027 Billy-- Billy, dear-- aren''t you well? |
40027 | Blind? |
40027 | But how did you get here, then? |
40027 | But how? 40027 But if it does pay, maw? |
40027 | But what can I do? 40027 But what do you mean, eh? |
40027 | But what, Maman? |
40027 | But when, my son? |
40027 | But where, Billy? |
40027 | But, Billy--"Will you do that for me? 40027 But-- if-- I-- come-- here-- to-- stay?" |
40027 | By yourself? |
40027 | Ca n''t you be still? |
40027 | Ca n''t you bring yourself to tell me-- can''t you, dear? |
40027 | Ca n''t you see it, Jenny? |
40027 | Ca n''t you see that it''s all like a horrible nightmare? 40027 Can you find your way home-- by yourself-- little girl?" |
40027 | Can you see anything wrong here, Jenny? |
40027 | Charlie--; Charlie!--ach!--will-- you-- not-- then-- wait? |
40027 | Conquers? 40027 Crazy?" |
40027 | D''you ever feel--she turned to face him--"d''you ever feel you''d been in a place before-- and yet you knew you''d never been there at all?" |
40027 | D''you feel a wind? 40027 D''you know what makes you do it, Jasper?" |
40027 | D''you know? |
40027 | D''you mean you ca n''t see things for yourself? |
40027 | D''you want him to kill me? |
40027 | D''you want me to go? |
40027 | D''you want one? |
40027 | D''you want to go, China- Ching? |
40027 | D''you want-- anything of-- me? |
40027 | Did anything happen? |
40027 | Did n''t I? 40027 Did not one of you ask,''Is there anything greater than hate''?" |
40027 | Did you say_ you_ lived in Chalet Corneille? |
40027 | Did you see this-- this woman, Gina-- often? |
40027 | Do n''t I always write? |
40027 | Do n''t what, Jenny? |
40027 | Do you know what it is to see and then to be able to do nothing-- nothing? 40027 Ernest, what''s the sense? |
40027 | Faith? |
40027 | Friends? |
40027 | Genius,--Jasper? |
40027 | Get what? |
40027 | Gina, what is it? |
40027 | Glad? |
40027 | Good God, did anything happen? 40027 Good?--Did you say good of me, Charlie?" |
40027 | Got to,--huh? 40027 Gregory-- that time you were away-- for a whole fortnight-- did anything happen, then-- Gregory?" |
40027 | Have you ever felt you were going mad, Kathleen? 40027 Have you said all you''re going to say?" |
40027 | How can I tell? 40027 How can I?" |
40027 | How can we-- get them-- back? |
40027 | How can you love flowers? |
40027 | How can you? |
40027 | How did you come in here, Charlie? |
40027 | How did you get up from the station, Gina? |
40027 | How do you do it? |
40027 | How-- can-- I-- tell-- you--? 40027 How-- can-- you-- find-- me?" |
40027 | How? 40027 I told you she was a bit queer, did n''t I?" |
40027 | I-- I most sincerely hope I''m not interrupting, Andreyvitch-- but-- are you speaking of those things-- again? |
40027 | I--? 40027 I--? |
40027 | If I can do this for others, you think, why should I not be able to do everything for myself? 40027 If I were n''t really terrified, I''d go into the woods and show myself there''s nothing to be frightened of, would n''t I?" |
40027 | Is it, as the curà © says,''a Brotherhood of man''? |
40027 | Is that all, now? 40027 Is that what you''re here for?" |
40027 | Is there anything I can do? |
40027 | It is not pletty, this face? |
40027 | It''s a fierce night; ai n''t it, now? |
40027 | It''s about this war of ours; that''s it, is n''t it? |
40027 | It''s hot;--ain''t it? |
40027 | It''s moving, ai n''t it? 40027 It''s this cross you mean, eh? |
40027 | Jasper--"How can I work if you do n''t stop talking? 40027 Kind to''em--?" |
40027 | Know what? |
40027 | Later-- I-- will-- try-- to-- tell-- you--"Later? |
40027 | Leave your mammy? 40027 Little girl--""How, Mister; how?" |
40027 | Look out of the window? 40027 Love?" |
40027 | Madame is religious? |
40027 | Madame? |
40027 | Maybe it is,he conceded, and then, as she made no answer, he asked:"You like to walk with me a little?" |
40027 | Me, Gina? |
40027 | Muttering,--huh? |
40027 | My God!--What is it--? |
40027 | My back- rest? |
40027 | Nannie-- what? 40027 Nannie--; you said he was taking her--; the black- haired one--; away for a-- a rest? |
40027 | No-- I asked if you knew people there by name of Fornier? |
40027 | Non-- non; how is it then three? |
40027 | Nothing-- to-- do-- with-- me? |
40027 | Now? |
40027 | Of what? |
40027 | Of-- death? |
40027 | Oh, Lord, ca n''t you leave me alone? |
40027 | Oh, Mister, tell me; please-- what is it? |
40027 | Oh, is it? |
40027 | Oh, lucky, Jasper? |
40027 | Petite Maman--"You-- go-- now-- Jean? |
40027 | Queer ideas? |
40027 | Queer? 40027 Rather a strange view for an artist, my friend, is it not?" |
40027 | See here, Otto-- What is it? |
40027 | See here, you, ai n''t I kind to''em? |
40027 | Shall we have supper now? |
40027 | Sick of what? 40027 So I took the heart out of you,--did I?" |
40027 | So good of you to come-- You know every one, do n''t you, Gregory? 40027 So? |
40027 | Some fog; ai n''t it, Mister? |
40027 | Something else, Maman? |
40027 | Sure? |
40027 | Surely you do not think that I could sit here in the dark, holding my enemy by the hand? |
40027 | That I would come? |
40027 | That''s all you do, is n''t it? 40027 The barbarians have caught you too?" |
40027 | The chow? |
40027 | The kind of feeling that makes you think something is going to happen? |
40027 | The real poilu? |
40027 | Then I am not alone? 40027 Then what''s the matter,--huh?" |
40027 | Then why ca n''t you leave me alone? |
40027 | Then why do you always talk about it like this? |
40027 | Then you do not know? |
40027 | Then you''re not a soldier? |
40027 | These days? |
40027 | They do n''t ask us together, eh? |
40027 | Things you do not know, Otto? |
40027 | To- night? |
40027 | To-- stay? |
40027 | Truth--; about what? |
40027 | Want to help me with these here nets? |
40027 | Was Andreyvitch there? |
40027 | Was it, Gina? |
40027 | Was she then horrid, Maman? |
40027 | Was you down in the south meadow where you could n''t hear me call? |
40027 | Watching, Benny? |
40027 | Well, what of it? |
40027 | Well, what? |
40027 | Well? |
40027 | Well? |
40027 | Well? |
40027 | What are you doing here? |
40027 | What d''you mean, Nannie? 40027 What d''you mean?" |
40027 | What d''you mean? |
40027 | What d''you mean? |
40027 | What d''you want to put it there for? 40027 What did he say? |
40027 | What diffelence does it make if I am a Chinaman? |
40027 | What diffelence does that make? |
40027 | What difference does it make, petite Maman, when I go? |
40027 | What do I care for any kind of idealism? 40027 What do you mean?" |
40027 | What do you want? |
40027 | What flowers did you say? |
40027 | What good does it do, anyway? 40027 What is it you see? |
40027 | What is it, Ernest? 40027 What is it, Williams?" |
40027 | What is it, then? |
40027 | What is it? 40027 What is it? |
40027 | What is it? |
40027 | What is it? |
40027 | What is it? |
40027 | What is there to do but sleep? |
40027 | What kind of roses, Gina? |
40027 | What made you do that, Jasper? |
40027 | What made you think I was? |
40027 | What makes you do it, Jasper? |
40027 | What of that night? 40027 What sort of a rose, Gina? |
40027 | What things, Otto? |
40027 | What under the canopy''s eating you? |
40027 | What under the sun''s the matter with you? |
40027 | What was it you were going to say? |
40027 | What was it, Gina? 40027 What''d you do?" |
40027 | What''re you driving at,--huh? |
40027 | What''re you standing still for--_now_? |
40027 | What''re you standing there for? 40027 What''s happened, Otto?" |
40027 | What''s that mut got to do between you and me? |
40027 | What''s that you say? |
40027 | What''ve you got to do with it? |
40027 | What, Nannie? 40027 What, little girl?" |
40027 | What-- Nannie? |
40027 | What-- is-- it, Charlie--; this-- now--? |
40027 | What-- what d''you mean? |
40027 | What-- what did you mean by that, Ellen? 40027 What-- what''d-- you-- do-- that-- for?" |
40027 | What? |
40027 | What? |
40027 | What? |
40027 | What? |
40027 | What? |
40027 | What? |
40027 | When do you go-- mon Jean? |
40027 | When was that? 40027 When we''ve been talking of her all night?" |
40027 | When will this thing--; this wound-- come--? |
40027 | When will your next one be ready? |
40027 | When, Billy? |
40027 | When, Gina? |
40027 | When? |
40027 | When? |
40027 | Where are-- you--? |
40027 | Where does he get it? |
40027 | Where was she, Gina? |
40027 | Where was you? |
40027 | Where''d you go,--huh? |
40027 | Where''s the wind? |
40027 | Where''ve you been, Jenny? |
40027 | Where, Gina? 40027 Who''s that there, Sally?" |
40027 | Who''s there? |
40027 | Why ai n''t you come along then? 40027 Why d''you go to him?" |
40027 | Why d''you keep me here? 40027 Why d''you say that?" |
40027 | Why do n''t you say, genius, Delafield, and be done with it? 40027 Why do you ask?" |
40027 | Why do you laugh? |
40027 | Why not tell me now? |
40027 | Why not? |
40027 | Why wo n''t you let me go? |
40027 | Why''re you standing there? |
40027 | Why, maw? 40027 Why-- don''t-- you-- laugh-- now? |
40027 | Why-- you do n''t mean;--you ai n''t trying to tell me;--you-- don''t-- want-- me-- here? |
40027 | Why--;his voice was hoarse,"Why d''you say that?" |
40027 | Why? 40027 Will I stay, Miss Genevieve?" |
40027 | Will Nannie stop with you a bit, Miss Genevieve, dearie? |
40027 | Will it-- be-- soon--? |
40027 | Will they get back-- safe? |
40027 | Will you have Jean see you tired, Maman? |
40027 | Will you not help me? |
40027 | Will you sit beside me? |
40027 | Will-- you-- let-- me-- go, Ernest? |
40027 | With-- me? |
40027 | Wo n''t you stay to dinner? |
40027 | Would I? |
40027 | Would you want me here? |
40027 | Wrong? 40027 Wrong?" |
40027 | Yes, Gina? |
40027 | Yes, Jasper? |
40027 | Yes--"Did you notice anything, Miss? |
40027 | Yes? 40027 You ai n''t got a boat?" |
40027 | You ai n''t got no excuses;--you do n''t even make no excuses to me;--huh? |
40027 | You ai n''t surprised? |
40027 | You are ill? |
40027 | You ever feel the sea''s something-- alive, like you and me? |
40027 | You feel aflaid? |
40027 | You funked meeting me-- in-- war? |
40027 | You get it too, mister? |
40027 | You heard me calling you? |
40027 | You live up here because of the sea, Mister? |
40027 | You live up there? |
40027 | You mean you do n''t like fishing? |
40027 | You mean--; why-- you ai n''t afraid of it, little girl, are you? |
40027 | You sell baskets? |
40027 | You smelled them, then? |
40027 | You sure? |
40027 | You surprised to see me? 40027 You was there, Miss-- this afternoon?" |
40027 | You will let me stay to wait the daylight with you? |
40027 | You will not hurt me? |
40027 | You would not be afraid? |
40027 | You would not have me stay behind when they need me? 40027 You wouldn''t-- wouldn''t-- go?" |
40027 | You''ll let me keep these; just this once? |
40027 | You''ll not be telling him, Miss? |
40027 | You''re a native of these parts? |
40027 | You''re not-- scared? |
40027 | You''ve got to write? |
40027 | You, Otto-- How did you get in here?--With them all away?--With the servants gone? |
40027 | You, too, ask questions, eh? |
40027 | You-- don''t-- blame-- me-- Nannie? |
40027 | You-- feel-- that-- too? |
40027 | You? 40027 You? |
40027 | _ You''ve_--got-- to-- write, Jasper? |
40027 | Afraid?" |
40027 | After all them years I gave to it?" |
40027 | Ai n''t I looked high and low the house through? |
40027 | Ai n''t I put it up? |
40027 | Ai n''t it?" |
40027 | Ai n''t that ole uniform of your grand- dad''s been the only rag I could lay my hands on? |
40027 | Ai n''t you able to know that I want to fight for my country? |
40027 | Ai n''t you going to see how much I want to go? |
40027 | Ai n''t you got a dime on you, mister? |
40027 | All rhododendrons and lilies of the valley--; is anything wrong, Billy?" |
40027 | And anyway had n''t this man spoken to him in irreproachable French? |
40027 | And d''you know why I''ve stood for it,--say, do you?" |
40027 | And if you do n''t, why do you look out of the window there every night? |
40027 | And it''s moving, ai n''t it? |
40027 | And then beneath his breath he whispered:"Where-- are-- you--?" |
40027 | And when he smiled-- I say, man, d''you ever see such damnably wicked teeth?" |
40027 | Are n''t you glad?" |
40027 | Are n''t you surprised, Billy?" |
40027 | Are n''t you well, darling?" |
40027 | Are you?" |
40027 | Are-- you-- speaking-- of-- those-- things--_again_?" |
40027 | Are-- you--?" |
40027 | As if--""As if what, Gina?" |
40027 | Away into the country?" |
40027 | But during the day--; why do n''t you ever come here during the day?" |
40027 | But what good are wishes, eh? |
40027 | But you ai n''t thought that maybe I knows it,--have you? |
40027 | But you seen it waving, ai n''t you?" |
40027 | By what you just said?" |
40027 | Ca n''t you realize that all this sickly sentimentality is nothing but dogmatic idiocy on your parts? |
40027 | Ca n''t you see it? |
40027 | Could my people get parole for you?" |
40027 | D''you know what''s going to happen to you;--d''you dare to think?" |
40027 | Did n''t she know that he had to write? |
40027 | Did n''t she realize that he had to write? |
40027 | Did n''t we, old Otto?" |
40027 | Do n''t you know you''re a part of it? |
40027 | Do you say you live at Chalet Corneille?" |
40027 | Do you see me?" |
40027 | Do you, William?" |
40027 | Do you?" |
40027 | Does n''t that mean anything to you?" |
40027 | Does not my uniform look magnificent? |
40027 | Eh, Jenny?" |
40027 | Eh, Jenny?" |
40027 | Eh, Otto?" |
40027 | Ever notice this, Jenny?" |
40027 | For what reason under the sun could this woman with those half closed eyes let herself be dominated by him? |
40027 | Go away from here?" |
40027 | Got a medium- sized one?" |
40027 | Have you no consideration? |
40027 | Have you no respect for genius?" |
40027 | He asked it:"Say, do you know the way to Charvel?" |
40027 | He could n''t tell me why-- only-- Isn''t it a strange name, Greg?" |
40027 | How can I do anything? |
40027 | How can I write?" |
40027 | How can a man write in a place like this, anyway? |
40027 | How could you have known I was coming?" |
40027 | How long ago?" |
40027 | How under the sun could it have happened? |
40027 | How?" |
40027 | I am the real poilu, hein? |
40027 | I ask you if you know those things-- now?" |
40027 | I ca n''t help having them in my hands when you come, if I do n''t know, can I?" |
40027 | I can never see-- Beyond the wood-- I should look beyond.--What wood? |
40027 | I could n''t guess that you-- d''you think, Ernest, if it had n''t been for those lies I''d have married you? |
40027 | I say, did they make you a prisoner? |
40027 | I say, you would n''t call me a coward, would you, Gregory?" |
40027 | I told you I was asleep? |
40027 | I told you I was comfortable, did n''t I? |
40027 | I told you that when I came in, did n''t I? |
40027 | I told you, did n''t I, that I was asleep until your stupid laughing woke me? |
40027 | I''m too little of a fool for that-- still-- Why do n''t you lean back here beside me against this beam?" |
40027 | If I ai n''t been born with dog- sense, would folks be giving me their muts to care for?" |
40027 | If I can give help to others, why can I not give help to myself?" |
40027 | If I can tell to others, what may I not tell to myself? |
40027 | In Heaven''s name, where did the horrible, appalling significance of the Wood of Living Trees come from? |
40027 | Is anything the matter? |
40027 | Is it because I''m here, Jasper?" |
40027 | Is it perhaps that-- you-- mean-- gate? |
40027 | Is it that you wish to know? |
40027 | It was that sort of thing you meant, Charlie?" |
40027 | It''s strange, is n''t it? |
40027 | Just care for your flowers all day long?" |
40027 | Keep your hands steady, Angele, or how can Maman see? |
40027 | Look here, Daniel Drare''s a great old fellow, but I''m not as crude in some things as he is; am I, Jenny?" |
40027 | Made me do what?" |
40027 | Maman-- what is it?" |
40027 | Mebbe that''s why-- it-- moves--""Aw-- Benny--""Well, you see it, do n''t you? |
40027 | Must I always be disturbed? |
40027 | Must you all drivel your catechism at every turn of the road? |
40027 | Must you close your eyes to filth, to vice, to everything you think outside of your smug English minds? |
40027 | Nannie, what?" |
40027 | Not of-- me-- are-- you-- Daniel Drare--? |
40027 | Now, Gina? |
40027 | Now, what do you know about that?" |
40027 | Now? |
40027 | Only they''re living things; they are, are n''t they?" |
40027 | Only yesterday, you remember-- the long curls? |
40027 | Over there; in that house; in that one window?" |
40027 | Petite Maman, have you not done enough for one day?" |
40027 | Promise me, dear?" |
40027 | Raving, tearing-- mad? |
40027 | Sacrà ©, but is there anything greater than hate?" |
40027 | Sacrà ©, did n''t I try it before, when you came along?" |
40027 | Sacrà ©, why did you have to laugh? |
40027 | Say, are n''t you?" |
40027 | Say, d''you feel a wind?" |
40027 | Say, it''s moving, ai n''t it?" |
40027 | She murmured;"d''you want to go and be free?" |
40027 | So that is it? |
40027 | Something to be proud of, Maman?" |
40027 | Swings to and fro? |
40027 | Tell me, d''you hear-- tell me-- where?" |
40027 | Tell me, dear, what is it?" |
40027 | Tell me, it is a sign of luck, is it not, to meet with two brothers?" |
40027 | That makes a difference,--don''t it? |
40027 | That''s what you wants, ai n''t it? |
40027 | The velvet suit? |
40027 | The way he did his fighting?" |
40027 | They were n''t here when you came in, were they?" |
40027 | Unless, perhaps, Madame has some question she would like to ask of me?" |
40027 | Was it not good? |
40027 | Was it the smudging shadows, the still unlighted mass of them up there on the arms of the crucifix? |
40027 | Was the old man surprised?" |
40027 | Was there anything else I could use? |
40027 | Was there?" |
40027 | We''d see them, would n''t we, if they were real? |
40027 | What ails you, Benny, letting me shout and shout that way?" |
40027 | What are you talking about? |
40027 | What d''you want to do that for in the first place?" |
40027 | What d''you want?" |
40027 | What did the Wood of Living Trees mean to him? |
40027 | What else have I to love? |
40027 | What for d''you put on that there uniform?" |
40027 | What had she meant by that last question of hers? |
40027 | What in the name of heaven had drawn the truth from him? |
40027 | What is it, Billy?" |
40027 | What is this?" |
40027 | What should be wrong?" |
40027 | What sort did you say?" |
40027 | What sort?" |
40027 | What then, if it walks out?" |
40027 | What was it you wanted?" |
40027 | What was this ghastly knowledge that sought for recognition in his own mind? |
40027 | What was you doing down there, Benny?" |
40027 | What you doing here?" |
40027 | What''d you go away for, when it pays? |
40027 | What''ll I do then?" |
40027 | What''ll I do? |
40027 | What''re you doing?" |
40027 | What''s going to make him tell the truth, I''d like to know?" |
40027 | What''s going to stop it, if it wants to walk out after me; once it starts moving that way? |
40027 | What''s happened?" |
40027 | What''s the joke, eh?" |
40027 | What''s there to get so excited about?" |
40027 | What?" |
40027 | What?" |
40027 | What?" |
40027 | What?" |
40027 | When could it have happened, eh? |
40027 | Where''ve you been?" |
40027 | Where''ve you been?" |
40027 | Who are you?" |
40027 | Who brought you up from the station?" |
40027 | Why d''you keep saying that and saying it?" |
40027 | Why d''you wait for it to come, before you start to write?" |
40027 | Why did n''t you write and tell me? |
40027 | Why did you laugh?" |
40027 | Why do n''t you make a clean breast of it with-- genius?" |
40027 | Why do n''t you, Mister?" |
40027 | Why had she said if anything ever happened to them she would die? |
40027 | Why had she told him that? |
40027 | Why must you go on picking the things and picking them?" |
40027 | Why should he call this man, whom he could not even see, his friend? |
40027 | Why should n''t I look out of the window?" |
40027 | Why would n''t I have liked it?" |
40027 | Why-- don''t-- you-- laugh-- Daniel-- Drare?" |
40027 | Why-- why, Billy, are n''t you glad to have me here? |
40027 | Why? |
40027 | Why?" |
40027 | With them birds so awful bad? |
40027 | Wo n''t you-- can''t you see that?" |
40027 | Would n''t I have kept it, falling to pieces as it is, if there''d have been anything else to put up there in that there corn field?" |
40027 | Would shadows take on so the semblance of the human body? |
40027 | Yes, Nannie?" |
40027 | You ai n''t able to say you do n''t see it, are you?" |
40027 | You ai n''t gone plum crazy, have you?" |
40027 | You are n''t afraid-- are-- you? |
40027 | You are not angry? |
40027 | You can see it moving for yourself, ca n''t you? |
40027 | You could be giving it to me for car fare--; could n''t you now, mister?" |
40027 | You do not care if I say it later?" |
40027 | You have then seen your family, Charlie?" |
40027 | You knew that when I married you, did n''t you? |
40027 | You know that, do n''t you?" |
40027 | You know that, do n''t you?" |
40027 | You said that, Nannie?" |
40027 | You two-- you who spoke of hate, do you still sit hand in hand?" |
40027 | You wanting to say something, Ben?" |
40027 | You who have met me-- is it not once-- perhaps, eh, twice?" |
40027 | You would not have me weep, brother Jean? |
40027 | You''ll have your tea here with us?" |
40027 | You''re certain that you''ve not forgotten anything?" |
40027 | You''re just full of wit,--ain''t you?" |
40027 | You''re-- not-- afraid-- of-- me? |
40027 | You-- aren''t-- afraid of-- anything? |
40027 | mon Dieu,--will you not-- help-- me--?" |
174 | A method of procuring sensations? 174 A sailor?" |
174 | Ah, what is impossible? |
174 | Ah, you have discovered that? |
174 | Am I really like that? |
174 | And does his philosophy make you happy? |
174 | And he? |
174 | And how did Lady Brandon describe this wonderful young man? |
174 | And those are...? |
174 | And what do you propose to do? |
174 | And what does she get annoyed with you about, Duchess? |
174 | And what is that? |
174 | And where did you come across her? |
174 | Anything that would tell his name? |
174 | Appreciate it? 174 Are you better, my dear fellow?" |
174 | Are you serious? |
174 | Are you very much in love with him? |
174 | At what particular point did you mention the word marriage, Dorian? 174 Before God?" |
174 | Before which Dorian? 174 But do n''t people say that he was murdered?" |
174 | But do you approve of it, Harry? |
174 | But must we really see Chicago in order to be educated? |
174 | But suppose, Harry, I became haggard, and old, and wrinkled? 174 But surely she did?" |
174 | But what about my man at the Orleans? |
174 | But what is the matter? 174 But what world says that?" |
174 | But why not? |
174 | But why should you be annoyed? 174 But, surely, if one lives merely for one''s self, Harry, one pays a terrible price for doing so?" |
174 | Ca n''t you see your ideal in it? |
174 | Can you move it, covering and all, just as it is? 174 Can you remember any great error that you committed in your early days, Duchess?" |
174 | Did any one call this evening? |
174 | Did you go to the club? |
174 | Did you say a sailor? |
174 | Do n''t know who he is? |
174 | Do n''t you like it? |
174 | Do you feel quite sure of that, Dorian? |
174 | Do you mean about Sibyl Vane? |
174 | Do you mean to say you do n''t like what I did of you? 174 Do you still refuse to do this for me?" |
174 | Do you think he will really marry this fascinating young person? |
174 | Do you think my nature so shallow? |
174 | Dorian Gray? 174 Dorian,"said Lord Henry at last, as the_ chaud- froid_ was being handed round,"what is the matter with you to- night? |
174 | Even when he is wrong? |
174 | Even when one has been wounded by it, Harry? |
174 | Greek meets Greek, then? |
174 | Harry, how can you? |
174 | Harry,cried Dorian Gray, coming over and sitting down beside him,"why is it that I can not feel this tragedy as much as I want to? |
174 | Has he never been jealous? |
174 | Has she got any? |
174 | Have you had good sport, Geoffrey? |
174 | Have you seen her to- day? |
174 | How can you say that? 174 How can you say that? |
174 | How do you mean? |
174 | How long ago is it since your sister died? 174 How long has she been married?" |
174 | How long will your experiment take, Alan? |
174 | I shut the window? |
174 | I suppose you have come about the unfortunate accident of this morning, Thornton? |
174 | I wonder is that really so, Harry? |
174 | If it is not, what have I to do with it? |
174 | In the Parthian manner? |
174 | In this fog, my dear Basil? 174 Is Monmouth to be there, too?" |
174 | Is it really finished? |
174 | Is it the real Dorian? |
174 | Is n''t he incorrigible? |
174 | Is n''t it, Mr. Gray? 174 Is she pretty?" |
174 | Is that yours, Harry? |
174 | Is there a fire in the room upstairs? |
174 | Love? |
174 | Might one look at the work of art, sir? |
174 | Money, Mother? |
174 | Mother, Mother,she cried,"why does he love me so much? |
174 | Mother, are my things ready? |
174 | Mr. Dorian Gray? 174 Must I really come, Harry?" |
174 | My dear Basil, how do I know? |
174 | My dear Basil,said Dorian,"what have you told me? |
174 | My dear Harry, why? |
174 | Not send it anywhere? 174 Not seventeen, Lady Henry?" |
174 | On the wharf? |
174 | Or do you think that would make it a petticoat party? |
174 | Prince Charming is what you like to be called, ai n''t it? |
174 | Religion? |
174 | Remembered what, Harry? |
174 | Safe from what, Dorian? 174 Shall I leave the things here, sir?" |
174 | Sibyl? 174 So you think that it is only God who sees the soul, Basil? |
174 | Somewhere about here, sir, ai n''t it? |
174 | Ten minutes past two? 174 That was at Lohengrin, Lady Henry, I think?" |
174 | Then what should we call you, Harry? |
174 | Then why wo n''t you exhibit his portrait? |
174 | Then you shall come; and you will come, too, Basil, wo n''t you? |
174 | They are pork- packers, I suppose? |
174 | To whom? |
174 | Too cold for Monsieur? |
174 | Ugliness is one of the seven deadly sins, then? |
174 | Understand what? |
174 | Was it all very bad? |
174 | Was that a paradox? |
174 | Was the poor fellow married? 174 Was there anything found on him?" |
174 | Well, Harry,said the old gentleman,"what brings you out so early? |
174 | Well, what night shall we go? |
174 | Well, you do n''t mind my looking at the thing now? |
174 | What are you looking for? |
174 | What are you two talking about? |
174 | What are you? |
174 | What becomes of your simile about the orchid? |
174 | What can it matter? |
174 | What change do you propose, then? |
174 | What do they say of us? |
174 | What do you mean, Jim? |
174 | What do you mean? 174 What do you mean?" |
174 | What do you think has happened to Basil? |
174 | What do you want me to say? |
174 | What do you want? 174 What do you want?" |
174 | What does this mean? |
174 | What has happened? |
174 | What has the actual lapse of time got to do with it? 174 What is it all about?" |
174 | What is it that one was taught to say in one''s boyhood? 174 What is it? |
174 | What is that, Harry? |
174 | What is that? |
174 | What is that? |
174 | What is the matter? |
174 | What is? |
174 | What more do you want? |
174 | What o''clock is it, Victor? |
174 | What of art? |
174 | What sort of ways, Basil? |
174 | What was that, Harry? |
174 | What would you say, Harry, if I told you that I had murdered Basil? |
174 | What? |
174 | When is she Sibyl Vane? |
174 | Where are you lunching, Harry? |
174 | Where else should I be? |
174 | Where is the body? |
174 | Where shall we put it, sir? |
174 | Where was it? |
174 | Where were you yesterday? |
174 | Where, sir? 174 Who are her people?" |
174 | Who are you in love with? |
174 | Who is he? 174 Who is she?" |
174 | Who would n''t like it? 174 Who?" |
174 | Who? |
174 | Whose house is that, Constable? |
174 | Whose property is it? |
174 | Why ca n''t these American women stay in their own country? 174 Why did n''t you kill him?" |
174 | Why do you ask me that, Harry? |
174 | Why do you ask me? 174 Why have you changed your mind? |
174 | Why have you stopped playing, Dorian? 174 Why not, Mother? |
174 | Why on earth do n''t you keep your men back? 174 Why, Harry?" |
174 | Why, what did you expect, Dorian? 174 Why?" |
174 | Why? |
174 | Why? |
174 | Why? |
174 | Why? |
174 | Will you have some coffee, you fellows? 174 With their ages, Lady Narborough?" |
174 | Would you have me take the verdict of Europe on it? |
174 | Yes, Basil? |
174 | You are not serious, Dorian? |
174 | You call yesterday the past? |
174 | You can dine with me to- night, Dorian, ca n''t you? |
174 | You do n''t like your country, then? |
174 | You do n''t want me to meet him? |
174 | You here, Adrian? |
174 | You insist on knowing, Basil? |
174 | You know nothing then? |
174 | You refuse? |
174 | You swear this? |
174 | You talk books away,he said;"why do n''t you write one?" |
174 | You think so? |
174 | You went to the opera while Sibyl Vane was lying dead in some sordid lodging? 174 You went to the opera?" |
174 | You will have tea, of course, Dorian? 174 You will sit to me again?" |
174 | You will some day, surely? |
174 | You will write to me if you want anything, wo n''t you? |
174 | You wish me to defend my throne, then? |
174 | You wo n''t forget? |
174 | You wo n''t? 174 Your letter? |
174 | Your life? 174 ''A dream of form in days of thought''--who is it who says that? 174 ''Have a box, my Lord?'' 174 ... And Basil? 174 A sort of brother, I suppose? |
174 | A wonderful tragic figure? |
174 | After a few moments he said to him,"Have you really a very bad influence, Lord Henry? |
174 | After all, what right had he to pry into the life of Dorian Gray? |
174 | After the coffee had been brought in, he stopped, and looking over at Lord Henry, said,"Harry, did it ever occur to you that Basil was murdered?" |
174 | Ai n''t English girls good enough for him?" |
174 | Am I safe here, Harry?" |
174 | And by the way, Harry, talking about silly marriages, what is this humbug your father tells me about Dartmoor wanting to marry an American? |
174 | And now tell me-- reach me the matches, like a good boy-- thanks-- what are your actual relations with Sibyl Vane?" |
174 | And now, my dear young friend, if you will allow me to call you so, may I ask if you really meant all that you said to us at lunch?" |
174 | And so will you, Harry? |
174 | And what did she say in answer? |
174 | And what is Ferrol like? |
174 | And what sort of lives do these people, who pose as being moral, lead themselves? |
174 | And where do bad Americans go to when they die?" |
174 | And why is it so? |
174 | And why was the red stain larger than it had been? |
174 | And you will promise to talk to me all the time? |
174 | And, besides, might not his nature grow finer, after all? |
174 | And, yet, what did it matter? |
174 | And, yet, what was there to be afraid of? |
174 | And... his mother was very beautiful?" |
174 | Are they true? |
174 | Are you disengaged Tuesday?" |
174 | Are you ill? |
174 | As bad as Basil says?" |
174 | At what time shall I be back?" |
174 | Besides, I do n''t suppose you will want your wife to act, so what does it matter if she plays Juliet like a wooden doll? |
174 | Besides, even if he did confess, who would believe him? |
174 | Besides, was it really under his control? |
174 | Besides, what do you know of this young man? |
174 | Besides, what on earth could happen to you, Dorian? |
174 | But I suppose you will be back soon?" |
174 | But are you really going for a walk with me? |
174 | But how are you going to begin?" |
174 | But tell me, what did she say about Mr. Dorian Gray?" |
174 | But the picture? |
174 | But this murder-- was it to dog him all his life? |
174 | But was it all irretrievable? |
174 | But what does he see in me? |
174 | But what if, by some fate or deadlier chance, eyes other than his spied behind and saw the horrible change? |
174 | But when did you first speak to Miss Sibyl Vane?" |
174 | But where were you? |
174 | But who could tell? |
174 | But who drove him to it? |
174 | But who had done it? |
174 | But wo n''t you miss your train?" |
174 | But you do n''t think of living up there, sir, and you so comfortable here?" |
174 | But you understand now, do n''t you?" |
174 | By the way, what has become of that wonderful portrait he did of you? |
174 | CHAPTER 6"I suppose you have heard the news, Basil?" |
174 | Ca n''t you see what I am going through? |
174 | Can she feel, or know, or listen? |
174 | Can they be true? |
174 | Can they feel, I wonder, those white silent people we call the dead? |
174 | Confess? |
174 | Could it be that what that soul thought, they realized?--that what it dreamed, they made true? |
174 | Curiosity? |
174 | Did I teach the one his vices, and the other his debauchery? |
174 | Did Sibyl--? |
174 | Did any one see you going round to her room? |
174 | Did he leave any message?" |
174 | Did it mean that he was to confess? |
174 | Did it merely take cognizance of what passed within the soul? |
174 | Did n''t you get my letter? |
174 | Did n''t you recognize me?" |
174 | Did you advertise for it? |
174 | Did you go down and see the girl''s mother? |
174 | Did you go straight home?" |
174 | Did you make a scene with her?" |
174 | Did you really see it?" |
174 | Do n''t you see that accursed thing leering at us?" |
174 | Do n''t you understand? |
174 | Do you think I am going to peril my reputation for you? |
174 | Do you think this girl will ever be really content now with any one of her own rank? |
174 | Do you think, then, that a man who has once committed a murder could possibly do the same crime again? |
174 | Do you?" |
174 | Dorian?" |
174 | Erskine?" |
174 | Even if he told them, would they believe it? |
174 | Even those that are born in England become foreigners after a time, do n''t they? |
174 | Finally he stammered, in a stifled voice,"Harry, did you say an inquest? |
174 | Good God, Dorian, is that what you have come to? |
174 | Gray?" |
174 | Gray?" |
174 | Gray?" |
174 | Gray?" |
174 | Gray?" |
174 | Gray?" |
174 | Gray?" |
174 | Gray?" |
174 | Gray?'' |
174 | Had he any people dependent on him?" |
174 | Had he been cruel? |
174 | Had he something of her temperament in him? |
174 | Had it been merely vanity that had made him do his one good deed? |
174 | Had it hit the mark? |
174 | Had it indeed been prayer that had produced the substitution? |
174 | Had she cursed him, as she died? |
174 | Had some strange poisonous germ crept from body to body till it had reached his own? |
174 | Had the lover of Giovanna of Naples bequeathed him some inheritance of sin and shame? |
174 | Had the portrait really changed? |
174 | Had there been nothing more in his renunciation than that? |
174 | Hallward?'' |
174 | Harry, what shall I do? |
174 | Have another brandy- and- soda? |
174 | Have they summoned you?" |
174 | Have you any reason? |
174 | Have you noticed in the picture something curious?--something that probably at first did not strike you, but that revealed itself to you suddenly?" |
174 | His sin? |
174 | How can you say such horrible things? |
174 | How could I admire her? |
174 | How dare you ask me, of all men in the world, to mix myself up in this horror? |
174 | How dare you say it?" |
174 | How had she played that dreadful last scene? |
174 | How long have you known her?" |
174 | How long have you known her?" |
174 | How long will you like me? |
174 | How often do you see him?" |
174 | How should I know? |
174 | Hypocrisy? |
174 | I have been right, Basil, have n''t I, to take my love out of poetry and to find my wife in Shakespeare''s plays? |
174 | I know you would never harm any one I love, would you?" |
174 | I shall probably have to give it another coat of varnish before that, so I must see it some day, and why not to- day?" |
174 | I suppose they do n''t know your name at the theatre? |
174 | I suppose you think me awfully foolish about it?" |
174 | I wonder can you realize all that that means? |
174 | I wonder do I know you? |
174 | I wonder shall I always be glad?" |
174 | I wonder, did Chopin write it at Majorca, with the sea weeping round the villa and the salt spray dashing against the panes? |
174 | If Adrian Singleton writes his friend''s name across a bill, am I his keeper? |
174 | If Kent''s silly son takes his wife from the streets, what is that to me? |
174 | If it was not true, why trouble about it? |
174 | If thought could exercise its influence upon a living organism, might not thought exercise an influence upon dead and inorganic things? |
174 | If we women did not love you for your defects, where would you all be? |
174 | In the present case, what is it that has really happened? |
174 | Indeed, what right had Basil to have spoken to him as he had done? |
174 | Is insincerity such a terrible thing? |
174 | Is n''t there a verse somewhere,''Though your sins be as scarlet, yet I will make them as white as snow''?" |
174 | Is that his name?" |
174 | Is that right? |
174 | Is that very vain of me? |
174 | Is the man...?" |
174 | Is there a single decent woman in London now who would drive with her in the park? |
174 | It is a gentleman, is n''t it, who is in love with her, or says he is? |
174 | It seems silly of the French, does n''t it? |
174 | It was curious my not wanting to know her, was n''t it?" |
174 | Know you? |
174 | Lord Henry, do n''t you think that Mr. Gray should get married?" |
174 | Makes it quite cosmopolitan, does n''t it? |
174 | Might there not be some curious scientific reason for it all? |
174 | Money? |
174 | Mother, did you love my father as I love Prince Charming?" |
174 | My dear fellow, why? |
174 | Oh, Dorian, Dorian, you understand now what it signifies? |
174 | Or did you say you had done more than one?" |
174 | Or do you object to such simple pleasures?" |
174 | Or had his choice already been made? |
174 | Or had it been simply his own imagination that had made him see a look of evil where there had been a look of joy? |
174 | Or shall I write to him?" |
174 | Or shall we lunch with our little duchess? |
174 | Or that passion to act a part that sometimes makes us do things finer than we are ourselves? |
174 | Or the desire for a new sensation, as Lord Henry had hinted, with his mocking laugh? |
174 | Or was it indifferent to results? |
174 | Or was that merely his own fancy? |
174 | Or was the body really in the soul, as Giordano Bruno thought? |
174 | Or was there some other, more terrible reason? |
174 | Or would you like hock- and- seltzer? |
174 | Or, perhaps, all these? |
174 | Perhaps you are tired of Gladys? |
174 | Poor? |
174 | Shall you see Basil between this and then? |
174 | Should he move it aside, after all? |
174 | So she left a son, did she? |
174 | Some red star had come too close to the earth.... And yet, what evidence was there against him? |
174 | Somewhere in the Euston Road, is n''t it? |
174 | Surely a painted canvas could not alter? |
174 | Surely his wish had not been fulfilled? |
174 | Surely it was not still so horrible as it had been? |
174 | Surely not, my dear fellow? |
174 | Surely you do n''t think it was a vulgar accident? |
174 | Tell me, did you go behind and see her, after the play was over?" |
174 | Tell me, is Dorian Gray very fond of you?" |
174 | The one who is pouring out tea for us, or the one in the picture?" |
174 | There was nothing else to see?" |
174 | They all are, ai n''t they? |
174 | To give himself up and be put to death? |
174 | Tuesday? |
174 | Vanity? |
174 | Was he always to be burdened by his past? |
174 | Was he really to confess? |
174 | Was it all true? |
174 | Was it not Buonarotti who had carved it in the coloured marbles of a sonnet- sequence? |
174 | Was it not Gautier who used to write about_ la consolation des arts_? |
174 | Was it not Plato, that artist in thought, who had first analyzed it? |
174 | Was it really true that one could never change? |
174 | Was it to alter now with every mood to which he yielded? |
174 | Was it true that the senses could cure it? |
174 | Was it very bad? |
174 | Was it young Herbert''s life that he sometimes led? |
174 | Was n''t he one of your men?" |
174 | Was that one of the things that life had in store? |
174 | Was the face on the canvas viler than before? |
174 | Was the soul a shadow seated in the house of sin? |
174 | Was the world going to be shown his secret? |
174 | Was there anything so real as words? |
174 | Was there no hope for him? |
174 | Was there some subtle affinity between the chemical atoms that shaped themselves into form and colour on the canvas and the soul that was within him? |
174 | Were his own actions merely the dreams that the dead man had not dared to realize? |
174 | Were people to gape at the mystery of his life? |
174 | Were you married to my father?" |
174 | What about Adrian Singleton and his dreadful end? |
174 | What about Lord Kent''s only son and his career? |
174 | What about that?" |
174 | What about the young Duke of Perth? |
174 | What about your country- house and the life that is led there? |
174 | What are American dry- goods?" |
174 | What are you now? |
174 | What can you expect? |
174 | What could atone for that? |
174 | What could he do then? |
174 | What could they know of love such as ours? |
174 | What did it matter what happened to the coloured image on the canvas? |
174 | What did it matter? |
174 | What did it mean? |
174 | What did it mean? |
174 | What did she say about it all?" |
174 | What did you do afterwards? |
174 | What did you mean by that? |
174 | What do years matter?" |
174 | What do you think the play was, Harry?" |
174 | What do you want?" |
174 | What does it matter? |
174 | What does that matter? |
174 | What gentleman would associate with him?" |
174 | What had Dorian Gray to do with Sibyl Vane''s death? |
174 | What had happened? |
174 | What had this man''s legacy been? |
174 | What has become of the Frenchman, by the bye?" |
174 | What have I done to you?" |
174 | What have I to do with the puppets of a play? |
174 | What have you or I to do with the superstitions of our age? |
174 | What if Alan Campbell should be out of England? |
174 | What if it should be stolen? |
174 | What is going on in town? |
174 | What is it but canvas and colour? |
174 | What is it to me what devil''s work you are up to?" |
174 | What is it to me where she came from? |
174 | What is marriage? |
174 | What is the name of the man at Richmond who supplies Selby with orchids?" |
174 | What is the number of your sister''s box?" |
174 | What matter what the cost was? |
174 | What more can one want? |
174 | What more can you want?" |
174 | What of George Willoughby, with his powdered hair and fantastic patches? |
174 | What passions had he bequeathed? |
174 | What should he do if Basil Hallward came and asked to look at his own picture? |
174 | What sort of boy is he? |
174 | What sort of life has he got now? |
174 | What then?" |
174 | What time is it?" |
174 | What was he doing there? |
174 | What was he to say of that? |
174 | What was it separated you? |
174 | What was it to him how vile and full of shame it looked? |
174 | What was she like? |
174 | What was that loathsome red dew that gleamed, wet and glistening, on one of the hands, as though the canvas had sweated blood? |
174 | What was the use of knowing? |
174 | What was your reason for refusing to exhibit my picture?" |
174 | What was youth at best? |
174 | Where had they passed to? |
174 | Where is he?" |
174 | Where is it? |
174 | Where shall we go? |
174 | Which is he? |
174 | Which is the work of art, sir?" |
174 | Who could say where the fleshly impulse ceased, or the psychical impulse began? |
174 | Who else is coming?" |
174 | Who had made him a judge over others? |
174 | Who is he? |
174 | Who is he?" |
174 | Who wants happiness? |
174 | Whom did she marry? |
174 | Why did he get in front of the guns? |
174 | Why did you paint it? |
174 | Why do you ask? |
174 | Why do you talk of it? |
174 | Why do you try to persuade our nice Mr. Dorian Gray to give up the East End? |
174 | Why had he been made like that? |
174 | Why had he kept it so long? |
174 | Why had he not known it? |
174 | Why had he worn its livery? |
174 | Why had it altered? |
174 | Why had it been left for a stranger to reveal him to himself? |
174 | Why had such a soul been given to him? |
174 | Why have you not told me about him? |
174 | Why have you pulled the screen in front of it? |
174 | Why inquire too closely into it? |
174 | Why is it that so many gentlemen in London will neither go to your house or invite you to theirs? |
174 | Why is it, Dorian, that a man like the Duke of Berwick leaves the room of a club when you enter it? |
174 | Why is your friendship so fatal to young men? |
174 | Why not let it stay there? |
174 | Why not tell me what it is? |
174 | Why not? |
174 | Why should I not love her? |
174 | Why should he have been murdered? |
174 | Why should he trouble about Sibyl Vane? |
174 | Why should he watch the hideous corruption of his soul? |
174 | Why should it keep what I must lose? |
174 | Why should n''t I look at it?" |
174 | Why should n''t you look at it? |
174 | Will it always be so? |
174 | With such blood as he has in his veins, how could his record be clean? |
174 | Would he ever look at it again? |
174 | Would it teach him to loathe his own soul? |
174 | Would there ever be some one who would fill him with a strange idolatry? |
174 | Would you think it awfully rude of me if I asked you to go away?" |
174 | Yet, after all, what did it matter to him? |
174 | You are dining out, I suppose? |
174 | You can talk to me of other women being charming, and of Patti singing divinely, before the girl you loved has even the quiet of a grave to sleep in? |
174 | You did n''t see anything else in the picture, did you? |
174 | You do n''t imagine I let him arrange my room for me? |
174 | You do n''t mean to say Ferrol is the fourth?" |
174 | You do n''t really mind, Basil, do you? |
174 | You have never been to any of my parties, have you, Mr. Gray? |
174 | You know her curiously shrill voice?" |
174 | You know her, at any rate, I suppose?" |
174 | You never got it back? |
174 | You remember Sibyl, do n''t you? |
174 | You remember that landscape of mine, for which Agnew offered me such a huge price but which I would not part with? |
174 | You remember the one I wore at Lady Hilstone''s garden- party? |
174 | You shrug your shoulders? |
174 | You smile? |
174 | You want to exhibit it?" |
174 | You will excuse me, wo n''t you?" |
174 | You wo n''t? |
174 | but what do you mean by good?" |
174 | ca n''t you forgive me for to- night? |
174 | ca n''t you see that my heart is breaking?" |
174 | do n''t you see a man moving behind the trees there, watching me, waiting for me?" |
174 | is there no doubt about that?" |
174 | she cried,"what does money matter? |
174 | that is one of Harry''s views, is n''t it, Mr. Gray? |
174 | why did n''t you tell me that the only thing worth loving is an actress?" |
26740 | A method of procuring sensations? 26740 A sailor?" |
26740 | Ah, what is impossible? |
26740 | Ah, you have discovered that? |
26740 | Am I really like that? |
26740 | And does his philosophy make you happy? |
26740 | And he? |
26740 | And how did Lady Brandon describe this wonderful young man? |
26740 | And those are...? |
26740 | And what do you propose to do? |
26740 | And what does she get annoyed with you about, Duchess? |
26740 | And what is that? |
26740 | And where did you come across her? |
26740 | Anything that would tell his name? |
26740 | Appreciate it? 26740 Are you better, my dear fellow?" |
26740 | Are you serious? |
26740 | Are you very much in love with him? |
26740 | At what particular point did you mention the word marriage, Dorian? 26740 Before God?" |
26740 | Before which Dorian? 26740 But do n''t people say that he was murdered?" |
26740 | But do you approve of it, Harry? |
26740 | But must we really see Chicago in order to be educated? |
26740 | But suppose, Harry, I became haggard, and old, and wrinkled? 26740 But surely she did?" |
26740 | But what about my man at the Orleans? |
26740 | But what is the matter? 26740 But what world says that?" |
26740 | But why not? |
26740 | But why should you be annoyed? 26740 But, surely, if one lives merely for one''s self, Harry, one pays a terrible price for doing so?" |
26740 | Ca n''t you see your ideal in it? |
26740 | Can you move it, covering and all, just as it is? 26740 Can you remember any great error that you committed in your early days, Duchess?" |
26740 | Did anyone call this evening? |
26740 | Did you go to the club? |
26740 | Did you say a sailor? |
26740 | Do n''t know who he is? |
26740 | Do n''t you like it? |
26740 | Do you feel quite sure of that, Dorian? |
26740 | Do you mean about Sibyl Vane? |
26740 | Do you mean to say you do n''t like what I did of you? 26740 Do you still refuse to do this for me?" |
26740 | Do you think he will really marry this fascinating young person? |
26740 | Do you think my nature so shallow? |
26740 | Dorian Gray? 26740 Dorian,"said Lord Henry, at last, as the_ chaud- froid_ was being handed round,"what is the matter with you to- night? |
26740 | Even when he is wrong? |
26740 | Even when one has been wounded by it, Harry? |
26740 | Greek meets Greek, then? |
26740 | Harry, how can you? |
26740 | Harry,cried Dorian Gray, coming over and sitting down beside him,"why is it that I can not feel this tragedy as much as I want to? |
26740 | Has he never been jealous? |
26740 | Has she got any? |
26740 | Have you had good sport, Geoffrey? |
26740 | Have you seen her to- day? |
26740 | How can you say that? 26740 How can you say that? |
26740 | How do you mean? |
26740 | How long ago is it since your sister died? 26740 How long has she been married?" |
26740 | How long will your experiment take, Alan? |
26740 | I shut the window? |
26740 | I suppose you have come about the unfortunate accident of this morning, Thornton? |
26740 | I wonder is that really so, Harry? |
26740 | If it is not, what have I to do with it? |
26740 | In the Parthian manner? |
26740 | In this fog, my dear Basil? 26740 Is Monmouth to be there too?" |
26740 | Is it really finished? |
26740 | Is it the real Dorian? |
26740 | Is n''t he incorrigible? |
26740 | Is n''t it, Mr. Gray? 26740 Is she pretty?" |
26740 | Is that yours, Harry? |
26740 | Is there a fire in the room upstairs? |
26740 | Love? |
26740 | Might one look at the work of art, sir? |
26740 | Money, mother? |
26740 | Mother, are my things ready? |
26740 | Mother, mother,she cried,"why does he love me so much? |
26740 | Mr. Dorian Gray? 26740 Must I really come, Harry?" |
26740 | My dear Basil, how do I know? |
26740 | My dear Basil,said Dorian,"what have you told me? |
26740 | My dear Harry, why? |
26740 | My father was a scoundrel then? |
26740 | Not send it anywhere? 26740 Not seventeen, Lady Henry?" |
26740 | On the wharf? |
26740 | Or do you think that would make it a petticoat party? |
26740 | Prince Charming is what you like to be called, ai n''t it? |
26740 | Religion? |
26740 | Remembered what, Harry? |
26740 | Safe from what, Dorian? 26740 Shall I leave the things here, sir?" |
26740 | Sibyl? 26740 So you think that it is only God who sees the soul, Basil? |
26740 | Somewhere about here, sir, ai n''t it? |
26740 | Ten minutes past two? 26740 That was at''Lohengrin,''Lady Henry, I think?" |
26740 | That would be impossible, my dear boy? |
26740 | Then what should we call you, Harry? |
26740 | Then why wo n''t you exhibit his portrait? |
26740 | Then you shall come; and you will come too, Basil, wo n''t you? |
26740 | They are pork- packers, I suppose? |
26740 | To exhibit it? 26740 To whom?" |
26740 | Too cold for Monsieur? |
26740 | Ugliness is one of the seven deadly sins, then? |
26740 | Understand what? |
26740 | Was it all very bad? |
26740 | Was that a paradox? |
26740 | Was the poor fellow married? 26740 Was there anything found on him?" |
26740 | Well, Harry,said the old gentleman,"what brings you out so early? |
26740 | Well, what night shall we go? |
26740 | Well, you do n''t mind my looking at the thing now? |
26740 | What are you looking for? |
26740 | What are you two talking about? |
26740 | What are you? |
26740 | What becomes of your simile about the orchid? |
26740 | What can it matter? |
26740 | What change do you propose, then? |
26740 | What do they say of us? |
26740 | What do you mean, Jim? |
26740 | What do you mean? 26740 What do you mean?" |
26740 | What do you think has happened to Basil? |
26740 | What do you want me to say? |
26740 | What do you want? 26740 What do you want?" |
26740 | What does this mean? |
26740 | What has happened? |
26740 | What has the actual lapse of time got to do with it? 26740 What is it all about?" |
26740 | What is it that one was taught to say in one''s boyhood? 26740 What is it? |
26740 | What is that, Harry? |
26740 | What is that? |
26740 | What is that? |
26740 | What is the matter? |
26740 | What is? |
26740 | What more do you want? |
26740 | What o''clock is it, Victor? |
26740 | What of Art? |
26740 | What sort of ways, Basil? |
26740 | What was that, Harry? |
26740 | What would you say, Harry, if I told you that I had murdered Basil? |
26740 | What? |
26740 | When is she Sibyl Vane? |
26740 | Where are you lunching, Harry? |
26740 | Where else should I be? |
26740 | Where is the body? |
26740 | Where shall we put it, sir? |
26740 | Where was it? |
26740 | Where were you yesterday? |
26740 | Where, sir? 26740 Who are her people?" |
26740 | Who are you in love with? |
26740 | Who is he? 26740 Who is she?" |
26740 | Who would n''t like it? 26740 Who?" |
26740 | Who? |
26740 | Whose house is that, constable? |
26740 | Whose property is it? |
26740 | Why ca n''t these American women stay in their own country? 26740 Why did n''t you kill him?" |
26740 | Why do you ask me that, Harry? |
26740 | Why do you ask me? 26740 Why have you changed your mind? |
26740 | Why have you stopped playing, Dorian? 26740 Why not, mother? |
26740 | Why on earth do n''t you keep your men back? 26740 Why, Harry?" |
26740 | Why, what did you expect, Dorian? 26740 Why?" |
26740 | Why? |
26740 | Why? |
26740 | Why? |
26740 | Why? |
26740 | With their ages, Lady Narborough? |
26740 | Would you have me take the verdict of Europe on it? |
26740 | Yes, Basil? |
26740 | You are not serious, Dorian? |
26740 | You call yesterday the past? |
26740 | You can dine with me to- night, Dorian, ca n''t you? |
26740 | You do n''t like your country, then? |
26740 | You do n''t want me to meet him? |
26740 | You here, Adrian? |
26740 | You insist on knowing, Basil? |
26740 | You know nothing then? |
26740 | You refuse? |
26740 | You swear this? |
26740 | You talk books away,he said;"why do n''t you write one?" |
26740 | You think so? |
26740 | You went to the Opera while Sibyl Vane was lying dead in some sordid lodging? 26740 You went to the Opera?" |
26740 | You will have tea, of course, Dorian? 26740 You will sit to me again?" |
26740 | You will some day, surely? |
26740 | You will write to me if you want anything, wo n''t you? |
26740 | You wish me to defend my throne, then? |
26740 | You wo n''t forget? |
26740 | You wo n''t? 26740 Your letter? |
26740 | Your life? 26740 ''A dream of form in days of thought:''--who is it who says that? 26740 ''Have a box, my Lord?'' 26740 A sort of brother, I suppose? |
26740 | A wonderful tragic figure? |
26740 | After a few moments he said to him,"Have you really a very bad influence, Lord Henry? |
26740 | After all, what right had he to pry into the life of Dorian Gray? |
26740 | After the coffee had been brought in, he stopped, and, looking over at Lord Henry, said,"Harry, did it ever occur to you that Basil was murdered?" |
26740 | Ai n''t English girls good enough for him?" |
26740 | Am I safe here, Harry?" |
26740 | And Basil? |
26740 | And by the way, Harry, talking about silly marriages, what is this humbug your father tells me about Dartmoor wanting to marry an American? |
26740 | And now tell me-- reach me the matches, like a good boy: thanks:--what are your actual relations with Sibyl Vane?" |
26740 | And now, my dear young friend, if you will allow me to call you so, may I ask if you really meant all that you said to us at lunch?" |
26740 | And so will you, Harry? |
26740 | And what did she say in answer? |
26740 | And what is Ferrol like? |
26740 | And what sort of lives do these people, who pose as being moral, lead themselves? |
26740 | And where do bad Americans go to when they die?" |
26740 | And why is it so? |
26740 | And why was the red stain larger than it had been? |
26740 | And you will promise to talk to me all the time? |
26740 | And, besides, might not his nature grow finer, after all? |
26740 | And, yet, what did it matter? |
26740 | And, yet, what was there to be afraid of? |
26740 | And... his mother was very beautiful?" |
26740 | Are they true? |
26740 | Are you disengaged Tuesday?" |
26740 | Are you ill? |
26740 | As bad as Basil says?" |
26740 | At what time shall I be back?" |
26740 | Besides, even if he did confess, who would believe him? |
26740 | Besides, was it really under his control? |
26740 | Besides, what do you know of this young man? |
26740 | Besides, what on earth could happen to you, Dorian? |
26740 | But I suppose you will be back soon?" |
26740 | But are you really going for a walk with me? |
26740 | But how are you going to begin?" |
26740 | But tell me, what did she say about Mr. Dorian Gray?" |
26740 | But the picture? |
26740 | But this murder-- was it to dog him all his life? |
26740 | But was it all irretrievable? |
26740 | But what does he see in me? |
26740 | But what if, by some fate or deadlier chance, eyes other than his spied behind, and saw the horrible change? |
26740 | But when did you first speak to Miss Sibyl Vane?" |
26740 | But where were you? |
26740 | But who could tell?... |
26740 | But who drove him to it? |
26740 | But who had done it? |
26740 | But wo n''t you miss your train?" |
26740 | But you do n''t think of living up there, sir, and you so comfortable here?" |
26740 | But you understand now, do n''t you?" |
26740 | By the way, what has become of that wonderful portrait he did of you? |
26740 | CHAPTER VI"I suppose you have heard the news, Basil?" |
26740 | Ca n''t you see what I am going through? |
26740 | Can she feel, or know, or listen? |
26740 | Can they be true? |
26740 | Can they feel, I wonder, those white silent people we call the dead? |
26740 | Confess? |
26740 | Could it be that what that soul thought, they realized?--that what it dreamed, they made true? |
26740 | Curiosity? |
26740 | Did I teach the one his vices, and the other his debauchery? |
26740 | Did Sibyl----? |
26740 | Did anyone see you going round to her room? |
26740 | Did he leave any message?" |
26740 | Did it mean that he was to confess? |
26740 | Did it merely take cognizance of what passed within the soul? |
26740 | Did n''t you get my letter? |
26740 | Did n''t you recognise me?" |
26740 | Did you advertise for it? |
26740 | Did you go down and see the girl''s mother? |
26740 | Did you go straight home?" |
26740 | Did you make a scene with her?" |
26740 | Did you really see it?" |
26740 | Do n''t you like the name? |
26740 | Do n''t you understand? |
26740 | Do you think I am going to peril my reputation for you? |
26740 | Do you think this girl will ever be really contented now with anyone of her own rank? |
26740 | Do you think, then, that a man who has once committed a murder could possibly do the same crime again? |
26740 | Do you?" |
26740 | Dorian?" |
26740 | Erskine?" |
26740 | Even if he told them, would they believe it? |
26740 | Even those that are born in England become foreigners after a time, do n''t they? |
26740 | Finally he stammered in a stifled voice,"Harry, did you say an inquest? |
26740 | Good God, Dorian, is that what you have come to? |
26740 | Gray?" |
26740 | Gray?" |
26740 | Gray?" |
26740 | Gray?" |
26740 | Gray?" |
26740 | Gray?" |
26740 | Gray?" |
26740 | Gray?" |
26740 | Gray?'' |
26740 | Had he any people dependent on him?" |
26740 | Had he been cruel? |
26740 | Had he something of her temperament in him? |
26740 | Had it been merely vanity that had made him do his one good deed? |
26740 | Had it hit the mark? |
26740 | Had it indeed been prayer that had produced the substitution? |
26740 | Had she cursed him, as she died? |
26740 | Had some strange poisonous germ crept from body to body till it had reached his own? |
26740 | Had the lover of Giovanna of Naples bequeathed him some inheritance of sin and shame? |
26740 | Had the portrait really changed? |
26740 | Had there been nothing more in his renunciation than that? |
26740 | Hallward?'' |
26740 | Harry, what shall I do? |
26740 | Have another brandy- and- soda? |
26740 | Have they summoned you?" |
26740 | Have you any reason? |
26740 | Have you noticed in the picture something curious?--something that probably at first did not strike you, but that revealed itself to you suddenly?" |
26740 | His sin? |
26740 | How can you say such horrible things? |
26740 | How could I admire her? |
26740 | How dare you ask me, of all men in the world, to mix myself up in this horror? |
26740 | How dare you say it?" |
26740 | How had she played that dreadful last scene? |
26740 | How long have you known her?" |
26740 | How long have you known her?" |
26740 | How long will you like me? |
26740 | How often do you see him?" |
26740 | How should I know? |
26740 | Hypocrisy? |
26740 | I have been right, Basil, have n''t I, to take my love out of poetry, and to find my wife in Shakespeare''s plays? |
26740 | I know you would never harm anyone I love, would you?" |
26740 | I shall probably have to give it another coat of varnish before that, so I must see it some day, and why not to- day?" |
26740 | I suppose they do n''t know your name at the theatre? |
26740 | I suppose you think me awfully foolish about it?" |
26740 | I wonder can you realise all that that means? |
26740 | I wonder did Chopin write it at Majorca, with the sea weeping round the villa, and the salt spray dashing against the panes? |
26740 | I wonder do I know you? |
26740 | I wonder shall I always be glad?" |
26740 | If Adrian Singleton writes his friend''s name across a bill, am I his keeper? |
26740 | If Kent''s silly son takes his wife from the streets what is that to me? |
26740 | If it was not true, why trouble about it? |
26740 | If thought could exercise its influence upon a living organism, might not thought exercise an influence upon dead and inorganic things? |
26740 | If we women did not love you for your defects, where would you all be? |
26740 | In the present case, what is it that has really happened? |
26740 | Indeed, what right had Basil to have spoken to him as he had done? |
26740 | Is insincerity such a terrible thing? |
26740 | Is n''t there a verse somewhere,''Though your sins be as scarlet; yet I will make them as white as snow''?" |
26740 | Is that his name?" |
26740 | Is that right? |
26740 | Is that very vain of me? |
26740 | Is the man...?" |
26740 | Is there a single decent woman in London now who would drive with her in the Park? |
26740 | It is a gentleman, is n''t it, who is in love with her, or says he is? |
26740 | It seems silly of the French, does n''t it? |
26740 | It was curious my not wanting to know her, was n''t it?" |
26740 | Know you? |
26740 | LONDON: SIMPKIN, MARSHALL, HAMILTON, KENT& CO., LTD.*** Have You a friend who loves"My Lady Nicotine?" |
26740 | Lord Henry, do n''t you think that Mr. Gray should get married?" |
26740 | Makes it quite cosmopolitan, does n''t it? |
26740 | Might there not be some curious scientific reason for it all? |
26740 | Money? |
26740 | Mother, did you love my father as I love Prince Charming?" |
26740 | My dear fellow, why? |
26740 | Nothing about politics, I hope? |
26740 | Oh, Dorian, Dorian, you understand now what it signifies? |
26740 | Or did you say you had done more than one?" |
26740 | Or do you object to such simple pleasures?" |
26740 | Or had his choice already been made? |
26740 | Or had it been simply his own imagination that had made him see a look of evil where there had been a look of joy? |
26740 | Or shall I write to him?" |
26740 | Or shall we lunch with our little Duchess? |
26740 | Or that passion to act a part that sometimes makes us do things finer than we are ourselves? |
26740 | Or the desire for a new sensation, as Lord Henry had hinted, with his mocking laugh? |
26740 | Or was it indifferent to results? |
26740 | Or was that merely his own fancy? |
26740 | Or was the body really in the soul, as Giordano Bruno thought? |
26740 | Or was there some other, more terrible reason? |
26740 | Or would you like hock- and- seltzer? |
26740 | Or, perhaps, all these? |
26740 | Perhaps you are tired of Gladys? |
26740 | Poor? |
26740 | Shall you see Basil between this and then? |
26740 | Should he move it aside, after all? |
26740 | So she left a son, did she? |
26740 | So what does it matter if she plays Juliet like a wooden doll? |
26740 | Some red star had come too close to the earth.... And yet what evidence was there against him? |
26740 | Somewhere in the Euston Road, is n''t it? |
26740 | Surely a painted canvas could not alter? |
26740 | Surely his wish had not been fulfilled? |
26740 | Surely it was not still so horrible as it had been? |
26740 | Surely not, my dear fellow? |
26740 | Surely you do n''t think it was a vulgar accident? |
26740 | Tell me, did you go behind and see her, after the play was over?" |
26740 | Tell me, is Dorian Gray very fond of you?" |
26740 | The one who is pouring out tea for us, or the one in the picture?" |
26740 | There was nothing else to see?" |
26740 | They all are, ai n''t they? |
26740 | To give himself up, and be put to death? |
26740 | Tuesday? |
26740 | Vanity? |
26740 | Was he always to be burdened by his past? |
26740 | Was he really to confess? |
26740 | Was it all true? |
26740 | Was it not Buonarotti who had carved it in the coloured marbles of a sonnet- sequence? |
26740 | Was it not Gautier who used to write about_ la consolation des arts_? |
26740 | Was it not Plato, that artist in thought, who had first analysed it? |
26740 | Was it really true that one could never change? |
26740 | Was it to alter now with every mood to which he yielded? |
26740 | Was it true that the senses could cure it? |
26740 | Was it very bad? |
26740 | Was it young Herbert''s life that he sometimes led? |
26740 | Was n''t he one of your men?" |
26740 | Was that one of the things that life had in store? |
26740 | Was the face on the canvas viler than before? |
26740 | Was the soul a shadow seated in the house of sin? |
26740 | Was the world going to be shown his secret? |
26740 | Was there anything so real as words? |
26740 | Was there no hope for him? |
26740 | Were his own actions merely the dreams that the dead man had not dared to realise? |
26740 | Were people to gape at the mystery of his life? |
26740 | Were you married to my father?" |
26740 | What about Adrian Singleton, and his dreadful end? |
26740 | What about Lord Kent''s only son, and his career? |
26740 | What about that?" |
26740 | What about the young Duke of Perth? |
26740 | What about your country house, and the life that is led there? |
26740 | What are American dry- goods?" |
26740 | What are you now? |
26740 | What can you expect? |
26740 | What could atone for that? |
26740 | What could he do then? |
26740 | What could they know of love such as ours? |
26740 | What did it matter what happened to the coloured image on the canvas? |
26740 | What did it matter? |
26740 | What did it mean? |
26740 | What did it mean? |
26740 | What did she say about it all?" |
26740 | What did you do afterwards? |
26740 | What did you mean by that? |
26740 | What do years matter?" |
26740 | What do you think the play was, Harry?" |
26740 | What do you want?" |
26740 | What does it matter? |
26740 | What does that matter? |
26740 | What gentleman would associate with him?" |
26740 | What had Dorian Gray to do with Sibyl Vane''s death? |
26740 | What had happened? |
26740 | What had this man''s legacy been? |
26740 | What has become of the Frenchman, by the bye?" |
26740 | What have I done to you?" |
26740 | What have I to do with the puppets of a play? |
26740 | What have you or I to do with the superstitions of our age? |
26740 | What if Alan Campbell should be out of England? |
26740 | What if it should be stolen? |
26740 | What is going on in town? |
26740 | What is it but canvas and colour? |
26740 | What is it to me what devil''s work you are up to?" |
26740 | What is it to me where she came from? |
26740 | What is marriage? |
26740 | What is the name of the man at Richmond who supplies Selby with orchids?" |
26740 | What is the number of your sister''s box?" |
26740 | What matter what the cost was? |
26740 | What more can one want? |
26740 | What more can you want?" |
26740 | What of George Willoughby, with his powdered hair and fantastic patches? |
26740 | What passions had he bequeathed? |
26740 | What should he do if Basil Hallward came and asked to look at his own picture? |
26740 | What sort of boy is he? |
26740 | What sort of life has he got now? |
26740 | What then?" |
26740 | What time is it?" |
26740 | What was he doing there? |
26740 | What was he to say of that? |
26740 | What was it separated you? |
26740 | What was it to him how vile and full of shame it looked? |
26740 | What was she like? |
26740 | What was that loathsome red dew that gleamed, wet and glistening, on one of the hands, as though the canvas had sweated blood? |
26740 | What was the use of knowing? |
26740 | What was your reason for refusing to exhibit my picture?" |
26740 | What was youth at best? |
26740 | Where had they passed to? |
26740 | Where is he?" |
26740 | Where is it? |
26740 | Where shall we go? |
26740 | Which is he? |
26740 | Which is the work of art, sir?" |
26740 | Who could say where the fleshly impulse ceased, or the physical impulse began? |
26740 | Who else is coming?" |
26740 | Who had made him a Judge over others? |
26740 | Who is he? |
26740 | Who is he?" |
26740 | Who wants happiness? |
26740 | Whom did she marry? |
26740 | Why did he get in front of the guns? |
26740 | Why did you paint it? |
26740 | Why do you ask? |
26740 | Why do you talk of it? |
26740 | Why do you try to persuade our nice Mr. Dorian Gray to give up the East End? |
26740 | Why had he been made like that? |
26740 | Why had he kept it so long? |
26740 | Why had he not known it? |
26740 | Why had he worn its livery? |
26740 | Why had it altered? |
26740 | Why had it been left for a stranger to reveal him to himself? |
26740 | Why had such a soul been given to him? |
26740 | Why have you not told me about him? |
26740 | Why have you pulled the screen in front of it? |
26740 | Why inquire too closely into it? |
26740 | Why is it that so many gentlemen in London will neither go to your house nor invite you to theirs? |
26740 | Why is it, Dorian, that a man like the Duke of Berwick leaves the room of a club when you enter it? |
26740 | Why is your friendship so fatal to young men? |
26740 | Why not let it stay there? |
26740 | Why not tell me what it is? |
26740 | Why not? |
26740 | Why should I not love her? |
26740 | Why should he have been murdered? |
26740 | Why should he trouble about Sibyl Vane? |
26740 | Why should he watch the hideous corruption of his soul? |
26740 | Why should it keep what I must lose? |
26740 | Why should n''t I look at it?" |
26740 | Why should n''t you look at it? |
26740 | Will it always be so?... |
26740 | With such blood as he has in his veins, how could his record be clean? |
26740 | Would he ever look at it again? |
26740 | Would it teach him to loathe his own soul? |
26740 | Would there ever be someone who would fill him with a strange idolatry? |
26740 | Would you think it awfully rude of me if I asked you to go away?" |
26740 | Yet, after all, what did it matter to him? |
26740 | You are dining out, I suppose? |
26740 | You can talk to me of other women being charming, and of Patti singing divinely, before the girl you loved has even the quiet of a grave to sleep in? |
26740 | You did n''t see anything else in the picture, did you? |
26740 | You do n''t imagine I let him arrange my room for me? |
26740 | You do n''t really mind, Basil, do you? |
26740 | You have never been to any of my parties, have you, Mr. Gray? |
26740 | You know her curiously shrill voice?" |
26740 | You know her, at any rate, I suppose?" |
26740 | You never got it back? |
26740 | You remember Sibyl, do n''t you? |
26740 | You remember that landscape of mine, for which Agnew offered me such a huge price, but which I would not part with? |
26740 | You remember the one I wore at Lady Hilstone''s garden- party? |
26740 | You shrug your shoulders? |
26740 | You smile? |
26740 | You want to exhibit it?" |
26740 | You will excuse me, wo n''t you?" |
26740 | You wo n''t? |
26740 | but what do you mean by good?" |
26740 | ca n''t you forgive me for to- night? |
26740 | ca n''t you see that my heart is breaking?" |
26740 | do n''t you see a man moving behind the trees there, watching me, waiting for me?" |
26740 | do n''t you see that accursed thing leering at us?" |
26740 | is there no doubt about that?" |
26740 | she cried,"what does money matter? |
26740 | that is one of Harry''s views, is n''t it, Mr. Gray? |
26740 | why did n''t you tell me that the only thing worth loving is an actress?" |
7120 | ''How''s this,''I said,''Filka, my lad? 7120 ''Where is my Trésor?'' |
7120 | A merchant? |
7120 | After all,he thought to himself,"had n''t I better let him go? |
7120 | Akim? |
7120 | Alive and well; David''s alive, do you understand? 7120 And did the knocking stop?" |
7120 | And did you really go to Belyov? |
7120 | And he did not complain? |
7120 | And how about my father? |
7120 | And how was he-- did he seem anxious, depressed? |
7120 | And if they ask you what you have done with it? |
7120 | And it was_ your_ name that was called? |
7120 | And me? 7120 And there was no need to go to the police at all; but I ca n''t control myself because I am so... You do n''t understand German? |
7120 | And was that how it all ended? |
7120 | And what about Emilie? |
7120 | And what do you suppose they''ve been up to? |
7120 | And what would you give? |
7120 | And where did you run into her, my good girl? |
7120 | And where is my wife? |
7120 | And where is your mother? |
7120 | And who are you to teach me? 7120 And who is your father?" |
7120 | And why did I let go of his hand? |
7120 | And why not sell it,Kirillovna went on,"since a purchaser has luckily turned up? |
7120 | And will you swear it? |
7120 | And you left him? |
7120 | And you met no one? |
7120 | And you, my good friend, do you agree? |
7120 | And you? |
7120 | Are there reasons? |
7120 | Are you going home? |
7120 | At what time? |
7120 | Avdotya Arefyevna, what''s wrong with him? |
7120 | But are you leaving me all alone, Semyonitch? 7120 But excuse me, who are you?" |
7120 | But have n''t you declared your feelings? |
7120 | But have you spoken to Akim? |
7120 | But how can we find the way in this fog? |
7120 | But how could he? 7120 But what did you jump into the water for?" |
7120 | But what is he? 7120 But what the devil do you want with your uncle whom you never see except at the New Year when you go to congratulate him? |
7120 | But why are we standing here? |
7120 | But why did n''t you marry her, Ilya Stepanitch? |
7120 | But why did you go home, Raissa, why did n''t you stay? |
7120 | But why do you look like that, as though you were grieving? 7120 But why should you see him?" |
7120 | But,he went on, raising his voice,"why did you call me... if that is how it is?" |
7120 | Can someone have guessed our secret and dug up the watch? |
7120 | Certainly, why not? |
7120 | Curled himself? |
7120 | Dashed into them? |
7120 | David,I asked him as soon as we were left alone,"what did you do it for?" |
7120 | Did Tyeglev say anything to you? |
7120 | Did you give your watch to Yushka? 7120 Did you see Raissa?" |
7120 | Did you still hear the knocking? |
7120 | Do n''t be uneasy, Avdotya Arefyevna, why should we fight? 7120 Do n''t you like that?" |
7120 | Do you hear something? |
7120 | Do you know what, David? |
7120 | Do you know what? |
7120 | Do you know what? |
7120 | Do you like it? |
7120 | Do you mean to say you do n''t hear anything? 7120 Do you play on the guitar? |
7120 | Do you promise to deliver it? |
7120 | Do you promise? |
7120 | Do you remember your promise yesterday to give me a kiss? |
7120 | Do you see this bit of paper? |
7120 | Do you see? 7120 Do you think so?" |
7120 | Do you understand, officer? |
7120 | Does she know that you mean to marry her? |
7120 | Eh? 7120 Emilie?" |
7120 | Fight? 7120 For instance?" |
7120 | Found what? |
7120 | Good gracious, Kirillovna, what are you saying? |
7120 | Good? |
7120 | Has anything happened? |
7120 | Has he come back? |
7120 | Have you been out? |
7120 | Have you found Ilya Stepanitch? |
7120 | Have you heard,Lizaveta Prohorovna began with a forced laugh,"what this merchant has been proposing to me? |
7120 | He''s gone away-- well, God bless him.... What business is it of mine? 7120 Here''s the watch,"he added, opening the table drawer;"if it really is yours, take it by all means; but what''s the rouble for? |
7120 | His own money? 7120 How could I sell it to you?" |
7120 | How did you know? 7120 How is it she has never spoken of you?" |
7120 | How is that? |
7120 | How is that? |
7120 | How so? |
7120 | How so? |
7120 | How so? |
7120 | How the devil can it be yours? |
7120 | How... have you found him? 7120 I say, you are not jealous, are you?" |
7120 | I tell you what, Yefrem,Akim articulated at last,"could I have some vodka?" |
7120 | I tell you,shouted Akim in a cracked voice,"go away, do you hear? |
7120 | I wanted to ask you something, Davidushka; how ought I to spell''while''? |
7120 | I will buy it of you, what could be better? 7120 If she died,"I began,"do you think Ilya Stepanitch would not survive her?" |
7120 | Imagination? |
7120 | In what way not on her level? |
7120 | Is it possible? 7120 Is it some more stolen things returned to you?" |
7120 | Is n''t it dear? 7120 Is that Tyeglev an artillery officer, a man of middle height and with a stoop, speaks with a lisp?" |
7120 | Is that the way gentlemen behave? 7120 Is your master in love with this Marya... et cetera?" |
7120 | It''s a queer business, eh? 7120 It''s a secret, then?" |
7120 | It''s a strange business, really,he said,"how did it happen? |
7120 | It''s... it''s a pair of scissors? |
7120 | Lads, have n''t you a sack? 7120 Leaving you alone? |
7120 | Let me go,said Akim,"are n''t you satisfied?" |
7120 | Mein allerliebstep Florestan,she wrote to him,"can you really so cross with your Zuckerpüppchen be that you came not yesterday? |
7120 | Might we trouble you, dear sir,he went on, addressing the Kaluga landowner,"to give us the details of so interesting an incident?" |
7120 | My father? 7120 My lady, Lizaveta Prohorovna,"he kept repeating to himself all the way,"how have I lost your favour? |
7120 | No, why not? 7120 No, you wo n''t do that, Avdotya Arefyevna; what''s the use of talking like that? |
7120 | Not for me? |
7120 | Not understand, madam? 7120 Not yours? |
7120 | Nothing,answered the man...."What is it?" |
7120 | Now? 7120 On business, eh?" |
7120 | Or, I tell you what: should n''t we take it to Latkin? |
7120 | Out of his house? |
7120 | Quite so, but how was it to be done, how to prevent it? |
7120 | Raissa, dear, what''s the matter with you? |
7120 | Ran into her? |
7120 | See Vassilyevna here came in tchoo-- tchoo, just now.... Do you hear? 7120 Seventeen, you mean?" |
7120 | Shall I give you a lift? |
7120 | Shall we bury it again? 7120 She will pay, only when? |
7120 | Should n''t we light a lantern? |
7120 | So I suppose you thought to stay on? |
7120 | So he has turned you out? |
7120 | So my house is lost? |
7120 | So that is what you wanted the money for? |
7120 | Some other man, then? |
7120 | Someone else? |
7120 | Stopping for a woman? 7120 Surely you are not afraid of me?" |
7120 | Take me to him this minute-- do you hear? 7120 Taken the goose?" |
7120 | Tell me, my pretty, what put it into your head to invite me to- day? |
7120 | That''s all true, of course, but still I ca n''t do it.... How could I sell the inn? |
7120 | The fat woman who goes about in a green blouse? |
7120 | The thing has begun well,he thought,"how will it go on?" |
7120 | Then what will you do with me then? 7120 There is nothing in my house for you, do you hear?" |
7120 | To Hrisashka? |
7120 | To what expense? |
7120 | To- morrow at seven o''clock, then? |
7120 | Tyeglev? 7120 Upon my word, madam, what are you saying? |
7120 | Vodka? 7120 Was it Akim, I wonder?" |
7120 | Was it you answered me? |
7120 | Was it you calling me? |
7120 | Was it you, then, I saw under the willow tree the other night? |
7120 | Was it your servant found them? |
7120 | Was not that Raissa? 7120 Well, Arefyevna,"he began,"what are we going to do now?" |
7120 | Well, Petrovitch,she inquired, looking straight into his face,"is he angry?" |
7120 | Well, and afterwards.... Did you see her? |
7120 | Well, and was she standing with him, my good girl? |
7120 | Well, brother Yefrem,he said huskily,"could we have some again?" |
7120 | Well, have you brought it? |
7120 | Well, he did n''t beat you then? |
7120 | Well, how have you slept, Akim Semyonitch? |
7120 | Well, then,he began,"what do you propose?" |
7120 | Well, then,he brought out at last,"so then my house is lost?" |
7120 | Well, what if there is a trial? 7120 Well, what if there is?" |
7120 | Well, what of it? |
7120 | Well, why not? 7120 Well, why not?" |
7120 | Well? |
7120 | Well? |
7120 | Well? |
7120 | Well? |
7120 | What Ilya? |
7120 | What a senseless fellow you are, really? 7120 What are we going to do? |
7120 | What are you doing, good Christians? |
7120 | What are you waiting for? |
7120 | What crazy stuff is it you are talking? 7120 What did I do?" |
7120 | What did he come for, then? |
7120 | What did you see? 7120 What do I see, friends? |
7120 | What do you intend to do? |
7120 | What do you mean, what are you saying? 7120 What do you want of me?" |
7120 | What do you want, Petrovitch? 7120 What do you want?" |
7120 | What does it all mean? |
7120 | What does that mean? |
7120 | What else could I do? 7120 What expense? |
7120 | What for? |
7120 | What have you got, broth, is it? |
7120 | What have you to tell me, good madam? |
7120 | What ill- luck has brought her this way? 7120 What inn?" |
7120 | What is it? |
7120 | What is it? |
7120 | What is it? |
7120 | What is it? |
7120 | What is it? |
7120 | What is it? |
7120 | What is she like then, pretty? |
7120 | What is there to declare? 7120 What is to be done then?" |
7120 | What little imp is this? |
7120 | What marvel is this? |
7120 | What next? 7120 What next?" |
7120 | What nonsense is this? |
7120 | What of it? 7120 What owner?" |
7120 | What place is that, the falcon? |
7120 | What servant? 7120 What should I speak to him for? |
7120 | What sins have you, Semyonitch? |
7120 | What sort of''while''? |
7120 | What time did he set off for town? |
7120 | What watch? 7120 What will we do? |
7120 | What will you do, Semyonitch? 7120 What''s that you are saying to me?" |
7120 | What''s the good of stopping? |
7120 | What''s the good of talking to you? |
7120 | What''s the matter with you? |
7120 | What''s the matter? |
7120 | What''s there? 7120 What''s this, Semyonitch, what is the matter with you?" |
7120 | What, more? |
7120 | What, my dear sir,he began,"do you seriously maintain that something supernatural has happened to you? |
7120 | What? 7120 What? |
7120 | What? |
7120 | What? |
7120 | What? |
7120 | Where am I? |
7120 | Where am I? |
7120 | Where are the others sleeping? |
7120 | Where are we to go? |
7120 | Where are you going, wife? |
7120 | Where are you going? 7120 Where are you going?" |
7120 | Where are you going? |
7120 | Where are you off to so early? |
7120 | Where are you off to, Akim Ivanitch? |
7120 | Where are you off to, Akim Semyonitch? 7120 Where are you off to?" |
7120 | Where do you live? 7120 Where has God brought you from?" |
7120 | Where have you been without your cap, Semyonitch? |
7120 | Where is he, then? |
7120 | Where? |
7120 | Where? |
7120 | Who brought you the bundle, then? |
7120 | Who can make him out? 7120 Who is she?" |
7120 | Who is there? |
7120 | Who is there? |
7120 | Who owes it you? |
7120 | Who''s that singing? |
7120 | Whoever heard of such a thing, talking away? 7120 Whom do you mean?" |
7120 | Why do n''t you drink it? |
7120 | Why do n''t you marry her, then? |
7120 | Why do you move away? |
7120 | Why grieve? |
7120 | Why have you shut the door? |
7120 | Why is that? |
7120 | Why not? 7120 Why should I kill you, Arefyevna?" |
7120 | Why you have been hiding away from me all this time? |
7120 | Why, do n''t you know? 7120 Why, how old are you? |
7120 | Why, what else? |
7120 | Why, what is it? |
7120 | Why, yes, what of it? |
7120 | Why? |
7120 | Will there ever be an end to these fooleries? 7120 Will you have jam? |
7120 | Will you let me see you home? |
7120 | Would you be willing to sell your inn? |
7120 | Would you like me to sing? |
7120 | Would you like to hear it for yourself? |
7120 | Yes, I; why not? |
7120 | Yes, why? |
7120 | You a peasant, Akim Semyonitch? 7120 You are her sister? |
7120 | You are in concealment then... in hiding? |
7120 | You ceased to love her? |
7120 | You dance? 7120 You heard a horse was stolen from our neighbour yesterday?" |
7120 | You imagine perhaps,he brought out, glancing askance at me,"that I should n''t have the spirit to do it? |
7120 | You imagined I did n''t know you had your watch again? 7120 You love? |
7120 | You must take care of yourself, though,David observed;"you have n''t slept at all, I expect.... And what''s the use of crying? |
7120 | You saw Tyeglev? 7120 You say you heard a knocking?" |
7120 | You sing, then? |
7120 | You think so? 7120 You want to see the mistress, Akim Semyonitch?" |
7120 | You went home? |
7120 | You were called? 7120 You wo n''t consider me in your debt?" |
7120 | You wo n''t doubt it now, will you? |
7120 | You wo n''t wait for Emilie? |
7120 | You''d better think,Kirillovna went on,"should n''t you ask the mistress to let you off your yearly payment or something?" |
7120 | You? 7120 You?" |
7120 | Your name is Ilya? |
7120 | Your uncle? |
7120 | _ Tso?_"Why do you say_ tso?_ Are you a Pole? |
7120 | _ Tso?_"Why do you say_ tso?_ Are you a Pole? |
7120 | _ Tso?_"Why do you say_ tso?_ Are you a Pole? |
7120 | ''And how am I to find this man?'' |
7120 | ''And if it is not sorcery, what is it, then?'' |
7120 | ''And where does he live?'' |
7120 | ''Are you so and so?'' |
7120 | ''Did you put out the lamp?'' |
7120 | ''Do you hear the dog?'' |
7120 | ''For how can one?'' |
7120 | ''Go away,''he said,''get along,''but where am I to go?" |
7120 | ''How can you, Porfiry Kapitonitch,''she said,''distress yourself so about a dog? |
7120 | ''How good- bye? |
7120 | ''I can direct you about that,''he answered;''but how can it be sorcery? |
7120 | ''In whose house?'' |
7120 | ''Is n''t it a dog?'' |
7120 | ''Is there such a person?'' |
7120 | ''Oh, how can you?'' |
7120 | ''Stay,''I said to the man in the overcoat,''what will you sell it for?'' |
7120 | ''Well, now,''I said,''do you hear?'' |
7120 | ''Well,''I said,''Fedul Ivanitch, what do you think? |
7120 | ''What are you_ needing_?'' |
7120 | ''What can it be?'' |
7120 | ''What do you bid me make of it, Porfiry Kapitonitch? |
7120 | ''What do you make of it?'' |
7120 | ''What dog?'' |
7120 | ''What fool is going to make you a present of a watch?''" |
7120 | ''What is it?'' |
7120 | ''What is your name?'' |
7120 | ''What trick is this?'' |
7120 | ''What''s that? |
7120 | ''What''s_ this_?'' |
7120 | ''Who is it you are taking after,''she says,''to be a thief?''" |
7120 | ''You have n''t? |
7120 | ''You have need of me?'' |
7120 | ''Your age? |
7120 | ("Shall I tell him the real explanation of the taps?" |
7120 | A dog has got under my bed?'' |
7120 | Afterwards I was horribly frightened and could not help going away, for if the police had found us, what would have happened to us then? |
7120 | Akim Semyonitch, wo n''t you get out, sir, and come indoors?" |
7120 | Alyoshka, where''s the knife?" |
7120 | Am I to say to him,''My wife took it from under the floor and brought it to you''? |
7120 | And I''ll sing you... what do you call it? |
7120 | And do you suppose, madam, that he would have no money left? |
7120 | And here, meanwhile, are fifteen kopecks for the chemist''s.... Is that enough?" |
7120 | And how dare_ you_ come here?" |
7120 | And how old are you?" |
7120 | And how''s your father?" |
7120 | And is n''t all our property yours, our mistress''s?" |
7120 | And now must I go?" |
7120 | And the old lady, Madame Fritsche, is your aunt, too?" |
7120 | And to- day he meant to take me to the town but he let me off; so I ca n''t claim the money from him....''When did I borrow money from you?'' |
7120 | And was it possible that Madame Fritsche knew nothing about it? |
7120 | And what about her?" |
7120 | And what could they be talking about? |
7120 | And what is the letter?" |
7120 | And what''s the use? |
7120 | And when will you give me a kiss?" |
7120 | And who is it? |
7120 | And why did Emilie write to him? |
7120 | And why was I so furious about it?" |
7120 | And you live here?" |
7120 | And_ she_.... Who was she? |
7120 | Anyway, you might tell me what the house went for?" |
7120 | Are n''t you ashamed of frightening me like this? |
7120 | Are n''t you coming back to me?" |
7120 | Are we in the Russian Empire or the French Republic?" |
7120 | Are you a Jewess then, or what?" |
7120 | Are you a suicide or simply a thief or altogether a fool? |
7120 | Are you going? |
7120 | Are you reckoning on his money? |
7120 | Are you single or married?'' |
7120 | At last I asked him straight out:"What did he think, had our watch gone for some time after being buried in the earth or had it stopped at once?" |
7120 | Avdotya repeated with tears,"are you leaving me all alone? |
7120 | But ca n''t that be afterwards?" |
7120 | But do you imagine that the story of the watch ended there? |
7120 | But how was I to write? |
7120 | But how was it I did not see her afterwards?" |
7120 | But no, Kirillovna, how can I sell it?" |
7120 | But what am I to do now?" |
7120 | But what are we to do with it?" |
7120 | But what are you going to call me?" |
7120 | But what could he deduce from that? |
7120 | But what of that? |
7120 | But what to do? |
7120 | But what will Emilie say? |
7120 | But where could a dog have come from? |
7120 | But where did he get the money? |
7120 | But who could have dug it up except David? |
7120 | But whose steps were those, soft and rapid behind my back? |
7120 | But why are you standing?" |
7120 | But why have you no moustache?" |
7120 | But will it last long? |
7120 | But would n''t you be willing to sell it to me?" |
7120 | But you can dance? |
7120 | Can something unexpected have happened to you in Petersburg?" |
7120 | David turned his little grey eyes upon me:"Nastasey?" |
7120 | Do n''t we all belong to you? |
7120 | Do you count that as nothing? |
7120 | Do you hear, do you hear what he says? |
7120 | Do you hear?" |
7120 | Do you know what it means? |
7120 | Do you know, for instance, where the village is? |
7120 | Do you know,"Akim went on and his eyes gleamed,"do you know where I spent the night? |
7120 | Eh? |
7120 | Eh? |
7120 | Eh?" |
7120 | Eh?" |
7120 | Eh?" |
7120 | Every day he became more exacting; his needs increased.... And how were those needs to be satisfied? |
7120 | Florestan?" |
7120 | Give back the watch? |
7120 | Had she been overwhelmed by sudden remorse? |
7120 | Has anyone ever heard of turning anyone out of his house, especially the owner of it?" |
7120 | Has anything happened?" |
7120 | Has n''t there been scandal enough for you, Arefyevna? |
7120 | Have you heard nothing?" |
7120 | Have you only just come? |
7120 | He expressed some regret at the death of the lieutenant; wondered what could have possessed him...."Was he in debt to you?" |
7120 | He must have bewitched her, I suppose? |
7120 | He told me to go... how could I stay?" |
7120 | He was coming from the gate limping, covered with wounds and with blood....''What''s the meaning of it?'' |
7120 | He''s taken our knife and our pot-- well, God bless him, what has it to do with me?" |
7120 | Here''s God and here''s the door... do you understand? |
7120 | How can I live without a husband?" |
7120 | How can I look my husband in the face after this? |
7120 | How can he take care of a watch? |
7120 | How can we keep company with you? |
7120 | How can you go on like that-- when you know nothing about it? |
7120 | How dare you? |
7120 | I began rummaging in it and what do you think I found? |
7120 | I cried,"is that you? |
7120 | I daresay you wo n''t find him to- day; what''s to be done? |
7120 | I did not do it for that.... Where are you serving?" |
7120 | I do n''t know German... and in Russian, who would have translated it? |
7120 | I do n''t want to stay here, just because I do n''t want them to point the finger at me-- do you understand? |
7120 | I felt frozen, as though I had been thrust into the ice, up to my ears, and why? |
7120 | I heard him walk round it twice, asking all the time,"Who is there? |
7120 | I mean to say, something inconsistent with the laws of nature?" |
7120 | I need hardly say I did not express this feeling to him: could anything be more insulting to a"fatal"hero than to be an object of pity? |
7120 | I said to David, as soon as Raissa was out of hearing,"does she do the cooking herself?" |
7120 | I say, how old are you?" |
7120 | I stepped across the mat, across the girl... who opened that door? |
7120 | I suppose you kissed his hand?" |
7120 | I will sing to you.... Will you?" |
7120 | I''ll give you a knife and take one myself.... And then we shall see who does for which? |
7120 | I''ll go myself, I''ll speak myself... how... why should she sell it? |
7120 | Is he alive?" |
7120 | Is it sharp? |
7120 | Is it some devil''s sorcery or what?'' |
7120 | Is n''t it nice?" |
7120 | Is n''t that strange?" |
7120 | Is n''t the inn yours? |
7120 | Is that how you look after things? |
7120 | Is the door locked?" |
7120 | It ca n''t be lost by magic, you say, but what''s it to do with me? |
7120 | It must be that young fellow singing, Naum is his name, is n''t it?" |
7120 | It was my aunt shrieking... and that? |
7120 | Lieutenant?" |
7120 | Lieutenant?" |
7120 | May I ask you?" |
7120 | May I ask, madam, how much he offers you?" |
7120 | May I look?" |
7120 | Me?" |
7120 | Merciful heavens?" |
7120 | My head? |
7120 | Not that either? |
7120 | Not that, either? |
7120 | Now I remember, was n''t it she standing on the bank by the bridge? |
7120 | Officer? |
7120 | Officer? |
7120 | Officer? |
7120 | Officer? |
7120 | Only, to- morrow you will tell me?" |
7120 | Or perhaps she had herself been deceived and had not received her promised share? |
7120 | Or was there nothing of the sort-- and was it only imagination mocking me? |
7120 | Pack your belongings today,"he added, putting the document back in his pocket,"and do n''t let me see a sign of you here to- morrow, do you hear?" |
7120 | Perhaps you dislike it?" |
7120 | Perhaps you would like to pay interest? |
7120 | Shall I go for her?" |
7120 | Shall I?" |
7120 | Shall we send the watch there?" |
7120 | She became as soft as silk, she gave him an authorisation for the management of all her estate-- what more would you have? |
7120 | She saw me and said,''Where are you running to? |
7120 | She suddenly sat up and opened her eyelids wide.... Heavenly Father, what next? |
7120 | Someone sawing, somewhere, or scraping... or sighing? |
7120 | Soon underground-- and what do you call it? |
7120 | Stolen from you? |
7120 | Take up driving again?" |
7120 | The doctors do n''t know that and do n''t understand it, how should they, the idle drones, the wretched Germans? |
7120 | The old woman will hear.... What of it? |
7120 | Then all at once bawled at the top of his voice:"Where is it? |
7120 | There are insects like that in Africa, if I remember right?" |
7120 | To look at ourselves in the looking- glass and see what beauties we are? |
7120 | Tyeglev jumped out of bed, opened the window and thrusting out his head, cried wildly,"Who is there? |
7120 | Was it for the same reason, then? |
7120 | Was it worth while, I asked myself, to invent such rubbish at such a moment? |
7120 | Was n''t it through your kindness? |
7120 | Was not this perhaps why he became an artillery officer? |
7120 | We approached and called-- there was not a sound; at last we went into the barn.... And what did we see? |
7120 | Well, did that wake them? |
7120 | Well, did you dig up the watch?" |
7120 | Well, do you get a good salary?" |
7120 | Were not those very doubts of which he had spoken to me beginning to assail him? |
7120 | What about Akim? |
7120 | What am I to say to him? |
7120 | What are you so inquisitive about? |
7120 | What are you talking about? |
7120 | What became of her? |
7120 | What dance of death was this? |
7120 | What did it mean? |
7120 | What did you think it was... a pistol? |
7120 | What do we want a telescope for? |
7120 | What do you mean? |
7120 | What do you think of it, gentlemen?" |
7120 | What do you think, would they give us anything for it? |
7120 | What do you want of me?" |
7120 | What do you want?" |
7120 | What inhuman despair was torturing this unhappy creature? |
7120 | What is it, madam?" |
7120 | What is it?" |
7120 | What more have I to tell you? |
7120 | What sort is it, a setter?'' |
7120 | What to do?" |
7120 | What was the meaning of it? |
7120 | What were your parents? |
7120 | What will Nastasey Nastasyeitch say? |
7120 | What will happen? |
7120 | What would he think of me, of my lack of will? |
7120 | What''s his trade?" |
7120 | What''s that you''ve got, a dagger?" |
7120 | What''s that, a dog? |
7120 | What''s the meaning of it? |
7120 | What''s the use of saying that? |
7120 | What''s the use?" |
7120 | What''s to become of us?" |
7120 | What''s your name, allow me to ask?" |
7120 | Whatever you and I might say about it would make no difference, would it?" |
7120 | When he shouted:''Where''s the lad?'' |
7120 | Where am I to go?" |
7120 | Where are the compresses, Poplyovkin?" |
7120 | Where are we living? |
7120 | Where could the money be found? |
7120 | Where is he now?" |
7120 | Where''s your rouble?" |
7120 | Which way did he go?" |
7120 | Who are you?" |
7120 | Who called you?" |
7120 | Who could it be? |
7120 | Who else knew where it was? |
7120 | Who goes there? |
7120 | Who is knocking?" |
7120 | Who is knocking?" |
7120 | Who is there?" |
7120 | Why ashamed? |
7120 | Why do you spoil him like this? |
7120 | Why now?" |
7120 | Why should he complain?" |
7120 | Why, is n''t it there?" |
7120 | Why, it''s my house, is n''t it?" |
7120 | Why, what''s this?'' |
7120 | Wo n''t you have some tea?" |
7120 | Would you like to see him? |
7120 | XIII Yes; but where was I to go? |
7120 | XVI"Well?" |
7120 | XXI"Yes, indeed,"I reflected as I walked towards the Latkins'',"how was it that I did not notice Raissa? |
7120 | XXVIII"Well, did you answer her?" |
7120 | Yefrem told her what he knew and ended by asking"Is he awake yet, or not?" |
7120 | Yes, who was she? |
7120 | Yes, yes, it''s your sting, and you are a wasp, that''s what you are, a wasp, do you hear?" |
7120 | You do n''t know? |
7120 | You do n''t suppose I am drunk, do you?'' |
7120 | You do n''t wear a cross? |
7120 | You have given the whole family a fright and are you going to be unruly now? |
7120 | You say he is not far off?" |
7120 | You will ask me perhaps why I came to Nikolaev? |
7120 | You''ve bought our inn?" |
7120 | and so the mad dog has strangled him?'' |
7120 | asked her mistress,"how is Akim?" |
7120 | auntie, I will have cream with my tea.... Is there any cream?" |
7120 | does she cook the dinner?" |
7120 | eh?" |
7120 | he said at last;"how dare he take someone else''s property? |
7120 | he said,"do you hear? |
7120 | he said,''you have no feeling''; but how was I to blame? |
7120 | he thought at last;"whom do they take me for? |
7120 | he went on, making his guest sit down,"and wo n''t you take something?" |
7120 | he went on, pulling out of his pocket a sheet of stamped paper, folded in four,"do you see? |
7120 | he would say,''the Queen of Heaven herself is graciously pleased to be on my wall there, and is an unclean dog to put his infidel nose there?'' |
7120 | his wife inquired,"found?" |
7120 | said Akim raising his head,"has n''t she come?" |
7120 | said her mistress;"what does he want?" |
7120 | she asked,"want more?" |
7120 | she cried,"Naum Ivanitch, what does this mean? |
7120 | sorbet?" |
7120 | what is there for me? |
7120 | what was it? |
7120 | what was that sound? |
7120 | what?" |