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 |
---|---|
1436 | Peter Leon, having stood by some time, asked whether the King had but one ear? |
12617 | Sir Charles Paul and Mr. Hill said offhand: But you agreed to pay, how can you get out of it? |
10779 | What is that running up the tree, mother? |
10779 | my son; what sound is that?" |
3334 | The first to know if there were any wars between Spain and England; the second, why our merchants with their goods were embarged or arrested? |
3334 | To whom Captain Sampson was sent with Captain Goring; who coming to the said messenger, he first asked them, What nation they were? |
43776 | Chetopa? |
43776 | after 1854; name possibly a personal one? |
30924 | Who sent you? |
30924 | Everts?" |
46161 | How am I to describe a geyser? |
4030 | What is that? |
4030 | Does it not tell a story that all of us hope may be one day true; when war shall belong only to history, and when peace shall possess the earth? |
4030 | Is it not a strange and moving contrast? |
30820 | Going by Bus? |
30820 | Going by Car? |
30820 | Going by Train? |
30820 | Little children get tired on a long trip, and who can blame them? |
45078 | How then shall we travel in the future? |
45078 | Or shall we leave solid earth behind us altogether and make our journeys in great airships and aeroplanes? |
45078 | What can they be, these tiny carriages, each with its wheels, shafts, and box- seat complete? |
45078 | Will it be in some new form of railway train or motor- car, with increased speed and added comfort? |
42146 | Large tracts were covered with a tall fern(_ Pteris aquilina_?). |
42146 | and if so, to what are we to ascribe the deposition of such an enormous mass of alluvium- like accumulation? |
45706 | GLOSTER-- Knowest thou the way? 45706 Breakfast is ready-- can anything be more satisfactory, or anything more tempting and wholesome? 45706 What more would a man have? 45706 Will he drown?--will he not be suffocated? 2512 three cycle? 2512 two prongs? 4521 FIVE CORNERS(''Stypelia?'') 4521 THE APPLE- GUM(''Angophora?'') 4521 or was the author being poetic? 4521 p 73--exhiliration APPENDIX p 75--weeps the stream-- should be''sweeps the stream''? 14681 ........? 14681 ...? 14681 What is the direction, in a vague general way, towards which the path or river runs, or the sea- coast tends? 14681 What then, is that moderate load by which we shall obtain the largest amount ofuseful effect"? |
18975 | Have you heard about poor Marvin? |
18975 | Could such good fortune continue? |
18975 | Did this mean failure again? |
18975 | Passing along a cliff, on a sledge journey, a man will sometimes stop and listen and then say:"Did you hear what the devil said just then?" |
18975 | Should I return? |
18975 | Should I succeed? |
18975 | Should we return to tell the story? |
18975 | Should we stop here? |
18975 | Should we_ ever_ be able to make the few remaining miles? |
18975 | The char(?) |
18975 | Those sentences were:"I have often been asked: Of what use are Eskimos to the world? |
18975 | What chance would a man in a sleeping- bag have, should he suddenly wake to find himself in the water? |
18975 | What were they doing at home? |
36763 | Have you found it good? |
36763 | Is it always beautiful like this? |
36763 | What causes the colour? |
36763 | Aimlessly we wait and wonder, Will he come again? |
36763 | Did Matthew Arnold dream of such a cavern when he wrote:"When the sea snakes coil and turn, Dry their mail, and bask in the brine"? |
36763 | Did they reach it? |
36763 | Did those three years bring him pleasure? |
36763 | Hence when the chiefs inquired concerning this new arrival,"What does he do? |
36763 | How does he live?" |
36763 | Is it that Robert Louis Stevenson appeals first and foremost to a cultured audience? |
36763 | Lament, oh Vailima, waiting and ever waiting; Let us search and inquire of the Captains of Ships,"Be not angry, but has not Tusitala come?" |
36763 | Looks like a necklace of opals, does it not?" |
36763 | Small wonder that sixty natives were required to get the coffin up, and even so the question will always remain, How did they accomplish the feat? |
36763 | The question has been raised, Was Stevenson contented in Samoa? |
36763 | Who shall say? |
36201 | 21) on Drake''s Bay in 1934(? |
36201 | One might as well ask at the same time why Fletcher did not mention Tomales Bay if Drake were at Bodega? |
36201 | See, for example, J. D. B. Stillman,"Did Drake Discover San Francisco Bay?" |
36201 | The gifts brought by the women in round baskets included bags of_ Tobah_( already discussed), broiled fish, the seed and down of some plant( milkweed? |
36201 | Thus Madox''s''_ Hioghe_ may indicate a terminal sound( short or weak_ e_?) |
36201 | [ 21] See R. B. Haselden,"Is the Drake Plate of Brass Genuine?" |
44191 | Can he see me? |
44191 | Does he merely do this as a bluff and then recede from the attack? |
44191 | How big is he? |
44191 | How could any one requite such integrity with anything unkind? |
44191 | How does the victim escape? |
44191 | Is it best to fire into the black shadows, or to wait for his attack? |
44191 | Is it wrong that I should requite such devotion and fidelity with reciprocal emotion? |
44191 | Moved by such conviction, who could fail to pity that poor, lone captive, in his iron cell, far from his native land, slowly dying? |
44191 | Or does he follow it up and seize his victim, tear him open and drink his blood as he is supposed to do? |
44191 | What becomes of all those that are attacked by this fierce monarch of the jungle? |
44191 | What becomes of the assailant? |
44191 | What does he intend? |
44191 | What is his exact pose? |
44191 | Who lives to tell the tale? |
51910 | As there was no immediate chance of going to Greenland, why not see Shetland? |
51910 | By the iceberg is a sail Chasing of the swarthy whale; Mother doubtful, mother dread, Tell us, has the good ship sped?" |
51910 | I knew that at this season the animals would float, and as I was on the lee side, why did they not drift down to me? |
51910 | Some ruins have been found, but where are the people? |
51910 | The first question asked by us was,"Is England at war?" |
51910 | The next time it would be beside a boat-- which boat? |
51910 | Was it water or seals? |
51910 | What could it be? |
51910 | What danger is there in the pursuit of any member of the deer or antelope family, and what chance has the animal in these days of high power rifles? |
51910 | Would it come up under us or beside us? |
10813 | Do they wear such deep mourning for all relatives? |
10813 | Will they charge duty on tobacco? |
10813 | Will you put toys on it? |
10813 | And who but Dunois would have been so reckless as to follow baked mussels and_ crépinettes_ with_ rognons frits_? |
10813 | Could one imagine a dozen men of any other nationality thus maintaining the same indifference over even a short period? |
10813 | Have you been recalled to the throne of Poland?" |
10813 | Have you ever had an_ arbre de Noël_?" |
10813 | Need I say that the provision for ablutions was one basin and a liliputian ewer, and that there was not a fixed bath in the establishment? |
10813 | Now, I do wonder how it got among my rugs?" |
10813 | When is there a boat?" |
10813 | When shall we be allowed food,_ real_ food?" |
10813 | Would we kindly see that she got on all right?" |
10813 | [ Illustration: The Bedchamber of Louis XIV]"What is your name, my child?" |
10813 | when can we go to him? |
26059 | Which is the last boulder? |
26059 | Can any one be more dogmatic than your modern scientist? |
26059 | Had he discovered our wood and our grub and, perhaps starving, kindled a fire of the one to cook the other? |
26059 | Had some mysterious climber come over from the other side of the mountain and built a fire on the glacier? |
26059 | Is there any country in the world where furs are actually needed more? |
26059 | Or is it solely the conservation of commercial resources that engages the attention of government? |
26059 | Was there really, then, some access to this face of the mountain from the south? |
26059 | What should we have done with the ordinary leather climbing boots? |
26059 | Why should any one haul canned pemmican hundreds of miles into the greatest game country in the world? |
26059 | [ Sidenote: Horns of the South Peak] Where else might that name be placed? |
26059 | _ Is_ there any way to cook flour under such circumstances? |
27874 | Who would have thought that a nation would burn its own capital? |
27874 | And finally whence does it come? |
27874 | Is it because Nature is here so bountiful, so lovely, so prolific, that her children are sluggish, dirty, and heedless? |
27874 | Is it possible that the moon, whose light renders objects so plain that one can see to read small print, shines solely by borrowed light? |
27874 | We find ourselves asking, What is the real life of Italy to- day? |
27874 | What causes a foreign population to circulate through its cities, constantly on the wing, scattering gold right and left among her needy population? |
27874 | What keeps its tepid waters, in a course of thousands of miles, from mingling with the rest of the sea? |
27874 | Where could money purchase such attractions as crowd the museum of Naples? |
27874 | Where else can be found a city composed of over seventy islands? |
27874 | Who can explain satisfactorily its ceaseless current? |
27874 | _ Armado._ How hast thou purchased this experience? |
23460 | If you come for a flower, Pray where is your_ sou_? |
23460 | At Versailles, as perhaps you have heard, Countless pictures of fights Form the chief of the sights: Could so many great battles have ever occurred? |
23460 | But Mabel said,"Why should we_ English_ care About that Rolf they say was buried there?" |
23460 | Do they make them, I wonder, of frogs and of snails? |
23460 | Or are these, after all, only travellers''tales? |
23460 | Says Rose, to Dennis drawing nigher,"I think the wind is getting higher;""If a gale blows, do you suppose, we shall be wrecked?" |
23460 | Then she ran on, not waiting for reply-- My little reader, can_ you_ tell her why? |
23460 | Who will come for a ride? |
23460 | Who will come for a ride? |
23460 | Without drawings to follow, or patterns to trace, How can these poor cottagers fashion their lace? |
23460 | [ Illustration][ Illustration] MUSÉE DE CLUNY Where shall we go to next? |
23460 | _ Monsieur le Maître_, who rubs his hands And says,"What are_ Monsieur''s_ commands?" |
23460 | pretty swan, Do you know, in our Zoo''The swans are not half So conceited as you?" |
23460 | pretty swans, Do you know, in our Zoo''The swans of old England Are just like you?" |
2539 | They all come to life again, do n''t they? |
2539 | Why, they are all packed up in boxes,said I"What did you think became of them?" |
2539 | Why? |
2539 | (?) |
2539 | Arfaki?" |
2539 | Can this be an indication that the Papuans are a mixed race? |
2539 | How long would I stop? |
2539 | If these people are not savages, where shall we find any? |
2539 | If, however, the question that is so frequently asked of the votaries of the less popular sciences were put here--"Cui bono?" |
2539 | What are the finest Grecian statues to the living, moving, breathing men I saw daily around me? |
2539 | What is this ideally perfect social state towards which mankind ever has been, and still is tending? |
2539 | Would I stay two or three months? |
2539 | who ever heard of such a name? |
45162 | How much does it cost to go around the world? |
45162 | How much for breakfast? |
45162 | How much for dinner? |
45162 | What is the charge for attendance? |
45162 | What time must a room be given up? |
45162 | how much? |
45162 | Commit to memory a few phrases, such as"where is?" |
45162 | Is it not so?" |
45162 | Mercy Philbrick''s Choice; Afterglow; Deirdrè; Hetty''s Strange History; Is that All? |
45162 | Shall he preserve his haughty manner and refuse to pursue the subject, or shall he accept what he has just declined? |
45162 | The following inquiries will cover the ordinary circumstances of arrival at a hotel:--"What is the price of a bedroom?" |
45162 | The question naturally occurs to an American,''How shall I ascertain what is proper to give when a service has been rendered to me?'' |
45162 | To the question,"What would Admiral Drake say if he were alive now?" |
45162 | is as difficult to answer as"How much does a horse cost?" |
20928 | Has he? |
20928 | Indeed, madam,replied Hardee,"and how old do you take me for?" |
20928 | ''Uncle Robert''will get us into Washington yet; you bet he will?" |
20928 | Cease firing, sir; what is your name, sir?'' |
20928 | Every traveller we met on the road was eagerly asked the questions,"Are the Yanks in Brookhaven? |
20928 | Fairfax then said,"Is it a woman who speaks in such a manner of a dead body which can do no one any harm?" |
20928 | Is the railroad open?" |
20928 | It is said that at the end of a Texan journey the question asked is not,"Have you been upset?" |
20928 | The woman made a gesture with her foot, and replied,"If it was a rebel, do you think it would be here long?" |
20928 | Which is the General? |
20928 | but,"How many times have you been upset?" |
20928 | which is the Great Officer? |
20928 | who''s afraid of fire?" |
43394 | Do you remember any of the brands? |
43394 | Do you think,she inquired nervously,"if-- if I put this water on your stove, it will heat?" |
43394 | Has Port Arthur fallen yet? |
43394 | A horse? |
43394 | Cast? |
43394 | Did you ever ford a mountain stream on horseback? |
43394 | He was born quite a number of years ago, but what is that? |
43394 | How was it possible? |
43394 | Is there no way to stop this vandalism? |
43394 | Now and then he would say:--"Is n''t there one behind me?" |
43394 | Was this, then, going to the borderland of civilization, to the last stronghold of the old West? |
43394 | What are regions but the setting for life? |
43394 | What do you think?" |
43394 | What has happened? |
43394 | What matters a little rain when there is a yellow slicker to put on and no one to care how one looks? |
43394 | What names in the world are more beautiful than Going- to- the- Sun and Rising- Wolf? |
43394 | Why, O gentlemen at Washington who arrange these things, why not at Belton, on the railroad, five miles away? |
2064 | I asked a very learned Minister in Sky, who had used all arts to make me believe the genuineness of the book, whether at last he believed it himself? |
2064 | I once asked, If a crime should be committed, by what authority the offender could be seized? |
2064 | If the Tacksmen be banished, who will be left to impart knowledge, or impress civility? |
2064 | It may likewise deserve to be inquired, whether a great nation ought to be totally commercial? |
2064 | It would be easy to shew it if he had it; but whence could it be had? |
2064 | The history of the race could no otherwise be communicated, or retained; but what genius could be expected in a poet by inheritance? |
2064 | The persuasion of the Scots, however, is far from universal; and in a question so capable of proof, why should doubt be suffered to continue? |
2064 | What is recollection but a revival of vexations, or history but a record of wars, treasons, and calamities? |
2064 | Why are not spices transplanted to America? |
2064 | Why does any nation want what it might have? |
2064 | Why does tea continue to be brought from China? |
2064 | Yet what are these hillocks to the ridges of Taurus, or these spots of wildness to the desarts of America? |
2064 | whether amidst the uncertainty of human affairs, too much attention to one mode of happiness may not endanger others? |
2064 | whether the pride of riches must not sometimes have recourse to the protection of courage? |
2530 | But why do n''t they get a straight one, there are plenty here? |
2530 | How so? |
2530 | Where is it? |
2530 | Where is the Pumbuckle? |
2530 | And the unknown stranger who had done all this for them, and asked for nothing in return, what could he be? |
2530 | But what is the reality? |
2530 | But what should we think of a man who should advocate these principles of perfect freedom in a family or a school? |
2530 | But, with the sharper struggle for existence that will then arise, will the happiness of the people as a whole be increased or diminished? |
2530 | Could he not bring the dead to life? |
2530 | How is it then, that the descriptions of travellers generally give a very different idea? |
2530 | How long would tame squirrels continue to inhabit trees in the vicinity of an English village, even if close to the church? |
2530 | How was it possible for them to realize his motives? |
2530 | It may therefore be easily conceived that when anything bulky or out of the common way was collected, the question"Where is it to be put?" |
2530 | Thinking it might be thunder, I asked,"What is that?" |
2530 | Was he not as old as the mountains? |
2530 | Was it not natural that they should refuse to believe he was a man? |
2530 | Whence comes that inexhaustible fire whose dense and sulphurous smoke forever issues from this bare and desolate peak? |
2530 | Why are the Dyak villages so small and so widely scattered, while nine- tenths of the country is still covered with forest? |
2530 | Why, then, we must inquire, has not a greater population been produced? |
2530 | Will not evil passions be aroused by the spirit of competition, and crimes and vices, now unknown or dormant, be called into active existence? |
2530 | and where, it may be asked, are the glorious flowers that we know do exist in the tropics? |
18541 | How far outside the bar may this carry us? |
18541 | Is North America near New York? |
18541 | What if I do n''t go forward? |
18541 | Why did you not answer him correctly? |
18541 | Why do n''t ye come on deck like a man, and order yer men forid? |
18541 | Yer there, are ye? |
18541 | ( Literally translated,"Who knows?" |
18541 | Be it in our favour, we are carried hence, to what place or for what purpose? |
18541 | Be the current against us, what matters it? |
18541 | FOOTNOTE:[ 4] This alternative I was obliged to accept, or bring my family home as paupers, for my wealth was gone-- need I explain more? |
18541 | For words like these what sailor is there who would not search the caves of the ocean? |
18541 | I asked what I should do with the dead through the night-- bury them where we lay? |
18541 | Is it not a recognition of this which makes the old sailor happy, though in the storm; and hopeful even on a plank in mid- ocean? |
18541 | Mister,"said he, turning to me after a long pause,"mister, d''ye know the South were foolish? |
18541 | Need more be said? |
18541 | Then came the hearty hail,"Do you want assistance?" |
18541 | What could be done? |
18541 | What had I done? |
18541 | What was to be done? |
18541 | Who can look at such things without the heart being lifted up in adoration?" |
18541 | Who shall say that she was not large enough? |
18541 | Who then shall say that we anchored nights or spent much time hugging the shore? |
1146 | And what, it may be said, are these men- of- war which seem so delightful an object to our eyes? |
1146 | Can I say then I had no fear? |
1146 | Can gentlefolks lie a whole night at a public- house for less? |
1146 | Did you think I sold you the command of my ship for that pitiful thirty pounds? |
1146 | How shall we account for this depravity in taste? |
1146 | Is it--? |
1146 | What then is to be done in this case? |
1146 | What then ought in general to be so plentiful, what so cheap, as fish? |
1146 | What then so properly the food of the poor? |
1146 | Why then should not the voyage- writer be inflamed with the glory of having seen what no man ever did or will see but himself? |
1146 | or, why should the lowest of the people be permitted to exact ten times the value of their work? |
1146 | why yes, to be sure; why should not travelers pay for candles? |
47750 | Well, what you a doing away off from home down here in this country? |
47750 | Ah, git out, what are all these pretty muscles for if you ca n''t lick that Jimmie over there with only one hundred and thirty- five to hit yer with?" |
47750 | Approaching her, I extended my hand in a most familiar manner, and at the same time said,"Why, Miss Miles, how are you, how are your folks in Iowa? |
47750 | Condon?" |
47750 | Could Anderson milk? |
47750 | Could I plow? |
47750 | On awakening my first question was,"Did I win?" |
47750 | Stepping up to him I laid my hand on his shoulder and said,"Pardon me, sir, but are you an American?" |
47750 | Well, what did we care? |
47750 | What was I to do? |
47750 | What will they say when I get there and tell them I have come home to die?" |
47750 | What would it be, suicide or murder? |
47750 | When he heard me through he said,"Do you know what your folks will say when you get there?" |
27568 | The spirits of the dead men? |
27568 | What is the matter, Nina? 27568 What reason have you for saying so?" |
27568 | What will you do,asked a missionary,"to bring those around you to Christ?" |
27568 | Where is the Bishop? |
27568 | Why? |
27568 | [ 8] Are you as fond of frogs as you used to be? 27568 About a year afterwards Sir James Brooke said to me,Did you ever feel pleasure at hearing of the death of an old friend?" |
27568 | Are not such pricks of conscience common to us all when our dear ones leave us? |
27568 | Are you ill, that you are eating no supper?" |
27568 | Now the six months had passed away, were they prepared to assent to the law? |
27568 | Shall I ever forget my first impressions of the rajah''s bungalow? |
27568 | So I whispered,"Are you happy, child?" |
27568 | The first question the Dyaks asked, if told a new missionary was coming, would always be,"Is he clever at physic?" |
27568 | They looked out of their doors, asking what was the matter? |
27568 | What should we do? |
27568 | Who would have thought of a Dyak Undine? |
27568 | With no better guide than the untutored imagination of a mind which in religious matters is a blank, who shall wonder that this is so? |
27568 | how could it be otherwise? |
40746 | A little ragged urchin of about ten years old rather annoyed me, by jumping up and grinning repeatedly in my face:"Allez, allez, que faites vous là?" |
40746 | Can we then( with any pretence to candour and justice) affect to wonder at the deep- felt disgust and dislike of the French towards us? |
40746 | Combien durerâ t''elle? |
40746 | Did this nation come into the world under the influence of a dancing star? |
40746 | Elle me donnera un sous, n''est ce pas?" |
40746 | He then asked, with some appearance of reproach,"Why the English kept him so barbarously immured in a dreadful prison?" |
40746 | How shall I describe the wonderful manner in which we climbed these frightful eschelles? |
40746 | How was it possible to thread these mazes without thinking of_ Henri quatre_, and his famous hunting adventure in the miller''s hut? |
40746 | How would John Bull have writhed and raged with shame and grief, if the scene had been exhibited_ vice versa_ in our own country? |
40746 | I asked if the latter was the_ cadette_ of the family? |
40746 | I felt( and what Englishwoman ought not to feel?) |
40746 | The host( seeing that we were English) asked if we would not choose our_ pain_ to be_ grillé_? |
40746 | The master of the house, who seemed to think all this very fine, wanted to know if_ Madame_ would not join in the merry dance? |
40746 | We asked him, amongst other questions,"what was the chief manufacture of the place?" |
40746 | Wherefore is it that the imagination feels a charm and a repose so delightful amid scenes of this nature? |
40746 | Why should I attempt to describe Paris? |
40746 | dost think that because thou art virtuous, there shall be no more cakes and ale?" |
43342 | But how are you going to obtain it? |
43342 | Dat you little gal? 43342 What are you after?" |
43342 | Where is your Oakland company to hang me? |
43342 | And may we not, even now, after having escaped so many dangers, be reserved for the same or a worse doom? |
43342 | But are we not to be disappointed at last? |
43342 | But what land is that coming suddenly in sight under our lee bow, and nearly in the direction of the ship? |
43342 | Don to see dranfader? |
43342 | How near may we have been to sharing the same fate with them? |
43342 | How old you gal? |
43342 | In their efforts to save themselves, may not some of them have been lashed to this very yard? |
43342 | It is an interesting question, How came the Valley lowered to its present depth? |
43342 | May not this vessel have been lost in one of the storms that nearly drove us ashore upon the coast of Patagonia? |
43342 | Reader, shall I give you a further account of my observations and adventures? |
43342 | This afternoon two vessels are in sight, and our company, for want of other subjects, are busily engaged in discussing the questions,"Who are they?" |
43342 | To his question"why do you not eat some ship- bread?" |
43342 | What you gal name? |
43342 | You gal, he no come to Californy? |
43342 | You no want to see you gal? |
43342 | _ August 27._ Our first inquiry this morning was the same we have often and anxiously made of late,"How does she head?" |
43342 | and"Can we come up with them?" |
43342 | and"How soon?" |
43342 | where''s a handspike?" |
11104 | And have they never any desire to travel, or to visit the Bazaars, as the Turkish ladies do? |
11104 | From what part of France did she come? |
11104 | So your mother is French,_ Mademoiselle_? |
11104 | The Aïssaouas? |
11104 | But how were we to get within sight of them? |
11104 | But what would even their beauty be without the leafy setting of the place? |
11104 | Do n''t they find them excessively ugly?" |
11104 | Had I any children? |
11104 | How associate anything so precise and Occidental as years or centuries with these visions of frail splendor seen through cypresses and roses? |
11104 | Knowing that European fashions are of absorbing interest to the harem I next enquired:"What do these ladies think of our stiff tailor- dresses? |
11104 | V ON THE ROOFS"Should you like to see the Chleuh boys dance?" |
11104 | Was ever shade so blue- black and delicious as that of the cork- tree near the spring where the donkey''s water- cans are being filled? |
11104 | Were these the vaulted granaries, or the subterranean reservoirs under the three miles of stabling which housed the twelve thousand horses? |
11104 | What, then, prevents the tourist from instantly taking ship at Bordeaux or Algeciras and letting loose his motor on this new world? |
11104 | Where have they come from, where are they going, all these slow wayfarers out of the unknown? |
11104 | Who can have conceived, in the heart of a savage Saharan camp, the serenity and balance of this hidden place? |
11104 | motor? |
39042 | And have they never any desire to travel, or to visit the Bazaars, as the Turkish ladies do? |
39042 | So your mother is French,_ Mademoiselle_? |
39042 | The Aïssaouas? |
39042 | _ Oui, Madame._"From what part of France did she come? |
39042 | But how were we to get within sight of them? |
39042 | But what would even their beauty be without the leafy setting of the place? |
39042 | Do n''t they find them excessively ugly?" |
39042 | Had I any children? |
39042 | How associate anything so precise and Occidental as years or centuries with these visions of frail splendor seen through cypresses and roses? |
39042 | Knowing that European fashions are of absorbing interest to the harem I next enquired:"What do these ladies think of our stiff tailor- dresses? |
39042 | V ON THE ROOFS"Should you like to see the Chleuh boys dance?" |
39042 | Was ever shade so blue- black and delicious as that of the cork- tree near the spring where the donkey''s water- cans are being filled? |
39042 | Were these the vaulted granaries, or the subterranean reservoirs under the three miles of stabling which housed the twelve thousand horses? |
39042 | What, then, prevents the tourist from instantly taking ship at Bordeaux or Algeciras and letting loose his motor on this new world? |
39042 | Where have they come from, where are they going, all these slow wayfarers out of the unknown? |
39042 | Who can have conceived, in the heart of a savage Saharan camp, the serenity and balance of this hidden place? |
13150 | Me? 13150 No? |
13150 | Well, what are you going to do? |
13150 | Where are you going to stop? |
13150 | After talking awhile he asked:"What do you call yourselves?" |
13150 | CHAPTER XII COULD WE SUCCEED? |
13150 | COULD WE SUCCEED? |
13150 | Could anything be better? |
13150 | Could it be that my senses were all deceiving me as my eyes were fooled by the mirage? |
13150 | Did we make the big fire which had burned until morning? |
13150 | Had this man, too, failed us? |
13150 | It started to drizzle again that night, but what cared we? |
13150 | It would look something like a tub, would n''t it? |
13150 | Just before we parted one of them remarked,"You came through the Bee River four days ago, near a telephone, did n''t you?" |
13150 | We listened and heard it again, plainly this time,"Ca n''t you men find a landing? |
13150 | What about our third man? |
13150 | What could any one want with two men who had nothing but a flat- bottomed boat? |
13150 | What could it be? |
13150 | What could it be? |
13150 | What do you think about it?" |
13150 | What was a border for if not to have custom- houses and inspectors? |
13150 | What would he do when he came to this rapid? |
13150 | What would we do with our boat? |
13150 | Why undergo all the discomfort of a voyage on a desert stream, when the pleasures and comforts of the Pacific beckoned? |
13150 | Would it increase or diminish our dangers? |
13150 | Would we never reach it? |
13403 | Are there many instances of people having been bit by mad animals? |
13403 | How much is paid per day for ploughing with two oxen? 13403 Is the state of a bachelor aggravated and rendered less desirable? |
13403 | What is the value of whales of different sizes? |
13403 | Which food has been experienced to be most portable and most nourishing for keeping a distressed ship''s crew from starving? |
13403 | [ 82] Sidney foresees the difficulty his brother may have:How shall I get excellent men to take paines to speake with me? |
13403 | ( 1876?) |
13403 | 1595(?). |
13403 | 1605(?). |
13403 | 1690?] |
13403 | A few random examples of this list are:"Which are the favourite herbs of the sheep of this country?" |
13403 | A. Paris( n.d.)( 1552?). |
13403 | After what manner the subjects in both countries shewe their obedience to their prince, or oppose themselves against him? |
13403 | Alas, good Sir, what can a man learne in thirty yeeres?" |
13403 | By what means?" |
13403 | Devereux, Robert, Earl of Essex( or Bacon?). |
13403 | Footnote 202:_ Quo Vadis?_ A Just Censure of Travel as it is undertaken by the Gentlemen of our Nation, London, 1617. |
13403 | Hall mutters to his servants,"Jesus can you not knocke the boyes head and the wall together, sith he runnes a- bragging thus?" |
13403 | Imprinted at London for Edward A(? |
13403 | What Englishman could not know a Frenchman by this ridiculous picture?... |
13403 | What is the greatest vice in both nacions? |
13403 | What should this good man doe? |
13403 | With two horses?" |
13403 | [ London? |
13403 | _ Quo Vadis? |
33455 | But is this in winter, also? |
33455 | Is not that a New England man? |
33455 | And, stating it fairly, it is this-- Shall the industry of Cuba go on, or shall the island be abandoned to a state of nature? |
33455 | But what do these poor creatures know of what the world marches to, or dances to, or makes love by? |
33455 | Can any of these be political offenders? |
33455 | Can it be cavalry, marching on foot, their sabres rattling on the pavement? |
33455 | Did you not have milk with your coffee?" |
33455 | Have I ever seen a city view so grand? |
33455 | How can any one have a weather sensation, in such an air as this? |
33455 | Howe?" |
33455 | If they must be expected to remain, what is to be the relation of the two races? |
33455 | In fine, what is the Spanish government in Cuba but an armed monarchy, encamped in the midst of a disarmed and disfranchised people? |
33455 | Is the city on the sea? |
33455 | Shall I stay another? |
33455 | Shall it be the enforced labor of slavery, or shall the experiment of free labor be tried? |
33455 | Shall we go? |
33455 | The constant question is-- will they remain and mix with the other races? |
33455 | There is an hour to daylight-- and will this noise stop before then? |
33455 | What can that be? |
33455 | What is likely to be the effect on all the parties to this system, judging from all we know of human nature? |
33455 | What is this clanking sound? |
33455 | Where is the harbor, and where the shipping? |
33455 | Who can eat a hot, greasy breakfast of cakes and gravied meats, and in a close room, after this? |
33455 | Who can regret our delay, or wish to exchange this scene for the common, close anchorage of a harbor? |
33455 | Will the government try the experiment, and if so, on what terms and in what manner? |
33455 | Will they be able to go back? |
33455 | Will they be permitted to remain? |
33455 | adónde está Domingo?" |
2854 | And after his coming aboard, when they demanding"How all his company did?" |
2854 | And therefore desired to know, first, Whether our Captain was the same Captain DRAKE or not? |
2854 | But, by occasion of this demand, his brother sent one down to the Steward, to know"Whether there were any water in the ship? |
2854 | He being demanded,"What was become of his Captain and other fellow?" |
2854 | I will be one, who will be the other?" |
2854 | Or what other cause might be?" |
2854 | Our Captain answered him likewise, and being demanded"_ Que gente?_"replied"Englishmen!" |
2854 | Our Captain perceiving the feat wrought, would not hasten him; but in rowing away, demanded of them,"Why their bark was so deep?" |
2854 | There we found some Indians, who asking us in friendly sort, in broken Spanish,"What we would have?" |
2854 | They presently came forth upon the sand, and sent a youth, as with a message from the Governor, to know,"What our intent was, to stay upon the coast?" |
2854 | Thus with good love and liking we took our leave of that people, setting over to the islands of[? |
2854 | and how their wounds might best be cured? |
2854 | and next, Because many of their men were wounded with our arrows, whether they were poisoned or not? |
2854 | answered,"That they were gone ashore in their gundeloe[? |
2854 | lastly, What victuals we wanted, or other necessaries? |
2311 | Have you fed the Hogs, Sir Knight? |
2311 | How( cried he) cut my hair? 2311 You do not like the apartments? |
2311 | But how were those victories obtained? |
2311 | He asked in his turn if I was mad? |
2311 | He asked whence we had come; and understanding we had been in Italy, desired to know whether the man liked France or Italy best? |
2311 | How many high- sounding works on the other hand, are already worse than dead, or, should we say, better dead? |
2311 | How then must they support the glory of France? |
2311 | Leave off; the Bath Bell rings-- what, still play on? |
2311 | The celebrated reformer of the Italian comedy introduces a child befouling itself, on the stage, OE, NO TI SENTI? |
2311 | The one costs three half- pence; the last, half a farthing-- which of them is most effectual? |
2311 | Then, addressing himself to me, asked, if the English did not every day drink to the health of madame la marquise? |
2311 | They accosted my servant, and asked if his master was a lord? |
2311 | What are the consequences of this cruel swaddling? |
2311 | What glory is there in a man''s vanquishing an adversary over whom he has a manifest advantage? |
2311 | What is the consequence? |
2311 | What then, you will say, must a man sit with his chops and fingers up to the ears and knuckles in grease? |
2311 | Why not a lynch pin, which we were so carefully instructed how to inquire about in Murray''s Conversation for Travellers? |
2311 | Why, therefore, do n''t we follow it implicitly? |
2311 | You ask me why I submitted to such imposition? |
2311 | or that the ships of the line taken from the enemy would be carried in procession from Hyde- Park- Corner to Tower- wharf? |
2311 | what do I see? |
40830 | After replying,"Then what''s the news?" |
40830 | Are they then good pioneers? |
40830 | May not an Arab tribe have passed down along the east coast, and established themselves in the Mashona region, and formed a kingdom? |
40830 | May not these two tribes have travelled up the Zambese together at some remote time? |
40830 | May not this be one identification, that it was right that woman should be a ruler as well as man, handed down from the Queen of Sheba''s time? |
40830 | Now it is an interesting question, what tribe or nation did these emperors spring from? |
40830 | On which Durnford called out,"Will nobody stand by me?" |
40830 | The old Boer asked, which is always the first question put after shaking hands,"What''s your name? |
40830 | They evidently belonged to some ancient building, but when? |
40830 | They stated, if the Great Mother could not be written to, would I write to the Great Chief at the Cape? |
40830 | Was it that we are not trusted? |
40830 | Were these Monomotapa people black or white, and from whence did they come? |
40830 | What is it now? |
40830 | What''s the meaning of this? |
40830 | Where are they now? |
40830 | Where are they now? |
40830 | Who are they? |
40830 | Why are our people killed and our cattle stolen? |
40830 | Why is this land invaded? |
40830 | Why were we not called out sooner? |
40830 | Will they deliver up the murderers of Mr. Bethel and others? |
40830 | what have I up to handel( sell)?" |
40830 | where from? |
40830 | why should they be disturbed in their innocent life? |
43209 | But you have a camera; is n''t that enough? 43209 Have I the pleasure of addressing Madame Bazin?" |
43209 | Indeed,I remarked, with every evidence of surprise,"and who got hold of the feather first?" |
43209 | Then, of course, you must have known the noted village character Father Adam, who sold his donkey to this Scottish traveller? |
43209 | These gentlemen travel for pleasure? |
43209 | Well? |
43209 | What shall I say of Clarisse? |
43209 | --R. L. S.] If his descent was thus, how much more so ours on our whirling wheels? |
43209 | Did he know Stevenson? |
43209 | L. S.] Is that not a lovely monument to have? |
43209 | Perhaps the Bazins knew how much I liked them? |
43209 | Perhaps they also were healed of some slights by the thanks that I gave them in my manner?" |
43209 | The bill? |
43209 | Thus, under the representation of Christ falling while bearing His cross we read:"Who is it that causes Jesus to fall a second time? |
43209 | We knew, of course, what Stevenson had said of her? |
43209 | What is he to say that will not be an anti- climax?" |
43209 | What will you? |
43209 | What would you in such a case? |
43209 | Would we care to see her photograph? |
43209 | Yet he was ever an adventurer in search of beauty, and who shall say his quest was vain? |
43209 | Yet not always the same, for where was M. Bonnaire? |
43209 | is that life?" |
43209 | or"Watter, richt on?" |
52528 | Did he know Father Damien? |
52528 | How did she get that name? |
52528 | How do they grow them? |
52528 | How much tobac you give? |
52528 | Oh, what is the matter? |
52528 | One white man he say Queen he dead? |
52528 | They gave me a bottle of iron,he said,"and I got better on that, or I''d be dead by now, but how could I get the nourishing food?" |
52528 | Was any one frightened? |
52528 | Who that music? |
52528 | Why,he thought with wonder,"should a fire at sea look like a Christmas pantomime?" |
52528 | Will you have it with or without fumes? |
52528 | Wo n''t you come out for that? |
52528 | You want buy money? |
52528 | ''You Peletania?'' |
52528 | A little later one of the boys asked me:''You want wife?'' |
52528 | Finally he turned to me saying,"What you want?" |
52528 | He, himself, told me he had been to Sydney, and when I asked,"To San Francisco?" |
52528 | I could hear them asking and hearing what I claimed to be; and then they would come up and ask in a fine, offhand manner:''You Melican?'' |
52528 | I said,"Who''s there? |
52528 | If the latter, how much better to have accepted their god and shown them where they had mistaken his attributes? |
52528 | Lloyd jumped out of a sound sleep and ran aft, crying:"Where is she? |
52528 | Plainer than words her smile said:"You are a woman, too; I can trust you; you will protect me, will you not?" |
52528 | Stevens?" |
52528 | The first question put to us by the women was concerning Louis''s health; then what had we done with our devil box? |
52528 | What did they mean by it, I''d like to know? |
52528 | What do you want? |
19475 | Do you mean,I said,"that we are going to run four days of rapids that have never been run?" |
19475 | Joe,I said, in a stern voice,"did you ever try to make a horse go into an icy lake and climb on to an ice- cake? |
19475 | Knitting? |
19475 | The idea is this,Bob had said:"It''s never been done before, do you see? |
19475 | Well,we said;"what did he say?" |
19475 | What is it like? |
19475 | What is it? |
19475 | Why ca n''t all this sort of thing be put into music? |
19475 | Also, a share of the midday lunch and twenty pounds more weight than you ought to have by the beauty- scale? |
19475 | And I? |
19475 | And how her penalty was that every step was like walking on the edges of swords? |
19475 | And the agent? |
19475 | And yet, what Western story is complete without a round- up? |
19475 | And, having achieved it, fix on another five feet farther on, and almost fail to get it? |
19475 | Did I or did I not see a twinkle in Bill Shea''s eye as he described the sweep of the moose''s horns? |
19475 | Do you get it? |
19475 | Do you remember the little mermaid who wished to lose her tail and gain legs so she could follow the prince? |
19475 | For we rode up to him and said:--"Do you know of any place where we can find a cook?" |
19475 | Had they ventured across the snow- bank and slipped? |
19475 | Have you ever reached a point where you fix your starting eyes on a shrub or a rock ten feet ahead and struggle for it? |
19475 | How''s Buddy about water?" |
19475 | I was accustomed to roughing it; but how about another woman? |
19475 | Poor followers of the pavements, what to them is this six- inch path of glory? |
19475 | See? |
19475 | Then what are you going to do?" |
19475 | Then, at last, the familiar call,--"Are you all right, mother?" |
19475 | Therefore, would I, Pi- ta- mak- an, go to the Indian agent and make their peace for them? |
19475 | Was it not after Mr. Fred that we trailed on that famous game- hunt of ours, of which a spirited account is coming later? |
19475 | Why should the Government pick on us? |
19475 | Why?" |
19475 | Would she be putting up her hair in curlers every night, and whimpering when, as sometimes happens, the slow gait of her horse became intolerable? |
19475 | and"Who the dickens has any matches?" |
45238 | And see''st thou, and hear''st thou, And fear''st thou, and fear''st thou, And ride we not free O''er the terrible sea, I and thou? |
45238 | But how did you subsist until you reached the settlements? 45238 But, Richardson, did they take your horse also?" |
45238 | But what will not a New- England{ 3} man undertake when honor and interest are the objects before him? |
45238 | Have you any mules to sell?" |
45238 | He says:"Do the Oregon emigrants seek a fine country on the Oregon river? |
45238 | In all books of voyages and travels, who ever heard of the utmost distress for want of wood, leaves, roots, coal, or turf to cook{ 46} with? |
45238 | Now the question is how came our North American Indians with bows and arrows? |
45238 | Some of our company began to ask each other some serious questions; such as, Where are we going? |
45238 | The first question generally asked, is,"where do you come from, gentlemen?" |
45238 | The snake had doubtless killed the quadruped, but what had killed the snake? |
45238 | Water was now the desideratum, but where was it to be found? |
45238 | What cared we for the future? |
45238 | What have we done for their benefit? |
45238 | Where could they have gone? |
45238 | Who will say that this gallant body of cavalry were not wiser than the common run of white soldiers, to make peace for a_ quid_? |
45238 | _ kahtah pasiooks yahhalle?_( what is its English name?) |
45238 | _ kahtah pasiooks yahhalle?_( what is its English name?) |
45238 | and thereby save their horses and their own skins? |
45238 | and what are we going for? |
5199 | Do n''t you know me? |
5199 | McILROY:''Not bad; but how about a huge omelette?'' 5199 Soon the boat approached near enough for the Boss, who was standing up in the bows, to shout to Wild,''Are you all well?'' |
5199 | Tell me, when was the war over? |
5199 | What''s the matter with you? |
5199 | Who are you? |
5199 | You have come over the island? |
5199 | And the hoary frost of Heaven, who hath gendered it? |
5199 | And will it be possible to break out of the pack early in the spring and reach Vahsel Bay or some other suitable landing- place? |
5199 | As I came nearer I called out,"Are you all well?" |
5199 | But what of the poor beggars at Cape Evans, and the Southern Party? |
5199 | Can this mean that they have heard our recent signals and are trying to get us now? |
5199 | Had n''t we better light a flare?'' |
5199 | How long? |
5199 | I rushed forward, helped some emerging men from under the canvas, and called out,"Are you all right?" |
5199 | If we do n''t go down we shall have to make a detour of at least five miles before we reach level going What shall it be?" |
5199 | Mr. Sorlle came out to the door and said,"Well?" |
5199 | Shipwrights had never done sounder or better work; but how long could she continue the fight under such conditions? |
5199 | The following conversation was recorded in one diary:"WILD:''Do you like doughnuts?'' |
5199 | Was ever ship in such predicament? |
5199 | We will go west, no doubt, but how far? |
5199 | What welcome was the Weddell Sea preparing for us? |
5199 | When one of them asked why no member of the party had come round with the relief, Worsley said,"What do you mean?" |
5199 | Where will the vagrant winds and currents carry the ship during the long winter months that are ahead of us? |
5199 | Where will we make a landing now? |
5199 | Will it point straight for the berg, showing that our drift is in that direction? |
7879 | And his second duty? |
7879 | A beautiful feature of the scene to- day, as the preceding day, were the vines growing on fig- trees(?) |
7879 | After emerging from the gate, we soon came to the little Church of"Domine, quo vadis?" |
7879 | Could not all that sanctity at least keep it thawed? |
7879 | Did anybody ever see Washington nude? |
7879 | How came that flower to grow among these wild mountains? |
7879 | We heard Gaetano once say a good thing to a swarm of beggar- children, who were infesting us,"Are your fathers all dead?" |
7879 | What would he do with Washington, the most decorous and respectable personage that ever went ceremoniously through the realities of life? |
5813 | When missionaries go from here do they find fault with the pagan idols? 5813 Gold, diamonds, power, fame? 5813 Had they germ- scientists then? 5813 How did they find out the water''s secret in those ancient ages? 5813 Is it becoming a jewel casket? 5813 Is it that paint can not counterfeit the intense blaze of a sun- flooded jewel? 5813 Is the fairy structure growing? 5813 Should we be amazed? 5813 Should we be shocked? 5813 Should we call the performance a desecration? 5813 Should we feel outraged? 5813 Then why, as a whole, do they convey a false impression to the reader? 5813 They were running around the well( where else could they go to? 5813 Were there any Americans among those lunch parties? 5813 What do you see before you? 5813 Why do you keep him? |
5813 | Would the English be shocked? |
5813 | Would they be amazed? |
5813 | Would they call the performance a desecration? |
5813 | Would they feel outraged? |
5813 | You receive your water, you make your deposit, and now what more would you have? |
7880 | Yes,said he,"did you know who drew them?" |
7880 | But how does this accord with what I have been saying only a minute ago? |
7880 | Does his spirit manifest itself in the semblance of flame? |
7880 | Has a man a flame inside of his head? |
7880 | Have I spoken of the sumptuous carving of the capitals of the columns? |
7880 | How then can the decayed picture of a great master ever be restored by the touches of an inferior hand? |
7880 | I somewhat question whether it is quite the thing, however, to make a genuine woman out of an allegory we ask, Who is to we d this lovely virgin? |
7880 | Is there such a rural class in Italy? |
7880 | What shall we do in America? |
7880 | Where should the light come from? |
7880 | You feel as if the Saviour were deserted, both in heaven and earth; the despair is in him which made him say,"My God, why hast thou forsaken me?" |
55714 | And what do you consider your brightest failure? |
55714 | Are you seeing a Salamander,I asked,"or do the sparks flying upward make you think of the golden alchemy of Lescaris? |
55714 | The dream- expedition? |
55714 | ALAN BRECK Is''t you, Alan? |
55714 | And why not? |
55714 | Down the deep glade where fearsome shadows pass What is it lurks so still? |
55714 | ELLIS DUCKWORTH Was there a rustle of the leafy bed? |
55714 | Heard you no footstep in the matted grass? |
55714 | Is it a style, a native virtue, a mannerism, a fad, or what? |
55714 | O will he paint me the way I want, as bonnie as a girlie? |
55714 | She was small and old, this yacht, but what are thirty- three years when a craft has the proper tradition for daring, hazardous adventure? |
55714 | The Sanborns were in Europe that year and, all things considered, is it any wonder that he took the place for being abandoned? |
55714 | Was it any wonder the intelligence excited me? |
55714 | What is an old ship but a floating castle built upon the memories of the men who have helmed her? |
55714 | What secret dread Troubles the tangled branches overhead? |
55714 | What was civilization anyway to one who needed only sunshine and negligée? |
55714 | Why do you not revive more of these charming Indian names?" |
46695 | Do you think I forgot that? |
46695 | ( Is he clever?) |
46695 | ( When will you be wise?) |
46695 | And after all comes the question, What is the Tagáloc language? |
46695 | Ano t guinagasaan mo aco?--If you scold me, why with so much noise? |
46695 | Ask him his age, he will not be able to answer: who were his ancestors? |
46695 | Ay at linologmocan mo iyang duma?--Why seat yourself in that dirty place? |
46695 | But is it wasted? |
46695 | Caylan ca maoocan nang cahunghañgan mo?--When will you cast your fool''s skin? |
46695 | Caylan magcaca hapahap ang inyong ylog?--When will your river produce a conger eel? |
46695 | Do n''t you know the proverb,''The Indian and the cane grow together?''" |
46695 | Foreign fruits, preserves and liquors have to bear similar burdens, for can not the Philippines give confectionary and sweets enough of their own? |
46695 | I remarked one who went to the friar, and whispered in his ear,"But where are the golden garments of the general?" |
46695 | Maalam cang magsima sa taga?--Can he make the barb to the hook? |
46695 | Maylomalong tamis sapolot at lacas sahalimao?--What is sweeter than honey, or stronger than a lion? |
46695 | Of what are the millions composed, and how can the millions be turned to account? |
46695 | One asks, why is so much sweetness, so much glory, wasted? |
46695 | Our land is an Eden-- why should we desert it?" |
46695 | The question may be asked, whether the experiment is worth the cost? |
46695 | They will even ask a padre,''Whence do you come? |
46695 | Who can wonder, then, at the prosperous condition of the Chinese in the Philippines? |
46695 | where are you going?'' |
46695 | ||||||||||= 0·00126||||||||||||||||||||||| 27| Malavidondao-- Mavindalo(?) |
46695 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| 13|Bitoc-- Mirtica(?) |
46695 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| 19| Camayuan-- Diospyros(?) |
46695 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| 25| Malacatbun-- Tetracera sarmentosa(?) |
46695 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| 29| Malaruhat or Maladujat-- Mirtaceas(?) |
46695 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| 2|Alintatao-- Diospyros piloshantera(?) |
46695 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| 45| Tangan-- Rizophora longissima(?) |
46695 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| 5|Aninabla or Aninapla-- Mimosa conaria(?) |
2843 | Fellow,says I,"what''s that?" |
2843 | Have the people been feeding for three hours? |
2843 | He was received at Eglintoun, it is true,says the correspondent,"but what do you think was the reason? |
2843 | How the deuce CAN people dine at such an hour? |
2843 | We may sit up till twelve o''clock, if we like,said the nun;"but we have no fire and candle, and so what''s the use of sitting up? |
2843 | Are they fit for mental labor? |
2843 | Are they to be counted for nought? |
2843 | Are we not more moral and reasonable than our forefathers? |
2843 | As for Waterloo, has it not been talked of enough after dinner? |
2843 | But live or die, win or lose, what do THEY get? |
2843 | But what white paper can render the whiteness of their linen; what black ink can do justice to the lustre of their gowns and shoes? |
2843 | But who knows what susceptibilities such a confession may offend? |
2843 | Can the Queen herself make you a duchess? |
2843 | Do not gastronomists complain of heaviness in London after eating a couple of mutton- chops? |
2843 | Do not respectable gentlemen fall asleep in their arm- chairs? |
2843 | How is the stomach of man to be brought to desire and to receive all this quantity? |
2843 | How the deuce do their children look so fat and rosy? |
2843 | I asked the farmer whether his contributions were lighter now than in King William''s time, and lighter than those in the time of the Emperor? |
2843 | I had been drinking a bottle of Rhine wine that day, and how was I to afford more? |
2843 | Indeed it had only a franc in it: but que voulez- vous? |
2843 | Is it Don Sombrero, who is singing an Andalusian seguidilla under the window of the Flemish burgomaster''s daughter? |
2843 | Is this to be borne?" |
2843 | Of all European people, which is the nation that has the most haughtiness, the strongest prejudices, the greatest reserve, the greatest dulness? |
2843 | The other honest gentleman in the fur cap, what can his occupation be? |
2843 | Were they come to that part of the service where heretics and infidels ought to quit the church? |
2843 | Were we doing anything wrong, I wondered? |
2843 | What better mark of innate superiority could man want? |
2843 | What have you to ask, O sacred, white- veiled maid? |
2843 | What is the meaning of it? |
2843 | What''s the use of an opinion here? |
2843 | Who was ever piously affected by any picture of the master? |
2843 | Why was not every private man''s name written upon the stones in Waterloo Church as well as every officer''s? |
2843 | Why, after all, are we not to have our opinion? |
2843 | Will you come up and see the cells?" |
2843 | do not the French, the English, and the Prussians, spare them the trouble of thinking, and make all their opinions for them? |
2843 | have n''t they done YET, the greedy creatures?" |
2843 | what would Mrs. Trollope say to see his lordship here? |
29306 | And thet thar new Shanghai rooster, mister, ai n''t he a beauty? 29306 And were n''t we really show- people, going down the river this way, in a skiff? |
29306 | But what is the matter down there? |
29306 | How far below is Big Bone? |
29306 | How many miles? |
29306 | I thote I''d come to visit uv ye,he had said by way of introduction;"ye''re frum a city, ai n''t yer? |
29306 | What creek is this? |
29306 | What is the matter with this town? |
29306 | What''n''tarnation air ye, anny way? 29306 Who is there to mourn for Logan?" |
29306 | Who you holl''rin''at, you brack island niggah? |
29306 | Ye see that? 29306 Yees be one o''them photygraph parties, hey?" |
29306 | And in that of a steamboat captain? |
29306 | But all same, we''ll be friends, wo n''t we? |
29306 | But what of the Maysville of to- day? |
29306 | He looked surprised, and took a fresh chew while cogitating on my alarming ignorance of Point Sandy affairs:"Why, ain''ye heared? |
29306 | How fur down be yees goin''?" |
29306 | I took a snap- shot at the fleet, and heard one man shout to another,"Bill, did yer notice they''ve a photograph gallery aboard?" |
29306 | In tones half- choked with tears, he expressed the sentiment of all:"Mother, is it really ended? |
29306 | Say, hones''Injun, how fur down air yew fellers goin'', anyhow?" |
29306 | The Dynamiter confided to his listeners that he was going down the river for"a clean hundred miles, and that''s right smart fur, ai n''t it? |
29306 | Their chief concern centered in the query, how Pilgrim could hold that goodly heap of luggage and still have room to spare for four passengers? |
29306 | Thet there red flag? |
29306 | We are not in trade? |
29306 | Whar your shanty- boat been beached, thet ye ain''heared thet yere?" |
29306 | What killed it?" |
29306 | What was he going to make of himself? |
29306 | Why ca n''t we go back to Brownsville, and do it all over again?" |
29306 | Why? |
29306 | Would n''t the Doctor go into partnership with him? |
29306 | Would we object if, for a few moments, he tarried here by the roadside? |
29306 | Ye''re welcome t''all in this yere shanty boat-- ain''t no bakky''bout yer close, yew fellers?" |
29306 | and perhaps we could accommodate him with a drink of water? |
29306 | or, if we were n''t show- people, had we an agency for something? |
29306 | or, were we only in trade?" |
29306 | we are not canvassers? |
29306 | we are not fishing? |
29306 | we are not show- people? |
29306 | whar you git dat mule?" |
41751 | ''In God''s name, Efendi, what induced you to come to this fearful country, and to come to us too from that paradise on earth, from Stamboul?'' |
41751 | ''What would you do with this Efendi,''said Kotchak Khan,''if you encountered him in Russia? |
41751 | ( thought I) thou cruel saint, couldst thou not have got thyself interred elsewhere, to spare me the terrible martyrdom of this pilgrimage?'' |
41751 | ( thought I) water, dearest of all elements, why did I not earlier appreciate thy worth? |
41751 | 6)? |
41751 | And can not that which has once occurred, when the necessity arises, occur a second time? |
41751 | And what if he is able to save a few small coins? |
41751 | But why linger over Mazendran and all its beauties, rendered so familiar to us by the masterly sketches of Frazer, Conolly, and Burnes? |
41751 | He was right, thought I, for, in fact, what was I to do? |
41751 | How could it be otherwise in these countries, where there was positively not even a hope of seeing each other again? |
41751 | I doubt much whether, in these extreme sufferings, water would have been of service; but who was there to give it to him? |
41751 | Khalmurad?'' |
41751 | Need I say which side in this mental struggle gained the victory? |
41751 | Was he, in any respect, the worse for that?'' |
41751 | What if I journeyed with these pilgrims into Central Asia? |
41751 | What more can you say? |
41751 | What need to insist that the spirit in which religion is administered has a powerful influence upon both Government and society? |
41751 | What wilt thou then do?'' |
41751 | What wonder that I was somewhat in the condition of a half- boiled fish, when on the 13th July, 1862, I approached the capital of Persia? |
41751 | When I bade him farewell I saw a tear in his eye-- a tear, who knows by what feeling dictated? |
41751 | When I questioned the creditor as to this remarkable manner of procedure, his answer was,''What have I to do with the writing? |
41751 | When two Kirghis meet, the first question is,''Who are thy seven fathers-- ancestors?'' |
41751 | Why add that we moved on unnoticed by the Turkomans? |
41751 | [ Footnote 133: Deshti Kiptchak as far as the frontiers of Bolgar( in Russia?) |
41751 | and thou hadst then no other motive in coming hither from so distant a land?'' |
41751 | why need I add that the impression produced by its exterior was weakened as we approached, and entirely dissipated by our entry into the place itself? |
41751 | { 237} But why any longer distress the reader with these cruelties? |
7777 | ''What else,''says the captain,''can reasonably be expected, since all their views are selfish without the least mixture of regard or attachment? |
7777 | --''Well,''replied Tupia,''but why should you molest us while we are at sea? |
7777 | All nations being alike to him, where could he be more happy than at Otaheite? |
7777 | But may not our hopes be extended to still nobler objects? |
7777 | But of this how could he and his people be assured? |
7777 | For ever sacred are the dead? |
7777 | From what quarter, then, had they gotten our manufactures? |
7777 | If it be wisely and prudently begun and conducted, who can tell what beneficial consequences may spring from it, in future ages? |
7777 | It may be asked, then, how do these birds of prey live? |
7777 | The question will frequently arise, How far the detail should be extended? |
7777 | What Pow''r inspir''d his dauntless breast to brave The scorch''d Equator, and th''Antarctic wave? |
7777 | Where Spring, whose dewy fingers strew O''er other lands some fleeting flowers, Lives, in blossoms ever new; Whence arose that shriek of pain? |
7777 | Where then could he better employ his time? |
7777 | and when shall we find one more successful than that before us? |
44992 | Cui bono? |
44992 | And as to Americans, who has ever seen a young American? |
44992 | And if any man have done so, what have his friends said of him and his adventure? |
44992 | But if so, why has she been so careful with her gloves, and her hat, and all her little feminine belongings? |
44992 | But why is she what she is? |
44992 | Had she a sister? |
44992 | Has Dante fed any hungry mouths, or has Shakspeare put clothes on the backs of any but a poor company of players? |
44992 | He carries in his portmanteau a dress- coat, waistcoat, and trousers, which are of no use to him, as who would think of asking such a man to dinner? |
44992 | How education is accomplished or of what it consists, who yet has been able to explain to us? |
44992 | How or under what influences the unprotected female commences her tour, who can tell? |
44992 | Knowing all that he abandons and that you enjoy, how should he not become a Pharisee in his vocation, thanking God that he is not as other men are? |
44992 | Nay, who will not declare that they are right in all this? |
44992 | Or was there a dearer one still, and a nearer one Yet than all other? |
44992 | Shall he make his attempts and save himself by his little learning? |
44992 | They wo n''t do any harm?" |
44992 | To whom will any of these things do any good? |
44992 | Under such circumstances, who can dare to think of ease, or even of pleasure? |
44992 | What do you know of the thoughts and feelings of those who inhabit your own kitchen? |
44992 | What father does not fear to see his son too great, even as a cricketer, or on the river? |
44992 | What father wishes his son to be great as a billiard- player? |
44992 | What man as he travels learns so much, works so hard, uses so much mental power, takes so much trouble in all things, as she does? |
44992 | What matters it who knows that you can not speak two words of French together grammatically? |
44992 | Where is the woman that does not admit it? |
44992 | Who among us that has been thus soft- hearted on an occasion has not repented in sackcloth and ashes? |
44992 | Who does not know the look of the band, and can not at a glance swear to their vocation? |
44992 | Who was her father? |
44992 | Who will say that they are wrong? |
44992 | Why is she alone? |
44992 | and how is it possible that a girl whose dress fits her so nicely should not have"a nearer one and dearer one yet than all other?" |
44992 | had she a brother? |
44992 | or shall he remain mute and thus suggest the possibility of positive knowledge? |
44992 | who was her mother? |
45531 | 3. Who is thy wife, and who is thy son? 45531 But woe to the man that saith unto his father, what begettest thou? |
45531 | For who maketh thee to differ from another, and what hast thou which thou didst not receive? 45531 Is he any relation to you?" |
45531 | Where bound? |
45531 | After he had examined it a little, he asked me if I would allow him to peruse it for a few days? |
45531 | And how was my soul to appear before the holy and just Judge of the earth? |
45531 | Another of his comrades, with a horrid curse, said,"Let him alone; let him sleep away, ca n''t you?" |
45531 | But what can I expect from such men? |
45531 | But you may be ready to say, was there nothing I was leaving behind me calculated to raise in my mind feelings of an opposite kind? |
45531 | Can a man walk upon hot coals and his feet not be burnt?" |
45531 | He likewise asked me what liquor I received? |
45531 | I looked at him for some time before I could believe my own eyes; and scarcely being yet sure, I said to him,"Sandy, is this you?" |
45531 | My soul thirsteth for God, for the living God; when shall I come and appear before God?" |
45531 | No affectionate friends with whom I had enjoyed agreeable fellowship? |
45531 | She asked the woman what made the child cry so bitterly? |
45531 | Solomon''s question is a pertinent one:"Can a man carry fire in his bosom and his clothes not be burnt? |
45531 | The Colonel said, smiling,"Well, Mrs. Allan, are you not afraid of your husband being jealous of you and the Fife Major?" |
45531 | The Colonel, seeing me one day on deck, inquired very kindly how I was? |
45531 | Whose thou art, and whence thou comest? |
45531 | and how can they hear without preachers? |
45531 | and how can they preach except they be sent?" |
45531 | and to the woman, what hast thou brought forth?" |
45531 | canst thou live here below with complacency? |
45531 | how uncertain are all human plans and prospects;"For who saith, and it cometh to pass, when the Lord commandeth it not?" |
42252 | Goin''wes''harvesin''? |
42252 | Goin''wes''harvesin''? |
42252 | Goin''west harvestin''? |
42252 | I suppose,said Mr. McSweeny, as he stood at his door to bow adieu,"you will harvest when you get a little further west?" |
42252 | What''d ya think of the fight? |
42252 | Will you walk back? |
42252 | And she asked me with a fraternal, confidential air,"What you sellin'', what you sellin'', boy?" |
42252 | And so I asked,"Why are you swearing so?" |
42252 | And what about the picnic?" |
42252 | And what shall fill his failing veins And lift his head, bowed down? |
42252 | But why linger over the question of wages till I show I earned those wages? |
42252 | Did you dare to make the songs Vanquished workmen need? |
42252 | Did you waste much money To deck a leper''s feast? |
42252 | Eating as I had, how could I take a stand against my benefactor even though the issue were the immortal one of man''s sinful weakness for drink? |
42252 | Every time I say"No"to the question"Goin''west harvestin''?" |
42252 | Eyes so strained and eager To see what you might see? |
42252 | He asked,"So you goin''to walk west to the mountains and all around?" |
42252 | He inquired,"Why did n''t you tell me two days ago you were going to be overcome by the heat, so I could have had a man ready to take your place?" |
42252 | He rolled his big white eyes at me:"What in the name of Uncle Hillbilly_ air_ you up to then?" |
42252 | How could they be so happy and seem so blest? |
42252 | How did these rules work out? |
42252 | I asked the looming figure I met in the dark:"Where is the boss of this place?" |
42252 | I asked:"Why are you swearing, sister? |
42252 | I have a good deal of sympathy for all this, for indeed is it not briefly comprehended in my own rule:"Carry no baggage"? |
42252 | I inquired"Where are you all travelling?" |
42252 | I went over the border and encountered-- what do you think? |
42252 | Is this mortifying the flesh? |
42252 | Love the truth, defy the crowd, Scandalize the priest? |
42252 | Mark my words, you''ll ride back!_"He asked a little later,"Goin''to harves''in Kansas?" |
42252 | ON THE ROAD TO NOWHERE_ On the road to nowhere What wild oats did you sow When you left your father''s house With your cheeks aglow? |
42252 | On the road to nowhere What wild oats did you sow? |
42252 | She answered,"Do n''t you know about the Sunday- school picnic?" |
42252 | Since Isadora Duncan has rediscovered the human foot æsthetically, who dares object to it in ritual? |
42252 | The old gentleman asked the inevitable question:"Goin''west harvestin''?" |
42252 | Then a fellow in citified clothes came to me and asked:"Can you follow a reaper and shock?" |
42252 | Were the tramp- days knightly, True sowing of wild seed? |
42252 | Were you thief or were you fool Or most nobly free? |
42252 | What do you suppose happened in New London? |
42252 | What you sellin''?" |
42252 | When a prophet hits it right on essentials like that, who would be critical? |
42252 | Where was I to sleep? |
42252 | Why do it at all?" |
42252 | Why do they not make up their minds to serve the devil sideways, like that sly puss with the butterfly bow? |
42252 | Why, in Heaven''s name, do it as a beggar? |
42252 | _ What?_ Well,_ almost_ every day. |
42252 | _ What?_ Well,_ almost_ every day. |
34167 | And Jean- Marie? 34167 Are you content patiently to await all the horrors of the future? |
34167 | Do these monsters pray? |
34167 | Do you see the three boats yonder? |
34167 | Hate the men as much as you like,said one of his companions,"but why be so cruel as to kill the women? |
34167 | Is he English? |
34167 | Was n''t she some pirate''s mother? |
34167 | What more can I know of the horrors of the sea,I asked myself,"if it be not to make it my grave?" |
34167 | Will you then do nothing? |
34167 | Would they lie at anchor if they were pursued? |
34167 | Are you below? |
34167 | Being so wretched, what more had I to fear? |
34167 | Can you not help to disguise me? |
34167 | Could I get it down into the sea? |
34167 | Could it be the approach of a steamer which caused the flight of our captors? |
34167 | Even supposing that we had come across a steamer by the way, what had we to hope? |
34167 | Had I strength enough to row or paddle two miles? |
34167 | Had we been separated from our companions only to die slowly of hunger, thirst, and suffocation? |
34167 | How can you sleep while we are yet in so much danger?" |
34167 | How shall I describe these absurd warriors, dignified by the titles of"War- tigers,"and"Mountain- splitters?" |
34167 | I can still hear the voice of the captain calling, and counting his sailors--"Jacques, Pierre, André, Remy, Christian, Robert, where are you?" |
34167 | I questioned my past life; I searched all the corners of my memory; I asked myself what I had done to merit this great trial? |
34167 | I turned to Than- Sing, who was awake and listening also, and asked him what he thought could be doing overhead? |
34167 | If even we had succeeded in weighing the anchor, what chance had we, in our dismasted state, of drifting into any place of shelter? |
34167 | Jean- Marie?" |
34167 | Might not the pirates even now return, and might not the steamer put off without having once perceived us? |
34167 | Till to- morrow nothing could now be done, and who could tell what that morrow might bring forth? |
34167 | Transferred to another junk, what might not be our fate? |
34167 | Was it possible that they were nailing down the trap above our heads? |
34167 | Was it possible, after all, that they were about to give up, and go back to the steamer? |
34167 | Was it their intention to cut off my hands? |
34167 | Was this hole destined to be our coffin and our tomb? |
34167 | We are going to seek our fortunes-- to seek, but what to find? |
34167 | What could they want? |
34167 | What had we to expect? |
34167 | What shall I do? |
34167 | What was now to become of me, friendless and alone, in a strange and savage country? |
34167 | What were death to one whose sufferings had already touched the bounds of human endurance? |
34167 | What would now become of us? |
34167 | What would they do with us? |
34167 | Who knows what might have happened had one single drop of blood been actually shed? |
34167 | Would not our captors sooner throw us overboard, than be taken in the fact of piracy and kidnapping on the high seas? |
34167 | fire!--the ship is on fire-- do you hear?--what noise is that?" |
34167 | was that anchor ever to be weighed again, or was it destined to rust away throughout all the ages of time, in the spot where it was now imbedded? |
34167 | what if it were but a ship bound for Hong- Kong, Canton, or Macao? |
34167 | what should we do if the pirates came back, and once more took us prisoners? |
34167 | where are you? |
23031 | And how air you going? |
23031 | And you are going to the front, old lady-- you, of all people in the world? |
23031 | But, Madame Seacole,( this in a very altered tone),"_ you''ll_ surely help me? |
23031 | Do you think I shall be of any use to you when I get there? |
23031 | I am yours, truly obliged,J. K., 18th R. S."Does n''t that read like a sick man''s letter, glad enough to welcome any woman''s face? |
23031 | I say, Mrs. Seacole, how''s that---- boy? |
23031 | Oh, Dr. Casey, how could you shoot the poor lad, and now call him bad names, as though he''d injured you? 23031 What am I to do? |
23031 | What can I do or say, Dr. Casey? 23031 Where air you going?" |
23031 | Why not, my sons?--won''t they be glad to have me there? |
23031 | Another equally terrible and lengthy siege of the north? |
23031 | As it was, he came forward, and shook hands very kindly, saying,"How do you do, ma''am? |
23031 | But what have I gained? |
23031 | But who, indeed, has not been kind to me? |
23031 | By what conveyance air you going?" |
23031 | Ca n''t I rig up a hut with the packing- cases, and sleep, if need be, on straw, like Margery Daw?" |
23031 | Come, Madame Seacole, you''ll never leave me to be murdered by these bloodthirsty savages?" |
23031 | Did these ladies shrink from accepting my aid because my blood flowed beneath a somewhat duskier skin than theirs? |
23031 | Her colour was grey; would not a thick coating of flour from my dredger make all right? |
23031 | How could it be otherwise? |
23031 | How was I to know when I brought them what camp- life was? |
23031 | I could give many other similar instances, but why should I sadden myself or my readers? |
23031 | I felt it to be so, for I never failed( although who was I, that I should preach?) |
23031 | I wonder if I can ever forget the scenes I witnessed there? |
23031 | In a few days the camp could find plenty to talk about in their novel position-- and what then? |
23031 | Is n''t there a something we can du for you, ma''am?" |
23031 | More fighting? |
23031 | Now, would all this have happened if I had returned to England a rich woman? |
23031 | Perhaps you''ll see them some day, and if the Russians should knock me over, mother, just tell them I thought of them all-- will you?" |
23031 | Tell me, reader, can you fancy what the want of so simple a thing as a pocket- handkerchief is? |
23031 | To put a case-- have you ever gone out for the day without one; sat in a draught and caught a sneezing cold in the head? |
23031 | Was it not so with me? |
23031 | Was it possible that American prejudices against colour had some root here? |
23031 | What better or happier lot could possibly befall me? |
23031 | What can you do for me, mami?" |
23031 | What object has Mrs. Seacole in coming out? |
23031 | What was to be done? |
23031 | Why did n''t he show a little pluck? |
23031 | Why did you ever bring me to this place? |
23031 | Why not trust to their welcome and kindness, and start at once? |
23031 | Will the reader take any interest in my Crimean Christmas- pudding? |
23031 | Would you like, reader, to know my recipe for the favourite claret cup? |
23031 | _ you''ll_ surely tell the alcalde that the wound''s a slight one? |
23031 | do I, Aunty?" |
5136 | An Americanish araba, Effendi; have you any ekmek? |
5136 | Bey Effendi, have you any ekmek? |
5136 | Carpoose? |
5136 | How will you trade horses? |
5136 | Just about twelve miles,I reply;"what do you make it?" |
5136 | What do you propose doing, then? |
5136 | What does your cyclometre say? |
5136 | What''ll you do when you hit the snow? |
5136 | What''s the matter with your leg? |
5136 | What''s the name of these Indians here? |
5136 | Where are you going? |
5136 | Where have you come from? |
5136 | Where is the headquarters of the Augsburg Velocipede Club? |
5136 | You have n''t got one of those mirrored rooms, have you? |
5136 | ( how many liras?) |
5136 | ("This; what is it?") |
5136 | -"What have you, then?" |
5136 | Christian? |
5136 | Do you go mit der veld around?" |
5136 | Englander?" |
5136 | For some reason or other- perhaps the poor woman has none prepared; who knows? |
5136 | He puts his bald head out of the window above, and asks:"Pe you Herr Shtevens?" |
5136 | I mentally exclaim,"what will you do when that nose- bag has petered out?" |
5136 | I suppose you keep track of the crops as you travel along?" |
5136 | In such a case, would a wheelman be justified in using his revolver to defend his bicycle? |
5136 | Scanning time: 15 hours OCR time: 20+ hours Proof# 1: 25 hours Proof# 2:? |
5136 | The pasha arrived too late this evening at Eski Baba to see the bicycle:"Will I allow a gendarme to go to the mehana and bring it for his inspection?" |
5136 | They ask me if I made it myself and hatch- lira? |
5136 | They put no candles in, no naphtha, no anything; where does it come from?" |
5136 | Thrice during the forenoon I am accosted with the invitation"mastic? |
5136 | Who has not heard the"Ohio yell?" |
5136 | cogniac? |
5136 | do n''t you see the saddle?" |
5136 | what newspaper?" |
5814 | Where do they get matter to fill up a page in this little island lost in the wastes of the Indian Ocean? 5814 You would n''t expect a person to be proud of being a Mauritian, now would you? |
5814 | But why did the English allow the French to have Madagascar? |
5814 | Could anything be clearer than the Uitlander''s statement of the grievances and oppressions under which they were suffering? |
5814 | Could anything be more legal and citizen- like and law- respecting than their attitude as expressed by their Manifesto? |
5814 | Did I want my boots cleaned? |
5814 | Did she respect a theft of a couple of centuries ago? |
5814 | Did they suppose that the Boers would attack them even for issuing a Manifesto demanding relief under the existing government? |
5814 | Did they suppose that the Boers would attack them for petitioning, for redress? |
5814 | Did we want coffee? |
5814 | Discouragement of railway expansion? |
5814 | Finally, in a pause, a man asked,"Have you heard about the fellow that kept a diary crossing the Atlantic?" |
5814 | Has Miss Sullivan taught her by the methods of India and the American public school? |
5814 | If the 300 had been sent, what good would it have done? |
5814 | In preparing for armed revolution and in talking revolution, were the Reformers"bluffing,"or were they in earnest? |
5814 | La Trappe must have known that there were men who would enjoy this kind of misery, but how did he find it out? |
5814 | Laws denying, representation and suffrage to the intruder? |
5814 | Laws heavily taxing the intruder and overlooking the Boer? |
5814 | Laws inimical to religious liberty? |
5814 | Laws obstructive of gold production? |
5814 | Laws unfriendly to educational institutions? |
5814 | Now what would you expect from that unpromising material? |
5814 | This is the only country in the world where the stranger is not asked"How do you like this place?" |
5814 | To continue the Calcutta exposure:"What is the meaning of a Sheriff?" |
5814 | What is the meaning of''Ich Dien''? |
5814 | What is the secret of his formidable supremacy? |
5814 | What ought you to expect from it? |
5814 | What was their idea? |
5814 | When the captain finishes a statement the passengers glance at each other privately, as who should say,"Do you believe that?" |
5814 | Who was Cardinal Wolsey? |
5814 | Would n''t it be a good idea to put them in order? |
33359 | ''And who the devil is Atisa?'' |
33359 | ''But has he no interests or amusements?'' |
33359 | ''But what does he do all day?'' |
33359 | ''But why did you not treat with the Tibetans themselves?'' |
33359 | ''Do you get much of this sort of thing?'' |
33359 | ''Do you read much?'' |
33359 | ''The ruler of your country leaves his palace and capital, and you know nothing?'' |
33359 | ''What the devil is that old thief doing over there?'' |
33359 | ''Who are you?'' |
33359 | A transport officer was shouting:''How many bags have you, babu?'' |
33359 | And the rabble? |
33359 | And what Englishman with the same prospect to face, caught in this dark eddy of circumstance, would not have done the same thing? |
33359 | And who is he? |
33359 | Answer:"What signifies whether it was a bird or not?" |
33359 | But the men who attacked the Kangma post, what parallel in history have we for these? |
33359 | But what was left him if he lived except shame and humiliation? |
33359 | But what was the flame that smouldered in these men and lighted them to action? |
33359 | But why not own up that one travels for the glamour of the thing? |
33359 | Do you know where he is?'' |
33359 | Have we removed it? |
33359 | How in the name of all their Buddhas were they to stop such a man? |
33359 | It may be asked, then, What is, or was, the nature of the Russian menace in Tibet? |
33359 | One wondered, were they pursuing truth or were they petrified by ritual and routine? |
33359 | Or are they depths? |
33359 | Or were we noted as food for gossip and criticism when their self- imposed ordeal was done? |
33359 | Says I,"Was that a bird at the magistrate''s that flapped so loud?" |
33359 | We will not molest you, but we refuse to accept your terms''? |
33359 | What could they have done? |
33359 | What, then, drove them on? |
33359 | When Colonel Younghusband put the question direct to a head Lama in open durbar,''Have you news of the Dalai Lama? |
33359 | Where else can one find a racecourse, polo- ground, fishing, and shooting, and a rainfall that is little more than a third of that of Darjeeling? |
33359 | Who can tell what they think or what they wish, these undivinable creatures? |
33359 | Who knows? |
33359 | Why could we not have left at least one city out of bounds? |
33359 | Why do n''t they send up the--th Light Cavalry?'' |
33359 | Why should he? |
33359 | Why should not the Tibetans, who are of the same stock, yield themselves to enlightenment? |
33359 | Why should they? |
33359 | Why, in the name of all their Bodhisats and Munis, did they not run? |
33359 | Why, then, deal with China at all? |
33359 | You do n''t understand? |
33359 | _ Officer coming up_:''... Up above Phari ideal country for native cavalry, is n''t it?... |
55759 | All ready, sir,said he,"shall I drive you to the Palace or the Museum?" |
55759 | How did you put that piece of ice inside without breaking the bottle? |
55759 | If in the month of dark December, Leander, who was nightly wo nt( What maid will not the tale remember?) 55759 It was water, sir, and it froze inside,"said she,"will you have something to eat?" |
55759 | Oscar, what nation does that puny looking, red- skinned man belong to? |
55759 | That''s a fact, Captain, is that his pillar? |
55759 | Well is that any reason you should make my bill like a snipes? |
55759 | What tall, fine looking, yellow skinned man is that, Oscar, with that tall lady standing looking on? |
55759 | when are you going to leave and what directions will you take from here? |
55759 | Dorr?" |
55759 | Have we as learned a man as Moses, and if yes, who can prove it? |
55759 | He invited us into his parlor where he asked us many disguised questions, such as;"how do you like Naples?" |
55759 | How did he come to do what no man can do now? |
55759 | I asked her if it was good? |
55759 | I asked what subject? |
55759 | I said,"You mean to say this is the temple of Bacchus, the god of wine and drunkards, do you?" |
55759 | I saw one machine to put a man in, and gradually break his bones; at the crush of each bone, he would be asked"if he would confess the crime?" |
55759 | I then asked him if he was aware that the golden candlestick out of the temple of Solomon lay at the bottom of that muddy stream? |
55759 | Luxor, Carnack, the Memnonian and the Pyramids make us exclaim,"What monuments of pride can surpass these? |
55759 | Oh, when will we be the"Freest government in the world?" |
55759 | Reader, can a man dream with his eyes open? |
55759 | Sam Slick asked a country beaux"why it was that such a fine looking gentleman as himself was not married where so many pretty ladies were?" |
55759 | She stepped up to me and said,"Are they ready, sir?" |
55759 | The Irishman said,"how did it feel my marn?" |
55759 | The old man asked me how I liked it? |
55759 | The women are still pretty, and what is like a Grecian nose? |
55759 | Well, Mr. Captain, what are you looking after in the distance with as much anxiety as the passengers, have you not been here before? |
55759 | Well, who were the Egyptians? |
55759 | Were such men authors? |
55759 | _ A friend?_ Yes, a friend! |
55759 | or can a man see with them shut? |
55759 | said she,"what you call_ cela_?" |
55759 | valet de place?" |
8476 | ''Now, do you know what boat that was?'' |
8476 | ''Was she going fast?'' |
8476 | ''Yes, you did-- DIDN''T you?'' |
8476 | 13 say? |
8476 | Are they going to peg all the banks? |
8476 | But what does the river care for a stone wall? |
8476 | GOING TO BE A YEAR GETTING THAT HOGSHEAD ASHORE?'' |
8476 | Is dat so? |
8476 | Presently someone asked--''Any boat gone up?'' |
8476 | Says enough to knock THEIR little game galley- west, do n''t it? |
8476 | What do you reckon that is for? |
8476 | Where did you go when you went to see that battle?'' |
5808 | And some tea? |
5808 | Dear, dear, what can we do? |
5808 | Does Robbie Burns say-- what does he say? |
5808 | It does n''t look- oh, how would this do? 5808 Pale? |
5808 | You drink two hot Scotches every night? |
5808 | You eat all kinds of things that are dissatisfied with each other''s company? |
5808 | You take coffee immoderately? |
5808 | And I spoke up and said-- now what did I say? |
5808 | And she said,''Mother, do n''t you know you told him he could drive to see his people, and stay over Sunday?'' |
5808 | Are you in pain?" |
5808 | Are you?" |
5808 | Are you?" |
5808 | But if it is n''t summer, what does it lack?" |
5808 | Clemens?" |
5808 | Did n''t I say,''Providence will provide''?" |
5808 | Did n''t I, Julia Glossop?" |
5808 | Did n''t something tell you?--didn''t you feel that you were sent? |
5808 | Go ashore amongst the cholera and take the risks? |
5808 | He and I together can lift one of the Old People into the buggy; then drive her to my house and----"But who will take care of the other one?" |
5808 | He must have the hat, that was manifest; but how was he to get it? |
5808 | Here at noon what do we see? |
5808 | How, then, could the particles of the original men be searched out from the final conglomerate and put together again? |
5808 | Melbourne and its Attractions-- The Melbourne Cup Races-- Cup Day-- Great Crowds-- Clothes Regardless of Cost-- The Australian Larrikin-- Is He Dead? |
5808 | Now was n''t that remarkable?" |
5808 | Will it be believed that the first thing he did was to destroy his Established Church, root and branch? |
5808 | Would you expect to find in that awful Leper Settlement a custom worthy to be transplanted to your own country? |
5808 | You smoke extravagantly, do n''t you?" |
8478 | ''Cover it? |
8478 | ''How many cards?'' |
8478 | ''Oh, it DID, did it? |
8478 | ''Oh, that''s your little game, is it? |
8478 | ''What have you got?'' |
8478 | As they left the table, Cincinnati said--''But you have to have custom- house marks, do n''t you? |
8478 | Had he yielded at last? |
8478 | How do you manage that?'' |
8478 | Tell''m apart? |
8478 | There now-- what do you say? |
8478 | What had he gone below for?--His bag of coin? |
8478 | Would n''t their eyes bug out, to see''em handled like that?--wouldn''t they, though?'' |
8478 | You ai n''t a- going out to Californy for fun, nuther am I-- it''s business, ai n''t that so? |
8478 | you mean to say you''re going to cover it?'' |
7881 | And his second duty? |
7881 | Yes,said he,"did you know who drew them?" |
7881 | A beautiful feature of the scene to- day, as the preceding day, were the vines growing on fig- trees(?) |
7881 | After emerging from the gate, we soon came to the little Church of"Domine, quo vadis?" |
7881 | But how does this accord with what I have been saying only a minute ago? |
7881 | Could not all that sanctity at least keep it thawed? |
7881 | Did anybody ever see Washington nude? |
7881 | Does his spirit manifest itself in the semblance of flame? |
7881 | Has a man a flame inside of his head? |
7881 | Have I spoken of the sumptuous carving of the capitals of the columns? |
7881 | How came that flower to grow among these wild mountains? |
7881 | How then can the decayed picture of a great master ever be restored by the touches of an inferior hand? |
7881 | I somewhat question whether it is quite the thing, however, to make a genuine woman out of an allegory we ask, Who is to we d this lovely virgin? |
7881 | Is there such a rural class in Italy? |
7881 | We heard Gaetano once say a good thing to a swarm of beggar- children, who were infesting us,"Are your fathers all dead?" |
7881 | What shall we do in America? |
7881 | What would he do with Washington, the most decorous and respectable personage that ever went ceremoniously through the realities of life? |
7881 | Where should the light come from? |
7881 | You feel as if the Saviour were deserted, both in heaven and earth; the despair is in him which made him say,"My God, why hast thou forsaken me?" |
5811 | A good one? |
5811 | As to lights? |
5811 | Bad beds? |
5811 | Bells? |
5811 | But ca n''t I pay the conductor? |
5811 | But who will call me? |
5811 | But who will help me down with my baggage? |
5811 | Do you mean that we are drinking a bogus Veuve- Cliquot over there? |
5811 | Five dollars? 5811 How are the rooms?" |
5811 | Is it easy to be had? |
5811 | Is n''t there any good sand? |
5811 | Suppose you want the chambermaid to empty the slopjar? |
5811 | The pillows, too? |
5811 | Wardrobe? |
5811 | What do you do when you want service? |
5811 | What do you pay for it? |
5811 | What made you think of that? |
5811 | Will they be there again to- night? |
5811 | Yes, but what Prince? |
5811 | A bewitching place, a bewildering place, an enchanting place-- the Arabian Nights come again? |
5811 | And accommodating? |
5811 | And who re- started it? |
5811 | Do men ever turn out better than that-- in America or elsewhere? |
5811 | How do I know? |
5811 | I said,''Is this all you have? |
5811 | I said,''What''s on that pack- horse? |
5811 | I turned to the other gentleman:"Is your friend in the ministry?" |
5811 | I wonder where man will be in another forty- seven years? |
5811 | Is there any gold?'' |
5811 | Killanoola, wherefore Shall the prayer of Penola be scorned? |
5811 | That would change his spirit, perhaps? |
5811 | There are twelve miles of this road which no man without good executive ability can ever hope-- tell me, have you good executive ability? |
5811 | We returned to the others, when Kempthorne said,''What noise was that?'' |
5811 | What was the use of getting him up in that tragic style for so innocent a trade as his? |
5811 | Where is your manager?" |
5811 | You''ve got tickets?" |
5811 | first- rate executive ability?" |
22022 | ''Breakfast, ladies?'' |
22022 | ''Did you think the book would be famous when he read it to you in 1834, as you say?'' |
22022 | ''Do you know what impertinent things these little scamps are saying to you?'' |
22022 | ''Have n''t you a sigh for those lovely lakes, a tear for Albano, a pang of regret for Rome?'' |
22022 | ''Have we split any sails?'' |
22022 | ''How do you like it, dear?'' |
22022 | ''I got rather the best of the joke in that little affair: did n''t I?'' |
22022 | ''Is n''t it romantic?'' |
22022 | ''Is she a little fat woman?'' |
22022 | ''Oh, just go in and say,"Avez- vous le fils bleu?"'' |
22022 | ''Oh, what is it? |
22022 | ''Shall I be sick or well?'' |
22022 | ''Shall we burn up our rubbish, or give it away?'' |
22022 | ''Then you consider our trip a success?'' |
22022 | ''Trying to recall those fine lines in"Wilhelm Meister;"do n''t you remember? |
22022 | ''Very well, then; I leave you now, and shall expect to meet on the appointed day?'' |
22022 | ''What are you muttering about?'' |
22022 | ''What are you prowling about for?'' |
22022 | ''What should we do without you?'' |
22022 | ''What will Livy say?'' |
22022 | ''What''s her business?'' |
22022 | ''What_ would_ our blessed mother say if she saw us now?'' |
22022 | ''Which? |
22022 | ''Why are you abroad?'' |
22022 | ''Why do n''t the men go also?'' |
22022 | ''Will Madame kindly direct me to the house of Jacques Coeur?'' |
22022 | ''You think I ca n''t do it? |
22022 | Are these trunks a burden, a vexation of spirit, a curse?'' |
22022 | By the way, how do you ask for it in French?'' |
22022 | Dear Amandas, Matildas, and Lavinias, why delay? |
22022 | How will this do? |
22022 | How_ can_ you eat your nails in points, Until they look like claws?'' |
22022 | Is it not charmingly arranged? |
22022 | Is it sea- sickness? |
22022 | My precious granny, what will you say next?'' |
22022 | Query-- If steamers are named the"Asia,"the"Russia,"and the"Scotia,"why not call one the"Nausea?"'' |
22022 | The hospitable English came out strong on these occasions, with''''ampers of''am- sandwiches, bottled porter and so on, do n''t you know?'' |
22022 | Then if in one short fatal month A change like this appears, Oh, what will be the next result When they have stayed for years? |
22022 | These horrid, greasy, unknown things, How can you think them good?'' |
22022 | What did the grasshopper mean? |
22022 | Where are the sheepskin suits? |
22022 | Where did he go to in a fine carriage, and what was he plotting with the other Carlists, who dodged in and out of his room at all hours? |
22022 | Where shall it be sent?'' |
22022 | Who was he? |
22022 | Will you be ready?'' |
22022 | Would Madame call again, and perhaps it might be arranged? |
22022 | Would the dear ladies survey the party, still at table? |
22022 | how are you, my loves?'' |
22022 | is it only you?'' |
22022 | the bump or the bowls?'' |
22022 | the red skirts and white head- cloths? |
22022 | what more could the human heart desire? |
8481 | ''A dark and dreadful one?'' |
8481 | ''Account for it? |
8481 | ''How do you account for it?'' |
8481 | ''Is that so?'' |
8481 | ''Which one?'' |
8481 | ''Why did n''t you see them Roman soldiers that stood back there in a rank, and sometimes marched in procession around the stage?'' |
8481 | And what did the husband do? |
8481 | At last he said in a low voice--''My little friend, can you keep a secret?'' |
8481 | Do all whom you send from Hartford serve their Master as well? |
8481 | I asked him various questions; first about a mate of mine in Sunday school-- what became of him? |
8481 | I met him on the street the next morning, and before I could speak, he asked--''Did you see me?'' |
8481 | Some talk followed--''Why-- what should make you suspect that it is n''t genuine?'' |
8481 | Well, when you come to look at it all around, and chew at it and think it over, do n''t it just bang anything you ever heard of?'' |
11526 | Where is the skin? |
11526 | All once was theirs-- earth, ocean, forest, sky-- How can they joy in what now meets the eye? |
11526 | All this may be very true, but what is the use of all this straining? |
11526 | And you, how shall I name you? |
11526 | Beside, allowing the possibility of some clear glimpses into a higher state of being, what do we want of it now? |
11526 | But how are our faculties sharpened to do it? |
11526 | But, where there is so great, a counterpoise, can not these be given up once for all? |
11526 | Can it interest you? |
11526 | Can kind emotions in their proud hearts glow, As through these realms, now decked by Art, they go? |
11526 | Can you forgive the past?" |
11526 | Father, they will not take me home, To the poor child no heart is free; In sleet and snow all night I roam; Father,--was this decreed by thee? |
11526 | From water Venus was born, what more would you have? |
11526 | GOVERNOR EVERETT RECEIVING THE INDIAN CHIEFS, NOVEMBER, 1837. Who says that Poesy is on the wane, And that the Muses tune their lyres in vain? |
11526 | Hast thou forgotten that I here attend, From the full noon until this sad twilight? |
11526 | Have you paid for your passage? |
11526 | He careless stopped and eyed the maid;"Why weepest thou?" |
11526 | How nobly the ancients understood the inner life; how fully is it indicated in their mysteries? |
11526 | If the same law one grief to both impart, How could''st thou grieve a trusting mother''s heart? |
11526 | If the same star our fates together bind, Why are we thus divided, mind from mind? |
11526 | Is it a light? |
11526 | Is it not they who make the money? |
11526 | Is not this a true view? |
11526 | Is that your explanation? |
11526 | May not I have an office, too, in my hospitality and ready sympathy? |
11526 | Morning came, The dreamer took his solitary way; And, as he pressed the old man''s hand, he sighed, Must this too be a dream? |
11526 | Must they not think, so strange and sad their lot, That they by the Great Spirit are forgot? |
11526 | O fair, but fickle lady- moon, Why must thy full form ever wane? |
11526 | Oh rather, father, let me ask of thee What is it I do seek, what thing I lack? |
11526 | Oh who can say Where lies the boundary? |
11526 | Our aspiration seeks a common aim, Why were we tempered of such differing frame? |
11526 | Query, did the lilied fragrance which, in the miraculous times, accompanied visions of saints and angels, proceed from water or garden lilies? |
11526 | Query: Is this the reason why the left hand has been, by the custom of nations, so almost disused, because the heart is on the left side? |
11526 | The church, the school, the railroad and the mart-- Can these a pleasure to their minds impart? |
11526 | The ploughman who does not look beyond its boundaries and does not raise his eyes from the ground? |
11526 | There, very weary, I received from the distance a sweet emblem of an incorruptible, lofty and pervasive nature, but was I less weary? |
11526 | To whom, said I, are you to be married? |
11526 | What are the petty triumphs_ Art_ has given, To eyes familiar with the naked heaven? |
11526 | When will this country have such a man? |
11526 | Who knows how much of old legendary lore, of modern wonder, they have already planted amid the Wisconsin forests? |
11526 | Who sees the meaning of the flower uprooted in the ploughed field? |
11526 | Why must women always try to detain and restrain what they love? |
11526 | Why will people look only on one side? |
11526 | Will you?" |
11526 | With plenty of fish, and game, and wheat, can they not dispense with a baker to bring"muffins hot"every morning to the door for their breakfast? |
11526 | Yet why should we wonder at such, either, when we have Commentaries on Shakspeare, and Harmonics of the Gospels? |
11526 | no distant mountains? |
11526 | said he very quickly,"what have you done with it?" |
11526 | what, no valleys? |
11526 | why so soon Must your sweet light recede again? |
8475 | ''An alligator boat? |
8475 | ''Are they so thick as to be troublesome?'' |
8475 | ''Ca n''t you drink it?'' |
8475 | ''Did they actually impede navigation?'' |
8475 | ''Do you ever get aground on the alligators now?'' |
8475 | ''First time you have ever been West?'' |
8475 | ''Has she got any of her trip?'' |
8475 | ''Is this the first time you were ever in a pilot- house?'' |
8475 | ''Well, then, why do they still keep the alligator boats in service?'' |
8475 | ''What for?'' |
8475 | ''Where are you from?'' |
8475 | For instance--''Do you see that little boulder sticking out of the water yonder? |
8475 | Going to be all day? |
8475 | He paid first- class wages; but said I, What''s wages when your reputation''s in danger? |
8475 | He said--''What is a person to do here when he wants a drink of water?--drink this slush?'' |
8475 | How do criminals manage to keep a brand- new ALIAS in mind? |
8475 | Reputation''s worth everything, ai n''t it? |
8475 | So I was thinking, when the pilot asked--''Do you know what this rope is for?'' |
8475 | Well, I let you, did n''t I? |
8475 | What''s it for?'' |
8475 | When I had gone about twenty- three miles, and made four horribly crooked crossings--''''Without any rudder?'' |
8475 | Where now is the once wood- yard man? |
3529 | What,I exclaimed,"is this active principle which keeps me still awake? |
3529 | And could poor reason make considerable advances when it was reckoned the highest degree of virtue to do violence to its dictates? |
3529 | And, considering the question of human happiness, where, oh where does it reside? |
3529 | And, to avoid censure, what sacrifices are not made by weak minds? |
3529 | But whither am I wandering? |
3529 | But-- but what? |
3529 | Could the thoughts, of which there remained so many vestiges, have vanished quite away? |
3529 | Could they be no more-- to whom my imagination thus gave life? |
3529 | Do not saucily ask, repeating Sterne''s question,"Maria, is it still so warm?" |
3529 | For worlds I would not see a form I loved-- embalmed in my heart-- thus sacrilegiously handled? |
3529 | Has it taken up its abode with unconscious ignorance or with the high- wrought mind? |
3529 | He was afterwards obliged to resort to violent measures; but then, who could blame him? |
3529 | How few authors or artists have arrived at eminence who have not lived by their employment? |
3529 | How much of the virtue which appears in the world is put on for the world? |
3529 | In fact, what is to be expected in any country where taste and cultivation of mind do not supply the place of youthful beauty and animal spirits? |
3529 | In what element will it mix, giving or receiving fresh energy? |
3529 | Innocent and credulous as a child, why have I not the same happy thoughtlessness? |
3529 | Is it the offspring of thoughtless animal spirits or the dye of fancy continually flitting round the expected pleasure? |
3529 | Is not this the witching time of night? |
3529 | Is not this, in fact, the vice, both in England and the northern states of Europe, which appears to be the greatest impediment to general improvement? |
3529 | Is this all the distinction of the rich in the grave? |
3529 | Know you of what materials some hearts are made? |
3529 | Life, what art thou? |
3529 | Now-- but let me talk of something else-- will you go with me to the cascade? |
3529 | The steeple likewise towered aloft, for what is a church, even amongst the Lutherans, without a steeple? |
3529 | What are these imperious sympathies? |
3529 | What is speculation but a species of gambling, I might have said fraud, in which address generally gains the prize? |
3529 | What was to be done? |
3529 | What will break the enchantment of animation? |
3529 | What, for example, has piety, under the heathen or Christian system, been, but a blind faith in things contrary to the principles of reason? |
3529 | What, indeed, is to humanise these beings, who rest shut up( for they seldom even open their windows), smoking, drinking brandy, and driving bargains? |
3529 | Where goes this breath?--this_ I_, so much alive? |
3529 | Whither was he to flee from universal famine? |
3529 | Who can look at these rocks, and allow the voluptuousness of nature to be an excuse for gratifying the desires it inspires? |
3529 | Who fears the fallen dew? |
3529 | Why fly my thoughts abroad, when everything around me appears at home?" |
3529 | Why has nature so many charms for me-- calling forth and cherishing refined sentiments, only to wound the breast that fosters them? |
3529 | Why should I weep for myself? |
3529 | Why? |
8587 | Alas, the gallant ship and crew, Can nothing help them more?" |
8587 | And spin? |
8587 | And where are they now? |
8587 | I cried in fright"Oh, is there no retreat?" |
8587 | Independent? |
8587 | Is it not so? |
8587 | Oh where was her true love-- and why, why did he not come and save her? |
8587 | What could he ben eating? |
8587 | Where will you find another like it in the Western hemisphere? |
8587 | Why did n''t the Irishman fall on the dog? |
8583 | What do you mean? |
8583 | And so is"wherefore"--though why"wherefore"? |
8583 | And what else would they be likely to consist of? |
8583 | Boy, or girl?" |
8583 | But what was a man to do? |
8583 | Could you abide an Angel in an unclean shirt and no suspenders? |
8583 | Could you respect an Angel with a horse- laugh and a swagger like a buccaneer? |
8583 | Do not these relics suggest something of an idea of the fearful suffering and privation the early emigrants to California endured? |
8583 | He was murderous enough, possibly, to fill the bill of a Destroyer, but would you have any kind of an Angel devoid of dignity? |
8583 | If I were to suggest what ought to be done to him, I should be called extravagant-- but what does the sixteenth chapter of Daniel say? |
8583 | Then he said to them:"''You signed these contracts and assumed these obligations of your own free will and accord?'' |
8583 | To which the driver, who was looking over the precipice where he had disappeared, replied, with an injured air:"Think I''m a dam fool?" |
8583 | What has brought me to this? |
8583 | must I die? |
8480 | Are you happy? |
8480 | Do all the good people go to your place? |
8480 | How do you amuse yourself? |
8480 | How long have you been in the spirit land? |
8480 | Is not this true? |
8480 | Then this one has actually forgotten the date of its translation to the spirit land? |
8480 | Very well, then, when did you pass away? |
8480 | Well, then, what year was it? |
8480 | What do you drink? |
8480 | What do you eat there? |
8480 | What do you read? |
8480 | What do you smoke? |
8480 | What do you talk about? |
8480 | What else? |
8480 | When did you die? |
8480 | When your friends in the earth all get to the spirit land, what shall you have to talk about then?--nothing but about how happy you all are? |
8480 | Where are you? |
8480 | Would you like to come back? |
8480 | Would you say that under oath? |
535 | ''And where,''said I,''is monsieur?'' |
535 | ''And,''added the man,''what the devil have you done to be still here?'' |
535 | ''Comment, monsieur?'' |
535 | ''Comment? |
535 | ''Connaissez- vous le Seigneur?'' |
535 | ''Et vous pretendez mourir dans cette espece de croyance?'' |
535 | ''Have you no remorse for your crimes?'' |
535 | ''I am an amateur of such wine, do you see?'' |
535 | ''Nothing?'' |
535 | ''Was it not you who passed in the meadow while it was still day?'' |
535 | ''Where are you going beyond Cheylard?'' |
535 | ''Why are you called Spirit?'' |
535 | ''Why?'' |
535 | ''Your domicile?'' |
535 | ''Your donkey,''says he,''is very old?'' |
535 | ''Your father and mother?'' |
535 | ''Your name?'' |
535 | A Scotsman? |
535 | Ah, an Irishman, then? |
535 | An Englishman? |
535 | And Clarisse? |
535 | And his soul was like a garden? |
535 | And what although now and then a drop of blood should appear on Modestine''s mouse- coloured wedge- like rump? |
535 | And when the present is so exacting, who can annoy himself about the future? |
535 | And yet had not he himself tried and proved the inefficacy of these carnal arguments among the Buddhists in China? |
535 | At what inaudible summons, at what gentle touch of Nature, are all these sleepers thus recalled in the same hour to life? |
535 | But where one was so good and simple, why should not all be alike? |
535 | Do the stars rain down an influence, or do we share some thrill of mother earth below our resting bodies? |
535 | Durst I address a person who was under a vow of silence? |
535 | Et d''ou venez- vous?'' |
535 | Gambetta moderate? |
535 | I knew well enough where the lantern was; but where were the candles? |
535 | Might he say that I was a geographer? |
535 | Now may some Languedocian Wordsworth turn the sonnet into patois:''Mountains and vales and floods, heard YE that whistle?'' |
535 | OUR LADY OF THE SNOWS''I behold The House, the Brotherhood austere-- And what am I, that I am here?'' |
535 | Of what shall a man be proud, if he is not proud of his friends? |
535 | Was I going to the monastery? |
535 | Was I to pay for my night''s lodging? |
535 | Was it Apollo, or Mercury, or Love with folded wings? |
535 | What could I have told her? |
535 | What shall I say of Clarisse? |
535 | What the devil was the good of a she- ass if she could not carry a sleeping- bag and a few necessaries? |
535 | What was left of all this bygone dust and heroism? |
535 | What went ye out for to see? |
535 | What were his reflections as this second martyrdom drew near? |
535 | Where was it gone? |
535 | Who hath loosed the bands of the wild ass? |
535 | Who shall say? |
535 | Who was I? |
535 | Will you dare to justify these words?'' |
535 | he cried,''what does this mean?'' |
27250 | A man who takes a holiday at Trouville or Dieppe is not confronted on his return with the question,''When is your book on France going to appear?'' |
27250 | And if we did ask him to bring his wife, how many wives would he bring? |
27250 | Are these the amiable and pacific relations which will unite England and America, when Englishmen can get to America in a day? |
27250 | Are you an atheist?'' |
27250 | Assuming all the desperate composure of Slim Jim himself, I replied,''You mean you are connected with the police authorities here, do n''t you? |
27250 | But because I know that Bilge is only Bilge, shall I stoop to the profanity of saying that fire is only fire? |
27250 | But is my American critic really ready to treat the sacrifice of blood in the same way as the sacrifice of beer? |
27250 | But perhaps a better answer would be that given to W. T. Stead when he circulated the rhetorical question,''Shall I slay my brother Boer?'' |
27250 | But right in what? |
27250 | But the English are not always saying, either in romance or reality,''What''s to be done, if our food is being poisoned by all these baronets?'' |
27250 | But what are those rights? |
27250 | But what did it write on Belshazzar''s wall?... |
27250 | But what would be the good of imaginative logic to prove the madness of such people, when they themselves praise it for being mad? |
27250 | Can it be possible that he brought it from Virginia, where the cigarettes come from? |
27250 | Can we say in any special sense nowadays that clergymen, as such, make a poison out of the blood of the martyrs? |
27250 | Can we say it in anything like the real sense, in which we do say that yellow journalists make a poison out of the blood of the soldiers? |
27250 | I suppose most of your people are agricultural, are n''t they?'' |
27250 | If he was a lunatic who thought he was an astronomer, why did he have a badge to prove he was a detective? |
27250 | If the police insist on his wearing clothes, will he recognise the authority of the police? |
27250 | If there are no rights of men, what are the rights of nations? |
27250 | If_ Martin Chuzzlewit_ makes America a lunatic asylum, what in the world does it make England? |
27250 | In short, as in the American formula, is he a polygamist? |
27250 | In short, as in the American formula, is he an anarchist? |
27250 | Is Mr. Campbell content with a Prohibition which is another name for Privilege? |
27250 | Is bloodshed to be as prolonged and protracted as Prohibition? |
27250 | Is the Hairy Ainu content with hair, or does he wear any clothes? |
27250 | Is the normal noncombatant to shed his gore as often as he misses his drink? |
27250 | O, hidden face of man, whereover The years have woven a viewless veil, If thou wert verily man''s lover What did thy love or blood avail? |
27250 | One of the questions on the paper was,''Are you an anarchist?'' |
27250 | Only, if war is the exception, why should Prohibition be the rule? |
27250 | Shall I blaspheme crimson stars any more than crimson sunsets, or deny that those moons are golden any more than that this grass is green? |
27250 | Take that innocent question,''Are you an anarchist?'' |
27250 | The inquisitor, in his more than morbid curiosity, had then written down,''Are you a polygamist?'' |
27250 | Then there was the question,''Are you in favour of subverting the government of the United States by force?'' |
27250 | To which a detached philosopher would naturally feel inclined to answer,''What the devil has that to do with you? |
27250 | Was he a detective? |
27250 | Was he a wandering lunatic? |
27250 | Was he an astronomer? |
27250 | What has become of all those ideal figures from the Wise Man of the Stoics to the democratic Deist of the eighteenth century? |
27250 | Which has most to do with shekels to- day, the priests or the politicians? |
27250 | Who and what was that man? |
27250 | Why not wear his uniform, if he was resolved to show every stranger in the street his badge? |
27250 | Why should the world take the chains off the black man when it was just putting them on the white? |
27250 | Would etiquette require us to ask him to bring his wife? |
27250 | _ Is the Atlantic Narrowing?_ A certain kind of question is asked very earnestly in our time. |
27250 | or''Are you a philanthropist?'' |
27250 | which is intrinsically quite as impudent as''Are you an optimist?'' |
43520 | And for what reason? |
43520 | And pray, madam,said the same spirit to the sixth passenger,"How came you to leave the other world?" |
43520 | Have you so? |
43520 | How did you come to your end, sir? |
43520 | Sir,said I,"you tell me wonders: but if his bank be to decrease only a shilling a day, how can he furnish all passengers?" |
43520 | Well, sir,said he,"how many translations have these few last years produced of my à � neid?" |
43520 | What mysteries? |
43520 | What works? |
43520 | ''How dost thou mean?'' |
43520 | ''Why, how now?'' |
43520 | And what, it may be said, are these men- of- war which seem so delightful an object to our eyes? |
43520 | At last, with a kind of forced smile, she said,"I suppose the pill and drop go on swimmingly?" |
43520 | Can I say then I had no fear? |
43520 | Can gentlefolks lie a whole night at a public- house for less? |
43520 | Can you believe I would not give this man his own wine? |
43520 | Did you think I sold you the command of my ship for that pitiful thirty pounds? |
43520 | For, in reality, who constitutes the different degrees between men but the taylor? |
43520 | Hath he not more merit to me who doth my business and obeys my commands, without any of these qualities?'' |
43520 | Have I not fifty left?'' |
43520 | He answered sullenly,"Doth Mr Leibnitz know my mind better than myself?" |
43520 | He then asked me if I should not be much pleased to be a queen? |
43520 | He then replied, with a frown,''Can such a wretch conceive any hopes of entering Elysium?'' |
43520 | How shall we account for this depravity in taste? |
43520 | I immediately repaired to Mr Powney, and inquired very eagerly whether he had not more of the same manuscript? |
43520 | I then importuned him to acquaint me in which of the cities which contended for the honour of his birth he was really born? |
43520 | In which she so greatly succeeded( for what can not a favourite woman do with one who deserves the surname of Simple?) |
43520 | Is it----? |
43520 | My curiosity would not refrain asking him one question,_ i.e._, whether in reality he had any desire to obtain the crown? |
43520 | The Simple, who would still speak to me, cried out,''So, fool, what''s the matter now?'' |
43520 | The consequence to him, I suppose you know, was ruin; but what was it to me? |
43520 | To whom is he to apply? |
43520 | What then is to be done in this case? |
43520 | What then ought in general to be so plentiful, what so cheap, as fish? |
43520 | What then so properly the food of the poor? |
43520 | Why then should not the voyage- writer be inflamed with the glory of having seen what no man ever did or will see but himself? |
43520 | Will you please, before you move any farther forwards, to give me a short account of your transactions below?'' |
43520 | Would it not serve the purpose as well if he parted only with the single shilling, which it seems is all he is really to lose?" |
43520 | answered the Simple;''what can make them commoner now than usual?'' |
43520 | do you give me the lie?" |
43520 | or, why should the lowest of the people be permitted to exact ten times the value of their work? |
43520 | says the king;''are you ashamed of being a king?'' |
43520 | to S---- house?" |
43520 | what comfort did my long journey bring me? |
43520 | why yes, to be sure; why should not travellers pay for candles? |
38249 | And where shall I be likely to find him? |
38249 | Can you tell us how far it is to Bossburg? |
38249 | Get me? |
38249 | Has old Pierre seen it? 38249 Have you ever been in Beverly before?" |
38249 | He was on some kind of a boot- legging stunt, was n''t he? |
38249 | How long does it take to go round the Bend? |
38249 | I do n''t suppose you were heeled to tackle the Cascades just like that? |
38249 | I do n''t, huh? |
38249 | Inside or outside your neck? |
38249 | Spill a what? |
38249 | Sure you are n''t confusing the Big Bend with the Spanish Main? |
38249 | Thankfulness for what? |
38249 | Wha''''smatter? |
38249 | What kid? |
38249 | What shall I wear? |
38249 | What was that name again? |
38249 | What''s that about,''_ Yo, ho, ho and a bottle of rum_''? |
38249 | What''s wrong? |
38249 | When do you start? |
38249 | Where bound? |
38249 | Why did n''t you head her into that smooth stretch on the left? |
38249 | Why would n''t you let me make that shot over? |
38249 | Why? |
38249 | You could n''t do that again, could you? |
38249 | And since it_ was_ a natural shower bath, what could be more natural than for some one to take a shower under it? |
38249 | And when you_ have_ visualized it, is n''t it a funny pyramid? |
38249 | And why_ should_ they have cared to waste time over a mere seventy- five- dollar- a- week cameraman? |
38249 | But what''s the matter anyhow? |
38249 | Did n''t we run fast enough to suit you?" |
38249 | First place, do I look like a man that had took a shot of hop?" |
38249 | Get me? |
38249 | Get me?" |
38249 | Got me?" |
38249 | How would Nixon feel about trying it? |
38249 | I suppose you''ll be keen to smuggle your dividend right on down into the''The Great American Desert''?" |
38249 | I was n''t joking, was I? |
38249 | Just another rapid, is n''t it? |
38249 | Later... but why anticipate? |
38249 | Now has that ever been beaten for artistic concentration? |
38249 | Now which should it be? |
38249 | Now_ did_ she have a sense of humour, or did she not? |
38249 | Now_ was n''t_ that good for a small town that did n''t even have a railroad? |
38249 | Of course you know something of what you''re going up against in bucking the Bend?" |
38249 | Or Jim? |
38249 | Or say twenty? |
38249 | Or why not twenty- five? |
38249 | Roos?" |
38249 | Then I gave a gasp of amazement, for what did I see but Ike running-- with a light, springing step-- right along the surface of the river? |
38249 | What''s the game, anyhow? |
38249 | Why should we not go with him? |
38249 | Would ten dollars be fair? |
38249 | You have n''t...?" |
38249 | You will be getting more and more Primitive right along, but we must register each step on the film, see?" |
38249 | ejaculated Roos anxiously;"you did n''t say''machine,''did you?" |
8471 | ''Did it have its hair parted?'' |
8471 | ''Edward, did the child look like it was choked?'' |
8471 | ''Have you got the papers for them statistics, Edmund?'' |
8471 | ''Him? |
8471 | ''How did you get dry so quick?'' |
8471 | ''Say, Edward, do n''t you reckon you''d better take a pill? |
8471 | ''Say-- what did they do with the bar''l?'' |
8471 | ''WHO was shedding tears?'' |
8471 | ''Well, Aleck, where did you come from, here?'' |
8471 | ''Well, never mind how it could cry-- how could it KEEP all that time?'' |
8471 | ''What are you after here? |
8471 | ''What was the brand on that bar''l, Eddy?'' |
8471 | ''Who are you?'' |
8471 | Been dead three years-- how could it cry?'' |
8471 | But what did you hide for?'' |
8471 | Crippled them how, says you? |
8471 | Going to heave it clear astern? |
8471 | Honest, now, do you live in a scow, or is it a lie?'' |
8471 | How can you tell it''s an empty bar''l?" |
8471 | How long have you been aboard here?'' |
8471 | I says--''"What''s that?" |
8471 | Looky- here; if we let you off this time, will you keep out of these kind of scrapes hereafter?'' |
8471 | Naturally the question suggests itself, Why did these people want the river now when nobody had wanted it in the five preceding generations? |
8471 | To steal?'' |
8471 | What IS your name?'' |
8471 | What did you come aboard here, for? |
8471 | What was it to me that he was soiled and seedy and fragrant with gin? |
8471 | What''s your name?'' |
8471 | You look bad-- do n''t you feel pale?'' |
8471 | says Bob;''was it Allbright or the baby?'' |
755 | Auld Lang Syne,and"John Brown,"what would the chorus be without poor"Griff''s"voice? |
755 | The Island Valley of Avillonis left, but how shall I finally tear myself from its freedom and enchantments? |
755 | We''re going cattle- hunting, will you come? |
755 | But still I have not answered the natural question,[15]"What is Estes Park?" |
755 | Can it not be bought by dollars here, like every other commodity, votes included? |
755 | Could I by any effort"make myself agreeable"? |
755 | Did I know that a man was"strung"there yesterday? |
755 | Does it all mean sugar? |
755 | Had I not seen him hanging? |
755 | How CAN I ever leave it? |
755 | How can you expect me to write letters from such a place, from a life"in which nothing happens"? |
755 | How shall I ever leave this"land which is very far off"? |
755 | I often thought,"Suppose I am going south instead of east? |
755 | Is common humanity lacking, I wonder, in this region of hard greed? |
755 | Mr. K. says that the first thing he said to him this morning was,"Will Miss B. make us a nice pudding to- day?" |
755 | My thought at the moment was, Will not our Father in heaven,"who spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all,"be far more pitiful? |
755 | November? |
755 | Shall I ever get away? |
755 | Suppose Birdie should fail? |
755 | Suppose it should grow quite dark?" |
755 | The settlers have"great expectations,"but of what? |
755 | Then in feverish tones,"How dare you ride with me? |
755 | Was it semi- conscious acting, I wondered, or was his dark soul really stirred to its depths by the silence, the beauty, and the memories of youth? |
755 | What would Estes Park be without him, indeed? |
755 | Why do I write almost? |
755 | Would the sublime philosophy of Thomas a Kempis, I wondered, have given way under this? |
755 | You will ask,"What is Estes Park?" |
755 | You wo n''t speak to me again, will you?" |
755 | or the son of man, that Thou visitest him?" |
755 | or,"Will you help to drive in the cattle? |
755 | that woman going into the mountains alone? |
5809 | All right, what will you give? |
5809 | And keep it? 5809 But what about your shark?" |
5809 | He wo n''t go? 5809 How do you know I wo n''t make it worse?" |
5809 | Later news? 5809 Oh, in- deed? |
5809 | Say-- Mark!--is he dead? |
5809 | The shark? 5809 What do you bring that kind of a message here for? |
5809 | What is your name? |
5809 | What use is he? 5809 What, the whole of it?" |
5809 | What, you are not going? |
5809 | With him? 5809 --when probably nothing of the kind happened; for how should he know? 5809 Am I excited? 5809 And if you had it, what would you do with it? |
5809 | And what was the origin of this majestic city and its efflorescence of palatial town houses and country seats? |
5809 | Come, who are you?" |
5809 | Do n''t you know that we can go and report him to Government, and you''ll get a clean solid eighty shillings bounty? |
5809 | Do you know what our crop is going to foot up?" |
5809 | Does he say he wo n''t go?" |
5809 | Dress? |
5809 | Have you the gates?''" |
5809 | How do you know?" |
5809 | How then shall he determine which gods are the stronger, his own or those that preside over the concerns of other nations? |
5809 | I wonder where they get railroad coffee? |
5809 | Is he crazy?" |
5809 | Is that what you mean?" |
5809 | My first thought was, why did n''t he have the coffin opened? |
5809 | Now then-- just for curiosity''s sake-- what has sent you to me on this extraordinary errand?" |
5809 | Now wherein does one cow- track differ from another? |
5809 | Now, then, do you know what the margins would foot up, to buy it at sixty days?" |
5809 | Overshadows them? |
5809 | Shall he place his fate in the hands of weak gods when there may be stronger ones to be found? |
5809 | Then aloud,"Well, my good fellow, be quick about it; do n''t waste any words; what is it you want?" |
5809 | Then where was the use in harrying a ghost? |
5809 | Well, why, do n''t you jump? |
5809 | What are you writing?" |
5809 | What did you say your name is?" |
5809 | What do you think about it now?" |
5809 | What does he say he wants?" |
5809 | What is the matter with the specter? |
5809 | What is your scheme?" |
5809 | Where did you get it?" |
5809 | Where is the use in getting excited? |
5809 | Who handled the cat? |
5809 | Why do they puff him away? |
5809 | Why would you buy the crop, and why would you make that sum out of it? |
5809 | Why, what use is he to me?" |
8473 | ''How much water is there in it?'' |
8473 | ''Is n''t it easier in toward shore than it is out here in the middle?'' |
8473 | ''Know how to RUN it? |
8473 | ''Who IS I? |
8473 | ''Who wants you to get it? |
8473 | ''You think so, do you?'' |
8473 | And who was it that had the dashing presumption to do that? |
8473 | Are you acting under a law of the concern?'' |
8473 | Bixby?'' |
8473 | By and by the watchman came back and said--''Did n''t that lunatic tell you he was asleep, when he first came up here?'' |
8473 | Did n''t you KNOW there was no bottom in that crossing?'' |
8473 | Do you mean to say that you do n''t know as much as they do?'' |
8473 | Do you think there is any danger?'' |
8473 | Finally one of the managers bustled up to him and said--''Who IS you, any way? |
8473 | How much will it be?'' |
8473 | I laid in the lead, set the boat in her marks, came ahead on the engines, and said--''It was a fine trick to play on an orphan, WASN''T it? |
8473 | I suppose you know the next crossing?'' |
8473 | Just then the night watchman happened in, and was about to happen out again, when he noticed Ealer and exclaimed--''Who is at the wheel, sir?'' |
8473 | Presently he ventured to remark, with deference--''Pretty good stage of the river now, ai n''t it, sir?'' |
8473 | So they stepped into the association rooms, and the secretary soon satisfied the captain, who said--''Well, what am I to do? |
8473 | W----, do n''t that chute cut off a good deal of distance?'' |
8473 | Well, is n''t there water enough in it now to go through?'' |
8473 | Who IS I? |
8473 | Who is you? |
8473 | Who is your other pilot?'' |
8473 | Why?'' |
8473 | is there no way to save him?'' |
40238 | By the middle channel? |
40238 | Shall have you pottyto? |
40238 | What sort of pleasure, Monsieur, can you possibly hope to find in_ this_ place? |
40238 | --_Milton._ Does not a thought or two on such great things make other common things look small? |
40238 | After one or two locks this sort of travelling became so insufferable that I suddenly determined to change my plans entirely-- for is not one free? |
40238 | After ten miles an intelligent man said,"Distance from Paris? |
40238 | And so the question remained,"What is_ behind_ that wave?" |
40238 | Another Englishman at home asked me in all seriousness about the canoe voyage,"Was it not a great waste of time?" |
40238 | Are you going off to rest, and to recruit delicate health, or with vigour to enjoy a summer of active exertion? |
40238 | Bathing? |
40238 | But can it be an hotel? |
40238 | Can it be wise? |
40238 | Does he know the charms of a Nile boat, or a Trinity Eight, or a sail in the Ægean, or a mule in Spain? |
40238 | Emerging from trees we were right in the middle of the town, but where were the houses? |
40238 | Fishing? |
40238 | Has he swung upon a camel, or glided in a sleigh, or trundled in a Rantoone?" |
40238 | Here began a novel kind of astonishment among the people; for when, on my arrival, they asked,"Where have you come from?" |
40238 | I had not seen the boys, and so the women went away distracted, and left me sorrowful-- who would not be so at a woman''s tears, a mother''s too? |
40238 | I saw one raft in course of preparation, though there were not many boats, for as the men there said,"How could we get boats_ up_ that stream?" |
40238 | If birds''faces can give any expression of their opinions, it is certain that one of these herons was saying then to the others"Did you ever?" |
40238 | In Switzerland there was no objection raised, for was not I an English traveller? |
40238 | In fact, after he had laughed at the culprit''s caricatures, how could he gravely sentence him to penalties? |
40238 | Is it called the"News of the Wold,"or the"Gros Kembs Thunderer"? |
40238 | Is it quiet? |
40238 | Is it right? |
40238 | Is this to be a vacation of refreshment, or an idle lounge and killing of time? |
40238 | It may be asked, how such a low bridge fares in flood times? |
40238 | Kingston? |
40238 | Mortals must have some form of adoration, but there is the question, How much? |
40238 | Next, would it be just possible to float the boat past the rock while I might hold the painter from above? |
40238 | One after another the people came in to look at the queer stranger who was clad so oddly, and had come-- aye,_ how_ had he come? |
40238 | One comfort is the man made out my meaning, for did he not answer,"Ya vol?" |
40238 | One said, for example,"Do n''t you think it would have been more commodious to have had an attendant with you to look after your luggage and things?" |
40238 | Query.--Does this youthful carriage of the knapsack adapt boys for military service, and does it account for the high shoulders of many Germans? |
40238 | So what sort of dress did he wear? |
40238 | Surely this is an alarming proportion; and what should we say if Manchester had to report 100 men and women in one year who put themselves to death? |
40238 | The following notes are on miscellaneous points:--(_ a_) We are sometimes asked about such a canoe voyage as this,"Is it not very dangerous?" |
40238 | The man asked,"Is it a farce?" |
40238 | Then they looked right, left, before, behind, and upwards in all directions, except, of course, into the river, for why should they look_ there_? |
40238 | They said they had nothing to eat but kirchwasser, bread, and eggs, and how many eggs would I like? |
40238 | Three are probably safe, but which of these three is the shortest, deepest, and most practicable? |
40238 | Was it wrong to say this? |
40238 | We drew nearer to him, and"luffed up,"hailing him with,"What''s the matter?" |
40238 | Where can it be going, and whose is it? |
40238 | Who would think that Comorn, in Hungary, is stronger than Constantine? |
40238 | Will it be pleasant? |
40238 | a boat, up here in the hills? |
40238 | cloth, 5_s._"_ Who does not welcome Mr. W. H. G. Kingston? |
40238 | had they no windows, no lamps, not even a candle? |
40238 | or"Any room inside?" |
40238 | or"Got your life insured, Gov''nor?" |
4354 | Can you tell me the name of the stream which flows into the sea just beyond here? |
4354 | Do n''t you like_ bistecca_? |
4354 | Is this going to last? |
4354 | The Signore is not well? |
4354 | What is the opinion of Pythagoras concerning wild fowl? |
4354 | What water is this? |
4354 | After all, who knows whether I have seen the Galaesus? |
4354 | And had I not richly known the recompense of my love? |
4354 | Are we to suppose that Consentia was depopulated? |
4354 | At length he burst out with an emphatic question; these same books, were they large? |
4354 | But who_ was_ he? |
4354 | CHAPTER XV MISERIA"What do people do here?" |
4354 | Cotrone interested me? |
4354 | Could I have food at once? |
4354 | Did I mean to say that books written more than a thousand years ago still existed? |
4354 | Did all go to the building of Roman dwellings and temples and walls, which since have crumbled or been buried? |
4354 | Did any one ever compare the expenses with the results? |
4354 | Did these virtuous brothers continue their literary labours? |
4354 | Do the rivers Busento and Crati still keep the secret of that"royal sepulchre, adorned with the splendid spoils and trophies of Rome"? |
4354 | Does the like exist elsewhere? |
4354 | Evidently this is the work of hot sun on moisture; but when was it done? |
4354 | Has Naples grown less noisy, or does it only seem so to me? |
4354 | Has no one informed me that in autumn snows descend, and bury everything for months? |
4354 | Having listened to this with as pleasant a smile as I could command, I caught the Doctor''s eye, and asked quietly,"Is there much congestion?" |
4354 | He knew the hotel, of course? |
4354 | How shall I get along with people whose language is a barbarous dialect? |
4354 | How, they questioned in turn, did_ I_ know anything about him? |
4354 | I had the fever? |
4354 | If I did not care for a beefsteak of veal, could I eat a beefsteak of mutton? |
4354 | Is Naples really so much quieter? |
4354 | Is it changed so greatly since the sixth century of our era? |
4354 | Is it really so certain that all virtues of race dwell with those who can rest amid the ugly and know it not for ugliness? |
4354 | Not, I could see, a tourist; yet how account for this health and vigour in a native of the district? |
4354 | Now what did I find interesting at Cotrone? |
4354 | Really? |
4354 | Seeing us on good terms, the elder boy drew near, and at once asked a puzzling question: When was the ruined church on the hillside to be rebuilt? |
4354 | Should I ever stand by the sacred column? |
4354 | Tea? |
4354 | The river? |
4354 | The_ orario_ for the month gave 4.56, and how could the time of a train be changed without public notice? |
4354 | These fishermen are the primitives of Taranto; who shall say for how many centuries they have hauled their nets upon the rock? |
4354 | They are not to be oppressed, these humble tillers of the soil, for is it not written that"My yoke is easy, and my burden light"? |
4354 | They too thought of journeying to Cosenza, and, in short, would I allow them to share my carriage? |
4354 | Was I aware that at Catanzaro I should suddenly find myself in a season of most rigorous winter? |
4354 | Was it not open to him to go and make inquiries at Loreto? |
4354 | Was it really procurable? |
4354 | Was it, he asked, at all like a chemist''s shop in London? |
4354 | Was the rebuilding to be next year? |
4354 | Was this the site of Scylaceum, or is it, as some hold, merely a mediaeval refuge which took the name of the old city nearer to the coast? |
4354 | Were they-- were they_ as large as a missal_? |
4354 | What has become of the ruins of Croton? |
4354 | What in the world was I doing with_ tanti libri_? |
4354 | What was I doing at Cotrone? |
4354 | What, in truth, do we know of him? |
4354 | Which of the two borrowed this information from the other? |
4354 | Who could find himself at Taranto without turning in thought to the Galaesus, and wishing to walk along its banks? |
4354 | Who knows? |
4354 | Why go to Catanzaro? |
4354 | Why had I come hither, if it was not that I loved land and people? |
4354 | Why, I wonder, has Reggio paid such exceptional attention to this department of its daily life? |
4354 | Would they show me-- the dining room? |
4354 | Yes, to be sure he could admit me to see his own orchard; but why did I wish to see it? |
27252 | ''And what are you doing here?'' |
27252 | ''Anything else?'' |
27252 | ''Are English prisons like that?'' |
27252 | ''Are they better?'' |
27252 | ''Are you all alone here?'' |
27252 | ''But why do you come to Ecija by so roundabout a way as Carmona, and why should you return to Seville by such a route as Marchena?'' |
27252 | ''How long did the English take to conquer the Soudan?'' |
27252 | ''This is the right way, is n''t it?'' |
27252 | ''Twenty years? |
27252 | ''What are you doing here? |
27252 | ''What are you going to do?'' |
27252 | ''Why ca n''t they wait till they get out of prison? |
27252 | ''Why did n''t you tell me that before? |
27252 | ( What was your voice like, Rosarito? |
27252 | And what can be more fascinating than that magic city of Az- Zahra, the wonder of its age, of which now not a stone remains? |
27252 | And why should not the drinker have his paradise? |
27252 | Did he regret his beautiful Seville with the blue sky, and the orange- trees bowed down with their golden fruit? |
27252 | Do n''t you remember how I used to look at them, and turn them over and discuss them point by point? |
27252 | Has any one seen St. Peter''s without asking himself: Is that all? |
27252 | How is it?'' |
27252 | I asked the wind, and it sighed back the Spanish answer:''_ Quien sabe?_ Who knows?'' |
27252 | I asked the wind, and it sighed back the Spanish answer:''_ Quien sabe?_ Who knows?'' |
27252 | I wondered of what the archbishop thought, kneeling so humbly-- of the boys dancing before the altar, fresh and young? |
27252 | If an individual makes no use of his hour what does it signify? |
27252 | Is it worth while to be quite so strenuous? |
27252 | It is rather a bitter irony, is n''t it? |
27252 | On the Spanish side the night had been spent in joy and feasting; but how must Boabdil have spent his, thinking of the inevitable morrow? |
27252 | Their lives were even shorter than those of the rest, and what pleasure had they had? |
27252 | Was he thinking of their white souls darkening with the sins of the world, or of the troubles, the disillusionments of life, and the decrepitude? |
27252 | Were they three beautiful princesses whose fathers had been killed, and they expelled from their kingdom and thus reduced to menial occupations? |
27252 | What is the use of hurrying to pile up money when one can live on so little? |
27252 | What is the use of reading these endless books? |
27252 | What must have been the agony of his last look at the Alhambra, that jewel of incalculable price? |
27252 | What odds is it that they ever existed at all? |
27252 | What was her name? |
27252 | Where are you now, I wonder; and do you ever think of me? |
27252 | While it lasts the sun is there to shine equally on rich and poor, and afterwards will not a paternal government find a grave in the public cemetery? |
27252 | Who can wonder then that maidens fair, their hearts turning to thoughts of love, should cast favourable glances upon this hero of a hundred fights? |
27252 | Who knows? |
27252 | Who will come forward and strike an attitude and prove the benefits of the grape? |
27252 | Who will venture to say that a glass of beer gives savour to the humblest crust, and comforts Corydon, lamenting the inconstancy of Phyllis? |
27252 | Who, when he leaves a place that he has loved, can help wondering when he will see it again? |
27252 | Why ca n''t they let Cuba go? |
27252 | Why can one not be strong enough to leave it at that and never tempt the fates again? |
27252 | Why not let things slide a little, and just take what comes our way? |
27252 | _ Before thy brow the snow- flakes__ Hurry past and say:__''Where we are not needed,__ Wherefore should we stay? |
27252 | _ Quien sabe?_ Who knows? |
27252 | _ Quien sabe?_ Who knows? |
27252 | he cried,''when were woes ever equal to mine?'' |
27252 | why should one be so terribly strenuous? |
27252 | { c}''Water, who wants water? |
27252 | { d}''The first prize, who wants the first prize?'' |
60078 | And where did you think you vas going? |
60078 | But suppose we should get lost, what would we do? |
60078 | Do they hide? |
60078 | Do we move to- morrow? |
60078 | Do you hear the universe moving on? |
60078 | Do you like to look at them? |
60078 | Do you not love me? 60078 Hear who?" |
60078 | How could I know he lived here? |
60078 | I suppose you could walk out of the valley from anywhere? |
60078 | Suppose they should lie down? |
60078 | What is the Lonesome Bell? |
60078 | What of it? 60078 Why do n''t you take them to the top of that there peak?" |
60078 | Why do you? |
60078 | Why should you get lost? 60078 Why to- morrow?" |
60078 | Why? |
60078 | You are well and strong, ai n''t you? |
60078 | You could not fix it,they said,"and what would you do?" |
60078 | You think the lake ai n''t dried up yet, hey? |
60078 | Do n''t you see his pick on the second mule?" |
60078 | Have you lost yours?" |
60078 | How could a week slide into past things so soon? |
60078 | How could rocks and sand and silence make us afraid and yet be so wonderful? |
60078 | How could the desolation of Salt Creek, after that journey over the burning sands, yield ducks? |
60078 | How could we find the spring where you say we might camp when we have never seen one like it?" |
60078 | How could we not see it when the outdoors is always on the doorstep? |
60078 | How would we recognize those mountains you speak of when we do not even know how the desert- mountains look? |
60078 | Is it not enough to be old and yet fair? |
60078 | So lately come from the furnace of Death Valley, how should we suppose that we would need the implements of an Alpine mountain- climber? |
60078 | The flowers amazed us, for why should they grow there? |
60078 | They are all delightfully casual about them:"Did you happen to see a bunch of burros in the gulch youse come through?" |
60078 | Was it all solid ice? |
60078 | Was our pride worth more than the true chivalry of a kindly soul? |
60078 | Was the desert just a white space like that? |
60078 | What are eight miles or fifteen miles to the modern man accustomed to leap over distance? |
60078 | What is the huge sphinx, brooding and massive, gazing with strong eyes across the emptiness, but an interpretation of the desert carved in stone? |
60078 | What was the feel of being alone in the sagebrush? |
60078 | Where could he be going? |
60078 | Why ca n''t you go?" |
60078 | Why do you question me so much? |
60078 | You do n''t believe that? |
60078 | You do not like it? |
8474 | ''Are you aware that this boat was plowing down the river fully five minutes with no one at the wheel?'' |
8474 | ''Did it knock him down?'' |
8474 | ''Did n''t YOU hear him?'' |
8474 | ''Did you follow it up? |
8474 | ''Did you pound him much?--that is, severely?'' |
8474 | ''Did you strike him first?'' |
8474 | ''Do you know that that is a very serious matter?'' |
8474 | ''Hard?'' |
8474 | ''Pounded him?'' |
8474 | ''What did you do?'' |
8474 | ''What with?'' |
8474 | ''What you standing there for? |
8474 | ''Where was you born?'' |
8474 | AIN''T it now? |
8474 | After a pause--''Where''d you get them shoes?'' |
8474 | Brown?'' |
8474 | Did n''t Henry tell you to land here?'' |
8474 | Did you do anything further?'' |
8474 | Do n''t you hear me? |
8474 | Give him a good sound thrashing, do you hear? |
8474 | Going to run over that snag?'' |
8474 | I said,"It''s my nature; how can I change it?" |
8474 | Now came this shriek--''Here!--You going to set there all day?'' |
8474 | ORDERS, is it? |
8474 | Then--''What''s your name?'' |
8474 | Two minutes later--''WHERE in the nation you going to? |
8474 | What was you doing down there all this time?'' |
8474 | When the leads had been laid in, he resumed--''How long you been on the river?'' |
8474 | Where you going NOW? |
8474 | You going to hold her all day? |
8474 | going to be all DAY getting that hatful of freight out?'' |
8474 | why did n''t you tell me we''d got to land at that plantation?'' |
4381 | There''s no need, at all,said she;"have n''t I seen it all in my dream?" |
4381 | ''Ah, master,''he said,''would n''t it be fine to be in there, and to be kissing her?'' |
4381 | ''And the Gaelic League?'' |
4381 | ''And what do you think he did then?'' |
4381 | ''And why would n''t we?'' |
4381 | ''Are you always afraid when you hear a dog crying?'' |
4381 | ''Are you fond of your wife?'' |
4381 | ''Are you the men from Aran?'' |
4381 | ''Bhfuil tu go maith?'' |
4381 | ''Do you hear Rucard Mor? |
4381 | ''Do you hear, Rucard Mor? |
4381 | ''Do you hear, Rucard Mor? |
4381 | ''Do you hear, Rucard Mor? |
4381 | ''Do you hear, you old woman? |
4381 | ''Do you see that straight wall of cliff?'' |
4381 | ''Fifteen?'' |
4381 | ''For fifteen guineas?'' |
4381 | ''For how much will you let me sleep one night in your box?'' |
4381 | ''For ten guineas?'' |
4381 | ''For twelve guineas?'' |
4381 | ''For what cause are you idle?'' |
4381 | ''Have you bargained for any drop of his blood?'' |
4381 | ''Have you heard tell of the poet MacSweeny?'' |
4381 | ''Have you my gold on you?'' |
4381 | ''How could that be a right rabbit? |
4381 | ''Is it gold you might be wanting?'' |
4381 | ''Is it tired you are, stranger?'' |
4381 | ''Is that all gold?'' |
4381 | ''John,''he said, in shaking English,''have you got"Larry Grogan,"for it is an agreeable air?'' |
4381 | ''Maybe you remember the bits of horns he had like handles on the end of his sticks? |
4381 | ''Stranger,''says she,''would you be afeard to be alone with himself?'' |
4381 | ''Tell me,''he said,''did you read your Bible this morning?'' |
4381 | ''Tell us now,''said an old woman when I had finished,''did n''t you learn those things from the witches that do be out in the country?'' |
4381 | ''There was no use in my playing for money''said the old man,''for I''d always lose, and what''s the use in playing if you always lose?'' |
4381 | ''Tired?'' |
4381 | ''Twelve?'' |
4381 | ''What is it?'' |
4381 | ''What sort of rabbit was that?'' |
4381 | ''What''s that jargon?'' |
4381 | ''Where are you going with the bag?'' |
4381 | ''Where is your bag?'' |
4381 | ''Whisper, noble person,''he began,''do you never be thinking on the young girls? |
4381 | ''Why?'' |
4381 | ''Will you make me a bet of twenty guineas no man comes near her while you''ll be away on the journey?'' |
4381 | (''Are you well?'') |
4381 | A young boy came into the kitchen, and he said to the man--"What are you sharpening that knife for?"'' |
4381 | Am not I to be pitied? |
4381 | And was n''t it a cruel thing to see the haste was on them, and they in danger all the time to be drowned themselves?'' |
4381 | Arthur Scoil(?) |
4381 | As I was standing about a man came up to me and asked after the usual salutations:--''Is there any war in the world at this time, noble person?'' |
4381 | Did ever you hear what it is goes on four legs when it is young, and on two legs after that, and on three legs when it does be old?'' |
4381 | Did ever you see the like of that in County Wicklow?'' |
4381 | Is n''t it great danger and sorrow is over every one on this island?'' |
4381 | One of them said to me yesterday,''I''m thinking you never saw the like of this work before this day?'' |
4381 | Then he held it up:''Is it you is after bringing that thing into the world,''he said,''woman of the house?'' |
4381 | Then the little man was going to strike the lancet into him, when says lady O''Conor--''Have you bargained for five pounds of flesh?'' |
4381 | They spoke at first of their poverty, and then one of them said--''I dare say you do have to pay ten shillings a week in the hotel?'' |
4381 | Well, one day there was a priest over and he said to Pat--"Is it the devil''s horns you have on your sticks, Pat?" |
4381 | What at all do you think of me yourself?'' |
4381 | Would you believe that?'' |
4381 | [ a]''What do we want here with their teaching Irish?'' |
4381 | neighbors, did you hear The goodness and power of Felim? |
4381 | said the man in the corner;''have n''t we Irish enough?'' |
8584 | Has he any other-- er-- advantages? |
8584 | Here-- what do you mean? 8584 Nothing? |
8584 | So you think the prospect is pretty poor? |
8584 | Well, have n''t you formed any sort of opinion? |
8584 | Well, we''d better go back, had n''t we? |
8584 | What did you find? |
8584 | What, a railroad over the Sierra Nevada Mountains? |
8584 | And the streak of silver? |
8584 | At last, to a peculiarly urgent inquiry of"How far eastward?" |
8584 | But was the imperial beast subjugated? |
8584 | But what is the mining history of Humboldt? |
8584 | Did we go back to bed then? |
8584 | I said:"Where have you all been?" |
8584 | I shall not garble the extract, but put it in just as it appeared in the Daily Territorial Enterprise: But what about our mines? |
8584 | Is there some mystery behind all this?" |
8584 | See it? |
8584 | See the specks of gold? |
8584 | So, where was the flood to come from? |
8584 | Starchy?--proud? |
8584 | The Indians were true prophets, but how did they get their information? |
8584 | Then old Ballou said:"Think of it? |
8584 | What are you coming at? |
8584 | What do you think of the country?" |
8584 | What has become of our sinewy and athletic fellow- citizens? |
8584 | Why? |
5812 | He did, did he? |
5812 | How do you mean? |
5812 | I know; but how did you get the name? |
5812 | I mane, why wudn''t he put his naime to ut? |
5812 | Is this all? |
5812 | Is ut his own handwrite? |
5812 | Master? |
5812 | Oh, he did, did he? |
5812 | Oh, he does, does he? |
5812 | Oh, ye have, have ye? |
5812 | Well, you''ll never get in"Why? |
5812 | Well-- then-- how-- did-- your-- father-- get-- his name? |
5812 | What business? |
5812 | What does he want to see ye about? |
5812 | What is it, Satan? |
5812 | Who? |
5812 | Why, what is the trouble? |
5812 | Ye are? 5812 And not with marked courtesy of tone:Well, sor, what will you have?" |
5812 | And what is it?" |
5812 | And when a mad elephant goes raging through, belting right and left with his trunk, how do these swarms of people get out of the way? |
5812 | Are ye in the business?" |
5812 | Are ye in the show business yerself?" |
5812 | But a native official, who had a green flag in his hand, saw me, and said politely:"Do n''t you belong in the train, sir?" |
5812 | But how is it you are here? |
5812 | Dear me, ca n''t you explain? |
5812 | Did they purpose training them up as Thugs? |
5812 | He said:"It''s not an aisy one to spell; how do you pronounce ut?" |
5812 | How could they take care of such little creatures on a march which stretched over several months? |
5812 | How did people come to drift into such a strange custom? |
5812 | How did you get by that Irishman? |
5812 | How did you get your English; is it an acquirement, or just a gift of God?" |
5812 | How do you think Satan would do?" |
5812 | How is that?" |
5812 | I show him up, master?" |
5812 | Is that a slur? |
5812 | One more thing: Why was such a cruel death chosen-- why would n''t a gentle one have answered? |
5812 | That is your secret? |
5812 | The hundredth can keep it-- how long? |
5812 | These silent crowds sat there with their humble bundles and baskets and small household gear about them, and patiently waited-- for what? |
5812 | They had n''t timed themselves well, but that was no matter-- the thing had been so ordered from on high, therefore why worry? |
5812 | Was n''t it curious-- and amazing, and tremendous, and all that? |
5812 | Was that it? |
5812 | Was that proposition the equivalent of inviting European ladies to assemble scantily and scandalously clothed in the seclusion of a private park? |
5812 | Well, then, why ud he write it like that?" |
5812 | What are you doing here? |
5812 | What did they do with those poor little fellows? |
5812 | What is it ye want to see him about?" |
5812 | What is your name?" |
5812 | What was the fascination, what was the impulse? |
5812 | What was the origin of the idea? |
5812 | What was their subsequent history? |
5812 | When he rose to say good- bye, the door swung open and I caught the flash of a red fez, and heard these words, reverently said--"Satan see God out?" |
5812 | Would you have been? |
5812 | Would you mind giving a guess, if ye''ll be so good?" |
5812 | and what is it that can not happen in India? |
5812 | but is this for all certainty, is this the sentence of death? |
35480 | Am I to understand, madam,said Mr. Enderton,"that I am not to speak to my driver when I wish him to know my will?" |
35480 | An''he told you to do that? |
35480 | And how soon do you think they will come back? |
35480 | And she is Emily? |
35480 | And she is your adopted_ mother_? |
35480 | And that is the only relation she is to you two? |
35480 | And what relation are you to Emily? 35480 And you to her?" |
35480 | But before I go,I said,"is there anything I can do for you? |
35480 | Can I get through to your place of refuge? |
35480 | Could n''t we poke some wood to them through this hole? |
35480 | Could you lend me a small iron pot? |
35480 | Had you a shovel? |
35480 | Have you food enough? |
35480 | Have you not all suffered from cold? |
35480 | How did you manage to cut through the snow? |
35480 | Is n''t Mr. Dusante goin''out this afternoon? |
35480 | Is that all? |
35480 | Mr. Craig, will you please get your wife away as quick and as far as you can? |
35480 | Take it, sir? |
35480 | Then what relation,began Mrs. Aleshine,"is she to----?" |
35480 | Were you hurt? |
35480 | What are we to pack up to take with us? |
35480 | What could you have had to do with this accident? |
35480 | What do you mean? |
35480 | What has happened? |
35480 | What is the matter, father? |
35480 | Where is he, then? |
35480 | Who, in the name of Heaven, are you? |
35480 | Why do you think so? |
35480 | Why? |
35480 | Will it be safe? |
35480 | Yes,he was saying,"my name is Dusante, but why do you ask at this moment? |
35480 | Ai n''t that so, Jim and Bill?" |
35480 | An''how did he come to go to my house? |
35480 | An''how did he get in, I''d like to know?" |
35480 | An''so you came straight on to this place?" |
35480 | An''you do n''t mean to tell me there are other people in that hole?" |
35480 | And now do you suppose we could slide this basket in without upsettin''the little kittle?" |
35480 | And the three mariners? |
35480 | And where is the reverend gentleman? |
35480 | Are we to be robbed and murdered?" |
35480 | But how, in the name of all that''s wonderful, did you git here?" |
35480 | Could you conveniently lend me an iron pot?" |
35480 | Do n''t we, Jim and Bill?" |
35480 | Do you really want an iron pot?" |
35480 | Dusante?" |
35480 | Enderton?" |
35480 | May I ask you, sir, how you came to be thus snow- bound?" |
35480 | Or was it possible that there was a race of beings who inhabited snow- banks? |
35480 | Then he answered abruptly:"Hurt? |
35480 | Was n''t that so, Jim an''Bill?" |
35480 | Was this a dream? |
35480 | We''ve stood by ye an''obeyed orders since we first shipped on that island, an''we intend to do so straight along, do n''t we, Jim an''Bill?" |
35480 | Where are you? |
35480 | Where were the men to be found who could cut a road to us through those miles of snow- drifts? |
35480 | Why do you show such excited concern on the subject?" |
35480 | Will you please take a walk with her along the road? |
35480 | Will you show me the point from which you took your observations?" |
35480 | Would n''t we, Jim and Bill?" |
35480 | Yet, what comfort was there in that thought? |
35480 | and Lucille to her?" |
35480 | cried Mrs. Lecks, making a dash towards her friend,"ca n''t you give the man a minute to breathe? |
35480 | exclaimed her friend in surprise,"do n''t you intend goin''out this afternoon?" |
35480 | exclaimed the coxswain,"is she gone to the tavern? |
35480 | she screamed,"are you in there? |
5810 | ''Him? 5810 And you''ll shake hands with me?" |
5810 | Correspondence? |
5810 | Did n''t do what? |
5810 | Honor bright-- you have n''t? 5810 I-- er-- but have n''t you got anything against us?" |
5810 | I? 5810 Is that so? |
5810 | What? 5810 Where are your guns?" |
5810 | Where your little guns? |
5810 | You? 5810 And of course you had n''t had you? |
5810 | As we drove off I had only time to say,''Why, what do you know about him?'' |
5810 | But I was calm; so I said softly, and without acrimony:"''Which fox?'' |
5810 | But what would Ed do when he got back to Memphis? |
5810 | But----""Well, then, what have you got against me? |
5810 | Did what he said leave an impression upon you?" |
5810 | Do you know that extraordinary man?" |
5810 | Do you know who it was? |
5810 | Had the boys all gone mad? |
5810 | Had you any conversation with him?" |
5810 | Have we met before?" |
5810 | He says he says-- why, who is it?" |
5810 | How could they stoop down and get it, with only two feet of space to stoop in? |
5810 | How did they keep that sand- pipe from caving in on them? |
5810 | How did they throw sand out from such a depth? |
5810 | I do n''t know why; and he thundered out:"''WHICH fox? |
5810 | I have read somewhere that an acute observer among the early explorers-- Cook? |
5810 | Now how much should you say it is worth?" |
5810 | Presently there was an interruption by the chief:"Who are you?" |
5810 | She said:"''He spoke to you!--didn''t he?'' |
5810 | Tell me-- what do you think of him?'' |
5810 | Then he said:"Do you remember Corrigan Castle?" |
5810 | Was Fairchild crazy? |
5810 | We brewed and lit up; then he passed a sheet of note- paper to me and said--"Do you remember that?" |
5810 | We talked of the people we had known there, or had casually met; and G. said:"Do you remember my introducing you to an earl-- the Earl of C.?" |
5810 | What could be the explanation of this extraordinary conduct? |
5810 | What could be the meaning of this? |
5810 | What did he talk about?" |
5810 | What did you talk about?" |
5810 | What do you all treat me so for?" |
5810 | What have I done?" |
5810 | What is the secret of the feat? |
5810 | What makes you all act so? |
5810 | What put such a thing into your head?" |
5810 | What''s the matter?" |
5810 | When I delivered the letter----""Did you deliver it?" |
5810 | When he was going, he turned and said:"You do n''t remember me?" |
5810 | Where?" |
5810 | Which way did the FOX go?'' |
5810 | Why, THE fox? |
5810 | You observe the combination? |
5810 | Youth and gaiety might vanish, any day-- and then, what is left? |
5810 | said I,"how did you come by this?" |
8582 | Bemis, is all that true, just as you have stated it? |
8582 | Did I bring back my horse? |
8582 | Did you ever see the bull again? |
8582 | Forty years? 8582 He ca n''t, ca n''t he? |
8582 | Moses who? |
8582 | Of course-- who else? |
8582 | Take it up in the tree with me? 8582 Well, then, what is the use of your talking that way, then? |
8582 | Well, then, what more do you want? 8582 What did I understand you to say, madam?" |
8582 | And so the first question we asked the conductor whenever we got to where we were to exchange drivers, was always,"Which is him?" |
8582 | As we jogged along, said he:"Now, do you know where the fault lies? |
8582 | Bascom said:"There-- what did I tell you? |
8582 | Because you never saw a thing done, is that any reason why it ca n''t be done?" |
8582 | But do n''t you know that the very thing a man dreads is the thing that always happens? |
8582 | Did I bring back my lariat?" |
8582 | Did you take your saddle up in the tree with you?" |
8582 | How did it happen?" |
8582 | I cautiously unwound the lariat from the pommel of my saddle----""Your saddle? |
8582 | Leg, maybe-- and yet how could he break his leg waltzing along such a road as this? |
8582 | Now, what can be the thoroughbrace of a horse, I wonder? |
8582 | Only three hundred miles? |
8582 | Since you know so much about it, did you ever see a bull try?" |
8582 | Sure enough, it was just as I had dreaded, he started in to climb the tree----""What, the bull?" |
8582 | What did you do?" |
8582 | Wher''d ye come from?" |
8582 | Will no man lend me a pistol?" |
8582 | and the Use Providence Made of Him-- Sad Fate of Wheeler-- Devotion of His Wife-- A Model Monument-- What About the Ram? |
8582 | our sweet- scented, appetite- compelling air of the prairies? |
8582 | what does he know of the feast of fat things?) |
6445 | How could they stop it? 6445 I say as one''Varsity man to another-- we''re not hoi polloi-- could you lend me some money?" |
6445 | Logos,wailed the other,"_ What_ Logos?" |
6445 | O Nineveh, are these thy gods, Thine also, mighty Nineveh? |
6445 | Of what nationality_ are_ you? |
6445 | Still the stomach? |
6445 | Tell me, do you know that curious creature, Matthew Arnold? |
6445 | Would you like to hear me re- cite to you the Declaration of Independence? |
6445 | You''ll understand, old man,he said,"how out of place I am amongst this scum-- hoi polloi-- we''re not of the hoi polloi, are we?" |
6445 | _ What_ word? |
6445 | And, when all millionaires are as sensible, will they? |
6445 | Can human hearts desire more? |
6445 | Did I laugh some when I saw that? |
6445 | Did Vasa, with his heavy- lidded eyes, and that infinitely adorable lady Fafaia, wander down to the beach to watch them land? |
6445 | Did they see Stevenson''s tomb gleaming high up on the hill, as they made for that passage in the reef? |
6445 | Gladstone bags?.... |
6445 | How can it therefore not be interesting to see a little what the wondrous modern in him consisted of? |
6445 | Is it the absence of a soul? |
6445 | Is there any city in the world that stands so nobly as Quebec? |
6445 | Kind''er gets yer sick, does n''t it?" |
6445 | One must say something--_what_ must one say about Toronto? |
6445 | Or will they be entirely swallowed by that ugliness of shops and trousers with which we enchain the earth, and become a memory and less than a memory? |
6445 | Rope? |
6445 | The agent said,"Well, John?" |
6445 | The children in the car cried to each other with the shrill, sick persistency of tired childhood,"How many inches to Regina?" |
6445 | The question was to a certain extent crude,"Why need he be a poet, why need he so specialise?" |
6445 | Two appeared, and being asked,"Where is the escort?" |
6445 | Umbrellas? |
6445 | What can one? |
6445 | What has anybody ever said? |
6445 | What more could civilisation give? |
6445 | What was to be done? |
6445 | What was"A Channel Passage"thus but a flourish marked with the sign of all his flourishes, that of being a success and having fruition? |
6445 | What will happen? |
6445 | What, for instance, would it be like, the feeling of whatever democracy America has secured? |
6445 | When I was there, nearly a year ago, I was often asked,"When will Peritania( Britain) fight Germany, and send her away from Samoa?" |
6445 | Who knows? |
6445 | Whose are they?" |
6445 | Why do American faces hardly ever wrinkle? |
6445 | Why should it take such a flood of suggestion, such a luxury of acquaintance and contact, only to make superficial specimens? |
6445 | and how much would he get? |
8159 | Is anything amiss? |
8159 | What is the matter, sir? |
8159 | What means all this? 8159 What''s the matter?" |
8159 | About midnight, as I was lying awake and in great pain, I heard the Indian say,"Massa, massa, you no hear tiger?" |
8159 | But whither am I going? |
8159 | Could they not then be persuaded to protect the white- headed eagle, and allow it to glide in safety over its own native forests? |
8159 | Destroy the compass, and will the vessel find her far- distant port? |
8159 | Did no forward person cause offence? |
8159 | Here it might be asked, are all the ingredients just mentioned necessary in order to produce the wourali poison? |
8159 | How could you win my virgin heart, Yet leave that heart to break? |
8159 | How would Canova''s Venus look in a mob- cap? |
8159 | I may be asked, was it all good- fellowship and civility during my stay in the United States? |
8159 | Indeed, when good King Arthur reappears to claim his crown, he will find things strangely altered here; and may we not look for his coming? |
8159 | Is the crest to be erect? |
8159 | Is then the life of the snake proof against its own poison? |
8159 | Now this being the case, will not America at large wish most devoutly for the day to come when Europe shall have no more dominion over her? |
8159 | Now when the Indian has caught plenty of fish, and killed game enough to last him for a week, what need has he to range the forest? |
8159 | Now with St. Domingo as an example before them, how long will it be before they try to raise themselves into independent states? |
8159 | See Sangre- do- buey._ Waracaba,_ the trumpeter._ Whip- poor- will,_ one of the goat- suckers._ Who- are- you? |
8159 | They might have asked Government, who so able to instruct our youth as those whose knowledge is proverbial? |
8159 | Was it the weapon or the strength of the poison that brought on immediate dissolution in this case? |
8159 | Was it_ fanatical_ to preach salvation to innumerable wild hordes of Americans? |
8159 | Was there no exhibition of drunkenness or swearing or rudeness? |
8159 | Why do you hunt me up and down to death for an imaginary offence? |
8159 | Will it recover? |
8159 | Will the flock keep together, and escape the wolves, after the shepherds are all slain? |
8159 | Will they be of benefit to these grand and extensive colonies? |
8159 | Will they raise or lower it in the scale of estimation at the Court of St. James''s? |
8159 | or display of conduct which disgraces civilised man in other countries? |
8159 | to aid the dying Christian? |
8159 | to clothe the naked? |
8159 | to encourage the repenting sinner? |
8159 | who so fit as those who enjoy our entire confidence? |
8159 | who so worthy as those whose lives are irreproachable? |
8482 | ''And the boy knew it?'' |
8482 | ''Brothers,''said the leader,''has never any one of you, when fasting, dreamed of some friendly spirit who would aid you as a guardian?'' |
8482 | ''Dashed who in pieces-- her parents?'' |
8482 | ''Do you still travel with it?'' |
8482 | ''Everything about what?'' |
8482 | ''Have n''t you the least idea?'' |
8482 | ''Is that so?'' |
8482 | ''No, indeed,''said one of the others,''do you not know we were all killed, and that it is our sister who has brought us to life?'' |
8482 | ''Very drunk?'' |
8482 | ''Who is a great manito?'' |
8482 | ''Wish you may die in your tracks if you have?'' |
8482 | A citizen asked,''Do you remember when Jimmy Finn, the town drunkard, was burned to death in the calaboose?'' |
8482 | And above Winona you''ll have lovely prairies; and then come the Thousand Islands, too beautiful for anything; green? |
8482 | And what will become of you? |
8482 | But what can you do? |
8482 | Do you know how the man came to be burned up in the calaboose?'' |
8482 | How can I give what I would have done with so much pleasure? |
8482 | I do n''t mean HIS act, I mean yours: would you be a murderer for letting him have that pistol?'' |
8482 | I said, with admiration--''Why, how in the world did you ever guess it?'' |
8482 | I said--''What is the matter?'' |
8482 | Is she the maiden of the rock?--and are the two connected by legend?'' |
8482 | Now, is that boy a murderer, do you think?'' |
8482 | Presently he asked--''Are you going to give him up to the law?'' |
8482 | Quick-- out with it-- what did I say?'' |
8482 | The burden of my thought was, How much did I divulge? |
8482 | The chief, looking around, and observing the woman, after some time said to the man who came with her:''Who have you got there? |
8482 | The man was drunk?'' |
8482 | Well, would it be murder?'' |
8482 | What became of Winona?'' |
8482 | What was to be done''? |
8482 | Why? |
8482 | in this town?'' |
8482 | profit? |
8482 | who can this be he is leading us to?'' |
8482 | who is a manito? |
13749 | Ca n''t it be forded with camels? |
13749 | Do they have railways in Yenghi Donia? |
13749 | Eat soup with a spoon? |
13749 | Ever hear of Dadur, the place of which the Persians tritely say:''Seeing that there is Dadur, why did Allah, then, make the infernal regions?'' 13749 Ever hear of Dadur?" |
13749 | General Roberts Sahib, Cabool to Kandahar? |
13749 | Gladstone koob or Salisbury koob? |
13749 | Kishtee ass? |
13749 | Knowing that you have been worried in the same way yourselves,says Abbas Kahu,"I have replied to them,''Is the Sahib a giraffe and I his keeper? |
13749 | Like the one at Iskenderi and Stamboul? |
13749 | No bridge? 13749 No village, with people to assist with poles or skins to make a raft?" |
13749 | Noon ass? |
13749 | Parsee namifami? |
13749 | Paruski ni? |
13749 | Sheerah ass? |
13749 | Some of you pedar sags have stolen my money; who is it? 13749 Sowari pool f pool koob; rupee- rupee Jcoob?" |
13749 | There will be no trouble about getting permission to go through Turkestan? |
13749 | These men are not bul- buls; then why do they sing? |
13749 | Well, what if he is the Padishah''s step- father? 13749 Well, yes, I understand; Afghanistan-- what of it?" |
13749 | What have you then besides bread? |
13749 | What is the fire yonder? |
13749 | What was that? 13749 What was the medicine you prescribed, Gray?" |
13749 | What''s the matter? 13749 What''s up now?" |
13749 | Where are you going? |
13749 | Where have you come from? |
13749 | Why the devil do n''t you put them out, as you are told, then? |
13749 | Yes; why do n''t you have railroads in Iran? 13749 ( Do you understand Persian?) 13749 ( How much money did the King give you?) 13749 ( am I hungry, thirsty, or ill?). 13749 ( how much money?) 13749 Addressing himself to me, he inquires:Sahib, Parses namifami?" |
13749 | Among the wiseacres gathered around me plying questions, is one who asks,"Chand menzils inja to London?" |
13749 | Beaching the pagoda, we pass, on the opposite shore, the town of Yang- tai(?). |
13749 | Dismounting, and allowing them to approach, in reply to my query of"Chi mi khoi?" |
13749 | He speaks of London, and wants to know about Mr. Gladstone and Lord Salisbury-- which is now Prime Minister? |
13749 | I wonder, and does it always rain so soft and noiselessly here as it does to- day? |
13749 | In reply to the general and stereotyped query,"Shoot anything?" |
13749 | Several war- junks are anchored before Yang- tai; unlike the peaceful(?) |
13749 | Stevens?" |
13749 | Suppose the Sahib''s iron horse was a wheel of fire, what harm would it do their country even then?" |
13749 | The joint query of"chand pool?" |
13749 | They gather in a crowd about me when I stay to seek refreshments; the general query of"What is he? |
13749 | They have no squeamishness whatever about his watching their own natatorial duties; why, then, should he shrink within himself and wave them off? |
13749 | What cares she for Ferenghi"sanitary fads?" |
13749 | What is to be done? |
13749 | What plans could they devise to keep out the English? |
13749 | What, after all, are the ambitions and enterprises of an individual, compared to the will and policy of an empire? |
13749 | Where do these interesting specimens of Beerjand''s weird population want to entice me to? |
13749 | Why, then, do you come to me? |
13749 | a cuckoo?" |
13749 | mashallah, what language does he speak?" |
13749 | no ferry- boat? |
13749 | no means of getting across?" |
13749 | nobody expected to ever see anything of you again; and so you got through all safe, eh?" |
13749 | one of the erring pair replies,"Yes, we shot several canvas- backs, but lost them in the reeds; did n''t we, old un?" |
13749 | pahni? |
13749 | what is he?" |
13749 | where is the khan and the inirza? |
13749 | where''s the khan?" |
13749 | why do they want to entice me anywhere? |
13749 | you wanchee room? |
8472 | ''Do n''t KNOW?'' |
8472 | ''Do you give it as an order?'' |
8472 | ''How on earth am I ever going to learn it, then?'' |
8472 | ''Indeed? |
8472 | ''Learn a new set, then, every year?'' |
8472 | ''Now do n''t you see the difference? |
8472 | ''Pretty square crossing, an''t it?'' |
8472 | ''What DO you know?'' |
8472 | ''What''s the name of the NEXT point?'' |
8472 | ''Why?'' |
8472 | ''Why?'' |
8472 | ''Yes, but suppose the leads lie? |
8472 | ''You did n''t? |
8472 | ''You-- you-- don''t know?'' |
8472 | And does n''t he sometimes wonder whether he has gained most or lost most by learning his trade? |
8472 | Are not all her visible charms sown thick with what are to him the signs and symbols of hidden decay? |
8472 | Are there many of them?'' |
8472 | Did n''t I tell you that a man''s got to know the river in the night the same as he''d know his own front hall?'' |
8472 | Did you ever know of a boat following a bend up- stream at this stage of the river?'' |
8472 | Do you see that stump on the false point?'' |
8472 | Do you see where the line fringes out at the upper end and begins to fade away?'' |
8472 | Does he ever see her beauty at all, or does n''t he simply view her professionally, and comment upon her unwholesome condition all to himself? |
8472 | Have I got to learn the shape of the river according to all these five hundred thousand different ways? |
8472 | He opened on me after this fashion--''How much water did we have in the middle crossing at Hole- in- the- Wall, trip before last?'' |
8472 | How am I ever going to tell them apart?'' |
8472 | How do you reckon I can remember such a mess as that?'' |
8472 | How high was the bank along here last trip?'' |
8472 | Is the river rising or falling?'' |
8472 | Meet any boats?'' |
8472 | Mr. Bixby said to the mate:--''Upper end of the plantation, or the lower?'' |
8472 | One day he said--''What is the height of that bank yonder, at Burgess''s?'' |
8472 | One day he turned on me suddenly with this settler--''What is the shape of Walnut Bend?'' |
8472 | One visitor said to another--''Jim, how did you run Plum Point, coming up?'' |
8472 | Presently he turned on me and said:--''What''s the name of the first point above New Orleans?'' |
8472 | So he began--''Do you see that long slanting line on the face of the water? |
8472 | The voice of the invisible watchman called up from the hurricane deck--''What''s this, sir?'' |
8472 | We are drawing-- how much?'' |
8472 | What are you standing up through the middle of the river for?'' |
8472 | What did you suppose he wanted to know for?'' |
8472 | What do you start out from, above Twelve- Mile Point, to cross over?'' |
8472 | What do you suppose I told you the names of those points for?'' |
8472 | What does that signify?'' |
8472 | Why, what could you want over here in the bend, then? |
8472 | Will it keep the same form and not go fooling around?'' |
8472 | an''t the new cub turned out yet? |
8588 | And yet, was this joy rounded and complete? 8588 Certain of it? |
8588 | I was a stranger to Mr. Greeley, but what of that? 8588 Major General in the household troops, no doubt? |
8588 | No? 8588 Then the high priest, Hewahewa, inquired of the chiefs,''Where shall be the residence of King Liholiho?'' |
8588 | ( The Sandwich Islanders always squat on their hams, and who knows but they may be the old original"ham sandwiches?" |
8588 | Am I certain of it? |
8588 | Boston, botany, cakes, folony undertakes, but who shall allay? |
8588 | But Admiral, why overlook the Willis and Morgan case in South Carolina? |
8588 | Could n''t you ever cure him of it?" |
8588 | Do you think I''ve been lying about it? |
8588 | First Gentleman of the Bed- chamber? |
8588 | He faced about in his chair and said:"Circumstance? |
8588 | How much oil"--"Oil? |
8588 | It is a large world, too, for a thing to travel so far in-- now is n''t it? |
8588 | Minister of the Interior, likely? |
8588 | Preach in the stone church yonder, no doubt?" |
8588 | Sagacity? |
8588 | Secretary of war? |
8588 | Then Kamehameha inquired,''What do you say?'' |
8588 | Then, observing an enemy approaching,--a hairy tarantula on stilts-- why not set the spittoon on him? |
8588 | Then, who the mischief are you? |
8588 | They replied,''Where, indeed? |
8588 | This traits is characteristic of horse jockeys, the world over, is it not? |
8588 | Was there no secret alloy of unhappiness in it? |
8588 | What circumstance? |
8588 | What do you take me for? |
8588 | What do you take me for? |
8588 | Who, indeed, were the two Massachusetts ministers? |
8588 | and how the mischief did you get here, and where in thunder did you come from?" |
8588 | and who were the two Southern women they burned? |
8588 | what the mischief are you? |
8477 | ''Ah-- stabbed, do you mean?'' |
8477 | ''Brandy? |
8477 | ''Carried the WHOLE town away?-banks, churches, jails, newspaper- offices, court- house, theater, fire department, livery stable EVERYTHING?'' |
8477 | ''Dead?'' |
8477 | ''Failed to escape?--caught in the act and shot?'' |
8477 | ''Go ashore where?'' |
8477 | ''How, then?'' |
8477 | ''Napoleon?'' |
8477 | ''No? |
8477 | ''Serious? |
8477 | ''Well, by---?'' |
8477 | ''Why does he mix such elaborate and picturesque drinks for the nigger hands on the boat?'' |
8477 | ''Why, hang it, do n''t you know? |
8477 | And where so many are saying their say, shall not the barkeeper testify? |
8477 | But if he wait? |
8477 | Ca n''t a man go ashore at Napoleon if he wants to?'' |
8477 | Can you divine what my first thought was? |
8477 | Could you have endured an hour of it, do you think? |
8477 | Did I appeal to the law-- I? |
8477 | Does it quench the pauper''s thirst if the King drink for him? |
8477 | From them might not almost anybody reproduce for himself the life of that time in Vicksburg? |
8477 | Good liquors? |
8477 | How accomplish this, do you say? |
8477 | How strangely things repeat themselves, after long years; for MY hands were tied, that night, you remember? |
8477 | I said--''Come, what is all this about? |
8477 | I said--''What, then-- didn''t he escape?'' |
8477 | If he make ten voyages in succession-- what then? |
8477 | On the other boats? |
8477 | Presently the poet inquired--''Are you going to send it to him right away?'' |
8477 | Rogers said--''Who would have had ANY if it had n''t been for me? |
8477 | So I inquired about this thing; asked what resulted usually? |
8477 | Take a look behind you-- up- stream-- now you begin to recognize this country, do n''t you?'' |
8477 | The captain laughed; but seeing that I was not in a jovial mood, stopped that and said--''But are you serious?'' |
8477 | This man had kept a diary during-- six weeks? |
8477 | Three hours--? |
8477 | What happened, then?'' |
8477 | What was my idea in this nonsense? |
8477 | What, you can not? |
8477 | You give a nigger a plain gill of half- a- dollar brandy for five cents-- will he touch it? |
8477 | Your teeth chatter-- then why can not you shout? |
8477 | profit?'' |
14658 | All of us? |
14658 | Are you hungry? |
14658 | Boys,he said,"when did you eat last?" |
14658 | But where are you going to? |
14658 | But why ungrateful? |
14658 | D''ye remember Buffalo? |
14658 | Did you get shore- leave? |
14658 | Do you remember Billy Harper, at Shanghai? |
14658 | Do you remember Jim Wan? |
14658 | Do you remember the temple? |
14658 | He is dead? |
14658 | How''s that? |
14658 | I beg your pardon,said she;"but what... what was it you said?" |
14658 | It was at a little town in Ohio on the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern,a kid would start; and another,"Ever ride the Cannonball on the Wabash? |
14658 | Like you? |
14658 | Never again what? |
14658 | Not that I know of,she gurgled between gasps;"but what does it mean?" |
14658 | Out of an engine- cab,he answered;"and where did you?" |
14658 | Say, Bo, can you let us have a little tobacco? |
14658 | Say, Bo,he said,"you see that freight side- tracked over there to let us go by?" |
14658 | That was in--? |
14658 | Think you can make it? |
14658 | Two- bits,said I;"is there anything wrong about it?" |
14658 | What do you mean? |
14658 | What hotel are you stopping at? |
14658 | What in the dickens did he give me to be ungrateful about? |
14658 | What? |
14658 | Where''d ye glahm''em? |
14658 | Which temple? |
14658 | Which way, Bo? |
14658 | Why did you quit your job? |
14658 | Wo n''t you repeat it? |
14658 | You called in at Rangoon? |
14658 | You remember the custom- house at Bombay? |
14658 | You want some, eh? |
14658 | Your Honor,he began confusedly,"is n''t that a funny question to ask?" |
14658 | After a couple of minutes he looked up with an I- thought- you- were- gone expression on his face, and demanded:--"Well?" |
14658 | And did n''t I have my"nerve"with me? |
14658 | And furthermore, was I not a tramp- royal? |
14658 | And what crime was there in that? |
14658 | And who knows but some day I may meet him? |
14658 | And why not? |
14658 | And you remember that little island on the right- hand side coming into the harbor?" |
14658 | As he dealt the first card to me, he paused and said:--"Say, Bo, ai n''t I done seen you befo''?" |
14658 | Besides, had n''t I been thrown off of an east- bound train right at that very spot not five minutes before? |
14658 | But am I? |
14658 | But did I betray my desperate plight to those lynx- eyed guardians of the public welfare of Winnipeg? |
14658 | But have they? |
14658 | But how lively? |
14658 | But what did we care? |
14658 | But what does that matter? |
14658 | But why was I in the middle of Canada going west, when my grandparents lived in England? |
14658 | Did you ever see a circus rider, standing on two running horses, with one foot on the back of each horse? |
14658 | Did you ever see a tourniquet? |
14658 | Habeas corpus was all right, but of what good was it to me when I could communicate with no one outside the jail? |
14658 | Has the crew abandoned the fight? |
14658 | He took French Kid and me aside and gave us advice something like this:"We''re goin''to try an''ditch your bunch, see? |
14658 | Her mouth was twitching as she again said,"What?" |
14658 | How could naked men smuggle anything past an inspection? |
14658 | I scraped my feet to advertise my intention of going, and queried:--"And I do n''t get anything to eat?" |
14658 | In fact, his first words were:"Where did you come from?" |
14658 | Instead, his next question was:--"And how is Rangoon?" |
14658 | It answers Dr. Jordan''s test of truth:"Will it work? |
14658 | Of what use to the woman, or to me, would be my being beaten to death by five men there on the bank of the Susquehanna? |
14658 | Oh, I know, it was like taking candy from a baby, but what would you? |
14658 | Or was I to fail? |
14658 | Our fronts were decidedly against us; but what did we care? |
14658 | PICTURES"What do it matter where or''ow we die, So long as we''ve our''ealth to watch it all?" |
14658 | They were landlubbers, in the heart of the continent, and what better story for them than a sea story? |
14658 | Understand? |
14658 | Was I not blessed with strength, agility, and youth? |
14658 | Was not he guarding the one door, and had he not himself latched the opposite door but a few minutes before? |
14658 | Well, and what of it? |
14658 | Well, well, and what of it? |
14658 | Were not these other tramps mere dubs and"gay- cats"and amateurs alongside of me? |
14658 | Were we not to be together always? |
14658 | What crime had I committed against the good citizens of Niagara Falls that all this vengeance should be wreaked upon me? |
14658 | What does this little spray amount to? |
14658 | What had I done? |
14658 | What if these three men are about to man- handle me? |
14658 | What time had I to eat when it took all my time to prepare the many cups of coffee for drinking? |
14658 | What was a man with a fit, anyway? |
14658 | What was he? |
14658 | What''s that? |
14658 | Who was he? |
14658 | Will you trust your life to it?" |
14658 | Worse pages of life than what I have described? |
14658 | Would that matron ever look away? |
32333 | Ah, is it you? |
32333 | And did n''t I say so? |
32333 | And is dat boat made of paper? |
32333 | And what did the lady say, old fellow? |
32333 | And what duz he call his paper boat? |
32333 | And what sent dis Yankee- man_ one tousand_ four hundred miles in his_ paper_ boat? |
32333 | And what,continued the orator,"and what will the Yankee- mens do next? |
32333 | And why,went on this categorical negro,"did de_ Lord_ send him down souf in de_ paper_ boat?" |
32333 | But what subjects occupy your thoughts as you row, and row, and row all day by yourself, in this little ship? |
32333 | Can not,he queried,"a paper shell be made upon the wooden model of a boat? |
32333 | De''Nited States-- whar''s dat? 32333 If you do n''t drink, stranger, up your way, what on airth keeps your buddies and soulds together?" |
32333 | Is_ dat_ de_ little_ boat? |
32333 | My name''s Jacob Gilleu; what''s yourn? |
32333 | Of course ye did; and was n''t me of the same mind, to be sure? |
32333 | Surely,says the master to his mate,"I am past the Magdalens, and still far from Anticosti, yet we have breakers; which way can we turn?" |
32333 | Tell us,they said,"what were your thoughts while you rowed upon the broad ocean in the lonely hours of night?" |
32333 | The same who wint to the South Sea Islands and settled there? |
32333 | Then what''s to become of me? |
32333 | Whar''s your home? |
32333 | What do you think of Delaware law, after what I have written? 32333 What duz you want''bout here, any way? |
32333 | Where from, and where bound? |
32333 | Why did not the paper boat soak to pieces? |
32333 | _ Half the bed!_roared the squire;"here are_ three_ of us, and where''s_ my half_?" |
32333 | ''And now,''said he,''how many acres of land have you"logged"since you put your lumbermen into the forest?'' |
32333 | 1,"And what did I tell ye, Pater?" |
32333 | After all they dragged off my boy to Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, and killed him a fighting for what? |
32333 | And will not a shell thus produced, after being treated to a coat of varnish, float as well, and be lighter than a wooden boat?" |
32333 | Another night the colored orators became intensely excited over the query,"Which is de best,_ Spring- Water_ or Matches?" |
32333 | Can dey bring a man back agen? |
32333 | Can dey bring a man back to bref?" |
32333 | Did ye eber har tell ob him?" |
32333 | Do we love our neighbor as ourself? |
32333 | Do we, who have been taught from our youth sacred things, do more than this? |
32333 | Hab you a leetle bacca fur dis ole man?" |
32333 | Hall, where''s the bottle?" |
32333 | Has de gemmin from de norf any bacca for dis yere chile?" |
32333 | His exordium was:"How fur you cum, sar?" |
32333 | How could I remunerate a southerner for his cost of keeping me, when not, in the true sense of the word, an invited guest to his hospitality? |
32333 | How did you get across the marsh?" |
32333 | How is it up your way?" |
32333 | Men and women hailed me from the banks as I glided along in my canoe, with,"Say, captain, hab you eny''bacca or snuff for dis chile?" |
32333 | Now tell us, is the sailor made of paper, like his boat?" |
32333 | Now what''s Coolumbus, or any other man of the past ages, to him? |
32333 | Now, does the folkes up north like to see white people tyrannized over by niggers? |
32333 | Now, ef they eats us out of house and home, what can a poor man do? |
32333 | Now, would you folks up north like to have a nigger justice who ca n''t read nor count ten figgurs?" |
32333 | Now, yous ere folks, did ye''s eber hear de likes o''dis-- a_ paper_ boat?" |
32333 | On what could I stand to repair it? |
32333 | One evening these negroes debated upon the following theme,"Which is de best-- when ye are out ob a ting, or when ye hab got it?" |
32333 | Pretty soon up comes your head and shoulders into sight; then sez I, It''s a man, sure, but where is his boat? |
32333 | Says he, ruther hurriedly,''Sonny, what''s up?'' |
32333 | She kindly accosted the dwarfed black with,"Charles, have you got a match for my pipe?" |
32333 | The interesting inquiry of"Who was his father?" |
32333 | The little black tried to run his fingers through his short, woolly hair as he continued:"What is dis yere world a- coming to? |
32333 | To a question from one negro as to"How did dis yere Yankee- man cum all dis fur way in de_ paper_ canoe, all hissef lone?" |
32333 | Two men leaned over to inquire,"What''s the row now, stranger?" |
32333 | Upon this natural orator Seba Gillings''dignity had no effect-- was he not a travelled man? |
32333 | Whar''s yere pride? |
32333 | What are ye a- travelling in this sort of way for, in a paper dug- out?" |
32333 | What but this petty plundering could be expected of men who robbed by wholesale the poor negro, to protect whose rights they were sent south? |
32333 | What did he know about_ paper_ boats? |
32333 | What duz you want on Choc''late Plantation, anyhow?" |
32333 | What had become of their countrymen? |
32333 | What is imprisonment for a few months or years? |
32333 | What respect had_ they_ for the rights of discoverers or martyred missionaries? |
32333 | What''s this country a- coming to? |
32333 | When will I hear de ban- jo tum- ming Down in my good old home?" |
32333 | When will I see de bees a- hum- ming All round de comb? |
32333 | Why fur? |
32333 | Will it ingulf us in its insatiable maw, as the whale did Jonah? |
32333 | do n''t folks die of_ something_, any way? |
32333 | does it come nat''ral to them, or is it got by edication?" |
32333 | he roared;"duz you knows how much dat is, honnies? |
32333 | whar is it? |
32333 | which was another form of expressing the old question,"Is there more pleasure in possession than in anticipation?" |
8589 | And did you deem it a fit thing to publish? |
8589 | And do YOU claim the right to make ME come out and deny anything you may choose to write and print? |
8589 | And do you then retract it or not? |
8589 | Did you not see it before it was printed? |
8589 | Do n''t you know that I know they are false? |
8589 | Do you know them to be true? |
8589 | If you are not the author, then I do demand to know who is? |
8589 | Is your laugh hung on a hair- trigger?--that is, is it critical, or can you get it off easy? |
8589 | Why then did you print them? |
8589 | Ah- ah-- again? |
8589 | And did you s''pose the tree could last for- ever, con- found it? |
8589 | Answer me, did n''t I? |
8589 | Are you going to hand out your money or not? |
8589 | But what are either of them compared to the vacant stomach of Haleakala? |
8589 | Come, now, what do you say?" |
8589 | Did n''t I say I wished you could have seen it when I first saw it? |
8589 | Do you want to take any chances with these bloody savages?" |
8589 | Do you want your head blown off? |
8589 | Does any one smile at these last counts? |
8589 | He said:"The time''s up, now, ai nt it?" |
8589 | He then pointed to some numbered paragraphs in a TRIBUNE article, headed"What''s the Matter with Yellow Jacket?" |
8589 | How did they transport and how raise them? |
8589 | I could not sleep-- who could, under such circumstances? |
8589 | I want your final answer-- did you write that article or not?" |
8589 | I''ll put the thing in another shape( and then pointing to the paper); do n''t you know those charges to be false?" |
8589 | Of course the tree was reduced that way, but did n''t I explain it? |
8589 | Then:"Are you going to hand out your money or not?" |
8589 | What could she gain by it, even if she succeeded? |
8589 | Where did these isolated pagans get this idea of a City of Refuge-- this ancient Oriental custom? |
8589 | Why did not Captain Cook have taste enough to call his great discovery the Rainbow Islands? |
8589 | Will you sign or not?" |
8589 | [ He sees doom impending:] WHEN WILL THE CIRCLE JOIN? |
8589 | [ Who received the erroneous telegrams?] |
8589 | do you still refuse?" |
58361 | And the two little ones? |
58361 | And where is Hassan? |
58361 | But was the princess pretty? |
58361 | Eudocia, dearest, did you go up those horrid steps upon the wall, to look at those people outside? 58361 No,"replied the generous Hossein,"what use is there in fighting any longer? |
58361 | What in the world can they want so many fagots for? |
58361 | What, Eyesha? |
58361 | Where? |
58361 | Why should you weep? |
58361 | ''What is your fortunate name?'' |
58361 | ,, argentatus(?) |
58361 | ,, cetti(?) |
58361 | ,, falcinellus(?) |
58361 | ,, nivalis(?) |
58361 | ,, rupestris(?) |
58361 | ,, turtur(?) |
58361 | And we went, did we not go together, to the court of the palace of the Pasha? |
58361 | Bartholomew was consecrated bishop( of Nakchevan? |
58361 | But, Eudocia, did you see the lady? |
58361 | Buteo ater(?) |
58361 | Common buzzard(?). |
58361 | Cuculus(?) |
58361 | Did I not get from him the embroidery, the cloth of gold which you have, which is in your room? |
58361 | Did not you see him, Xenophon? |
58361 | Did you ever see such creatures?" |
58361 | Do not the soldiers present arms to you there when you go in? |
58361 | Had not each of these men a soul, immortal as their butcher''s? |
58361 | Had not many of them, many thousands of them perhaps, more faith, more trust in God, higher talents than their destroyer? |
58361 | Hath not a clock a pulse, when he is alive and in good health? |
58361 | He said to the people,''What can I do? |
58361 | He was brought up for judgment before me, when I said to him, Who are you? |
58361 | Herring gull(?). |
58361 | How are you off for tezek? |
58361 | I am but a guest of one breath in this transitory world; my relatives and companions are all gone, and what will it profit me to remain behind? |
58361 | I went to the Bezestein, and there did I not see the chief of the criers of the Bit Bazaar? |
58361 | Is he not a Christian-- an Armenian? |
58361 | Is she tall or short? |
58361 | It is opposite, is it not opposite to the entrance of the Bezestein? |
58361 | My man exclaimed,"The earth moves-- are you not afraid?" |
58361 | Pyrrhula communis(?) |
58361 | Sedge- warbler(?). |
58361 | Shall not their blood cry out for vengeance? |
58361 | Snow- finch(?) |
58361 | Then who would not have joined a righteous cause? |
58361 | They are Turks, my master( padrone); are they not Turks? |
58361 | They are all dead; why should not we be ready to follow their example?" |
58361 | Turtle- dove(?). |
58361 | We were all grieved for him, but what could we do? |
58361 | What do I know? |
58361 | What is she like? |
58361 | Where were the city guards? |
58361 | Where were the legionaries and the 10,000 auxiliary troops? |
58361 | he said;"did we not come on earth to die? |
58361 | or what? |
58361 | pretty or ugly? |
58361 | said the old woman;"who are you? |
58361 | who would not have given his wealth, his assistance, or his life, in the defense of his faith against the enemies of his religion? |
58361 | why do they tie their legs up with leather thongs in that funny way? |
20263 | E perche? 20263 Quid tam nudum inveniri potest, quid tam abruptum undique quam hoc saxum? |
20263 | Um,said he,"e nel Papa? |
20263 | What a thought? 20263 Who upon earth has written such perfect comedies( as Molière)? |
20263 | ''Sir,''said he, with the deepest concern,''may I beg the life of my uncle? |
20263 | And why?" |
20263 | And yet why trust a greasy cook? |
20263 | Are not you very proud of your Ode to Midnight? |
20263 | But is not that the case in every miscellaneous collection, even in that excellent one published by Mr. Dodsley? |
20263 | But to proceed; can a man make a pilgrimage to the Holy Land from the Island of Great Britain, without the aid of navigation? |
20263 | But who is this the fire of whose look flames infinitely beyond the rest? |
20263 | Can a man of acknowledged ignorance and stupidity, write a tragedy superior to Hamlet? |
20263 | Can a man walk in the Mall at noon, carrying his breeches upon an enormous long pole, without being laughed at? |
20263 | Can any thing be more condescending, and at the same time shew more the firmness of an heroick mind, than this letter? |
20263 | Could you come? |
20263 | Could your Lordship find time to honour me now and then with a letter? |
20263 | Dear BOSWELL,--How shall I begin? |
20263 | Dear ERSKINE,--Can a man walk up the Cowgate after a heavy rain without dirtying his shoes? |
20263 | Dear ERSKINE,--What sort of a letter shall I now write to you? |
20263 | Derrick''s versifications are infamously bad; what think you of the Reviewers commending such an execrable performance? |
20263 | Did you ever suspect me of believing your marriage? |
20263 | Did you really believe it? |
20263 | For what should make men attack one who never offended them, who has done his best to entertain them, and who is engaged in the most generous cause? |
20263 | He therefore advanced, and addressed himself to me,''Sir, is it proper for me to speak?'' |
20263 | How goes it with the elegant gentle Lady A----? |
20263 | How is my honest Captain Andrew? |
20263 | I could now tell why I should not write; for who would write to men who publish the letters of their friends without their leave? |
20263 | I liked to see their natural frankness and ease;[97] for why should men be afraid of their own species? |
20263 | I ventured to object:"But why has not Providence interposed sooner?" |
20263 | If these things continue, who is safe? |
20263 | In the name of every thing that is upside down, what could the people mean by marrying me? |
20263 | Is Dodsley to sell you for a shilling, or not? |
20263 | Now, my dear Captain, tell me how is it with you, after reading this? |
20263 | Or give to meat the time of play? |
20263 | Plures tamen hîc peregrini quam cives consistunt? |
20263 | Pray shall we not see you here this winter at all? |
20263 | Pray what is become of the Cub? |
20263 | Say, who could e''er indulge a yawn or nap, When Barclay roars forth snip, and Bainbridge snap? |
20263 | Shall I cram it from top to bottom with tables of compound interest? |
20263 | Swells the full song? |
20263 | Tell me how our second volume is received; I was much pleased with N----''s lines; how did he get them inserted? |
20263 | Tell me how you was affected; could you speak any? |
20263 | Tell me, dear Erskine, should not I My favourite path of fortune try? |
20263 | The exordium is a passionate address to Captains all; amongst whom, who can more properly be reckoned than Captain Andrew? |
20263 | Upon my arrival, the captain of the guard came out, and demanded who I was? |
20263 | Well, and what then? |
20263 | What can her keeping of Turkeys be owing to? |
20263 | What sort of a son had Cicero, and what had Marcus Aurelius?" |
20263 | What would I not do to gain your pardon? |
20263 | When I said he ought to marry and have a son to succeed him,"Sir,"said he,"what security can I have that my son will think and act as I do? |
20263 | While ev''ry trout gulps down a hook, And poor dumb beasts harsh butchers slay? |
20263 | Why do n''t you send me a copy? |
20263 | Why, then, should I suppress it? |
20263 | Why,''out of the abundance of the heart,''should I not speak?" |
20263 | With what feeling are you most strongly possessed? |
20263 | [ 77][ Footnote 76:"ADAMS.--But, Sir, how can you do this in three years? |
20263 | [ 89] What can be found so bare, what so rugged all around as this rock? |
20263 | [ Footnote 27:"Avez- vous lu le_ Testament politique du Maréchal de Belle- Isle_? |
20263 | [ Footnote 34:"Would you believe, what I know is fact, that Dr. Hill earned fifteen guineas a week by working for wholesale dealers? |
20263 | [ Footnote 46:"Pray, Sir,"said Mr. Morgann to Johnson,"whether do you reckon Derrick or Smart the best poet?" |
20263 | and how, O how does that glorious luminary Lady B---- do? |
20263 | and in the Pope?" |
20263 | and is the laugh of gaiety no more? |
20263 | and would not the sight of me have made you very miserable? |
20263 | could you fix your thoughts upon anything but the dreary way you was in? |
20263 | has he a landed estate? |
20263 | has the smile of cheerfulness left your countenance? |
20263 | has your flow of spirits evaporated, and left nothing but the black dregs of melancholy behind? |
20263 | or a genteel comedy superior to the Careless Husband? |
20263 | or with long stories translated from Olaus Wormius? |
20263 | quid ad copias respicienti jejunius? |
20263 | quid ad homines immansuetius? |
20263 | quid ad ipsum loci situm horridius? |
20263 | the lovely sighing Lady J----? |
20263 | what in climate more intemperate? |
20263 | what in the very situation of the place more horrible? |
20263 | what is the length of his walking- stick? |
20263 | what more barren of provisions? |
20263 | what more rude as to its inhabitants? |
20263 | what species of apology shall I make? |
20263 | what transport can you feel, In turning round on either heel? |
20263 | why am I not chained to Donaldson''s shop? |
20263 | why am I not in Edinburgh? |
20263 | with anecdotes of Queen Anne''s wars? |
20263 | with excerpts from Robertson''s history? |
11454 | ''And they arrived accordingly?'' 11454 ''But who told thee this piece of news?'' |
11454 | ''By himself, or in partnership?'' 11454 ''Did thee direct him as he requested?'' |
11454 | ''Did thee follow them?'' 11454 ''Did thee speak to them?'' |
11454 | ''Hast thou heard of the old saying,''said Mr. Tyson,''Hell is paved with good intentions? 11454 ''How can you say that, and be a slave- holder?'' |
11454 | ''I understand,''said he,''that there are persons confined in this place entitled to their freedom?'' 11454 ''Is he engaged in the traffic now?'' |
11454 | ''Is he not in partnership,''said Mr. Tyson,''with----?'' 11454 ''Thee do n''t know of their having dissolved?'' |
11454 | ''Was any body with them?'' 11454 ''Was the hack close, or were the curtains down?'' |
11454 | ''Were they gagged?'' 11454 ''Were two boys among the number?'' |
11454 | ''What o''clock last night was it when thee saw the carriage?'' 11454 ''You have been wrongly informed,''said the leader of the quartette;''and, besides, what business is it of yours?'' |
11454 | And are we to wait, it will be inquired, till this distant and uncertain period for the extinction of war? 11454 And will it be said that all this is visionary and impossible? |
11454 | But by whom, and in what way it will be asked, is this example to be set? 11454 But what are the means we shall use? |
11454 | To what well founded objections would such a treaty be subject? 11454 ''Did Henry Clay buy thee there?'' 11454 ''Did Henry Clay buy thee there?'' 11454 ''How many children hadst thou then?'' 11454 ''How many children hast thou?'' 11454 ''How old art thou?'' 11454 ''How old is that?'' 11454 ''Is there a school for colored people on Henry Clay''s plantation?'' 11454 ''It is gone?'' 11454 ''Was there any witness who could prove its payment?'' 11454 ''We said nothing to them,''said Kin- na;''why did they treat us so? 11454 ''Well,''said Mr. Tyson,''what is there new in thy way of business; I suppose it continues as usual to be a good business?'' 11454 ''Were the slaves any worse off, since the question of abolition has been agitated?'' 11454 ''Where are they?'' 11454 ''Where are they?'' 11454 ''Where is my blanket?'' 11454 ''Where is my shirt?'' 11454 ''Where wert thou raised?'' 11454 ''Who?'' 11454 ''Wilt thou shew me his improved cattle?'' 11454 ''Yes; where is he?'' 11454 **But in_ what way_ are we to make the experiment? |
11454 | After inspecting the machinery, the fabrics, and the great wheel, one of them turned to me and said,''Did man make this?'' |
11454 | And in what cause can the energies of Christian benevolence be more appropriately exercised? |
11454 | Are they not, in fact, still less under the control of moral obligation? |
11454 | But, on the other hand, how is it possible for England to extend her foreign trade while the present restrictions continue? |
11454 | From what motive then, do we uphold a traffic, which is the curse of China, the curse of India, and a calamity to Great Britain? |
11454 | Fu- li, on a former evening, being asked,''What is faith?'' |
11454 | He inquired,''if any of them were entitled to their freedom?'' |
11454 | How important is it that all the offices in a prison should be filled by persons of true piety; and where can such be more usefully employed? |
11454 | How is it possible to evade the conclusion that Christianity flourishes most, when it is unencumbered and uncorrupted by state patronage? |
11454 | I asked him whether, if I had brought a barrel of lard on board, he would have troubled me to prove property? |
11454 | I asked''How old art thou?'' |
11454 | I asked,''Will they make all free?'' |
11454 | I said to him,''Canst thou read?'' |
11454 | If he would leave such a kind master, what might not be expected of the oppressed field hand? |
11454 | Is dat like my brother? |
11454 | Is dat like my father? |
11454 | Is dat like my mother? |
11454 | Is dat like my sister? |
11454 | Is it not all the natural consequence of your electing slave- holders and their abettors to the highest offices of your State and nation? |
11454 | Is not the true conclusion from such premises, the very reverse of this? |
11454 | Is not this a pitiful business?" |
11454 | Men are every where inquiring why the sacrifice was made? |
11454 | No, my friend, they can no more reconcile to themselves the idea of sitting down by the side of a colored African,( American?) |
11454 | On approaching the house I saw a colored man, to whom I said,''Where wert thou raised?'' |
11454 | The answer is,''You have drank them,''''Where is my gun?'' |
11454 | Thee was talking about a case of kidnapping; well?'' |
11454 | What are these States but the greatest colonies ever planted by Great Britain? |
11454 | What can we do? |
11454 | What favored portion of the United Kingdom could compare its religious statistics with New England? |
11454 | What law governs the hereditary transmission of such traits? |
11454 | What must be the power of that delusion which can render intelligent and philanthropic men the victims of such a fallacy? |
11454 | What must be their wants, when he himself is even without a shirt?" |
11454 | What part has the restrictive system had in producing this result? |
11454 | Where can we find an anti- slavery organization more potential, and so dignified, as was the convention of American women? |
11454 | Why a mighty city was convulsed with violence? |
11454 | Why a noble hall was burned by incendiaries in the view of gazing thousands? |
11454 | Why not? |
11454 | Why the''shelter for orphan children''was set on fire, and why the houses of our citizens were surrounded by a ruffian mob? |
11454 | Why, then, will not Christians use the talents and influence given them from above to effect this consummation? |
11454 | Will the Southern still accept the shadow without the substance of equal and confederate powers? |
11454 | Will the decision be less consistent with justice, from being impartial and disinterested? |
11454 | [ A] But for what do they want gold but to purchase other supplies than food? |
8585 | But what kind? |
8585 | Cal., what kind of a house are you going to build? |
8585 | Cal., when are you going to Europe? |
8585 | Did n''t say nothing but that? |
8585 | Going to be gone all summer? |
8585 | Mr. Arkansas, if you''d only let me--"Who''s a henderin''you? 8585 No-- but are you in earnest?" |
8585 | Steamer of the 10th? |
8585 | Too much climbing? 8585 Was that all that you said?" |
8585 | Well then why d''n''t you say it? 8585 Well, do you know that you have got one of the most expensive and arduous undertakings before you that was ever conceived by man?" |
8585 | What is? |
8585 | What part of Europe shall you go to? |
8585 | Where are you going to live? |
8585 | Why no-- how is that? |
8585 | Why? 8585 Ai n''t it so, Smith? 8585 Ai n''t it? 8585 Ai n''t this company agreeable to you? 8585 Are you? 8585 But what is the use? 8585 Did n''t I say, no longer ago than last night, that for a man that was a gentleman all the time and every way you took him, give me Arkansas? 8585 Do you hear him talk about bloodshed? 8585 How did they get there? 8585 How much did I want? 8585 I''m the man, am I? 8585 If there''s got to be bloodshed--"Do you hear that, gentlemen? 8585 Is that it? 8585 Is that what you''re coming at? |
8585 | Is that your idea? |
8585 | It''s me you''re goin''to murder, is it? |
8585 | Now you know that I ai n''t the man to--""Are you a threatenin''me? |
8585 | Once Higbie said:"When are you going home-- to the States?" |
8585 | Said he:"Wha- what do you know a-- about Pennsylvania? |
8585 | Sha n''t you keep a carriage?" |
8585 | Then came a white upheaval at my side, and a voice said, with bitterness:"Will some gentleman be so good as to kick me behind?" |
8585 | Then he said to the men:"So you have taken a contract to run a tunnel into this hill two hundred and fifty feet to strike this ledge?" |
8585 | Wha-- what do you know''bout Pennsylvania?" |
8585 | What did you come swellin''around that way for, and tryin''to raise trouble?" |
8585 | What do you say?" |
8585 | What is your idea?" |
8585 | What''s the matter with you this mornin'', anyway? |
8585 | When are you?" |
8585 | You want us to leave do you? |
8585 | You was only goin''to say-- what was you goin''to say? |
21244 | Do you wish to smother me, man? |
21244 | Fish? |
21244 | Have you any flour? |
21244 | Have you any potatoes? |
21244 | Have you any tea? |
21244 | Have you any venison? |
21244 | Have you volunteered to go as a missionary to that far- off land? |
21244 | He is your Father? |
21244 | How many winters will pass by before that time comes? |
21244 | Jack, my noble fellow,I said,"do you know that we are lost, and that it is very doubtful whether we shall ever see the Mission House again? |
21244 | Then we are brothers? |
21244 | WHERE IS THE MISSIONARY? |
21244 | Waiting? |
21244 | Well, here is this letter; what are you going to do about it? |
21244 | Well, why is it I never heard of him before, I wonder? |
21244 | What about when it was too stormy for any one to go? |
21244 | What did you do when it was too stormy to visit the nets? |
21244 | What have you discovered? |
21244 | What have you got, poor woman? |
21244 | What were my words of three summers ago? |
21244 | Why do you think so? |
21244 | Why should I not wash? |
21244 | Why, then,I said,"do you not worship the good Spirit? |
21244 | Will you help my wife and children also to become Christians? |
21244 | A RACE FOR LIFE IN A BLIZZARD STORM-- SAVED BY THE MARVELLOUS INTELLIGENCE OF JACK--"WHERE IS THE OLD MAN, WHOSE HEAD WAS LIKE THE SNOW- DRIFT?" |
21244 | After a while I broke the silence by saying,"Where have you buried him?" |
21244 | Again I asked:"Tell me, what have you done with the old man with the snow- white hair?" |
21244 | As we arose from our knees, I quietly said to Mrs Young,"Have you any impression on your mind as to our duty in this matter?" |
21244 | As we were poorly off for food, I was very much pleased, and said to him,"What shall I give you for this meat?" |
21244 | At length he stopped, and as we came up to him we said,"Well, Tom, what is the matter?" |
21244 | At length one of the sons spoke up and said,"Who is causing us all this trouble?" |
21244 | Before I closed the first service I asked,"Where is the old man whose head was like the snow- drift?" |
21244 | But what should we do then? |
21244 | Do n''t you think you had better come back to him?'' |
21244 | Do you not remember, William, he said that if we ever got into great trouble, the Great Spirit was the best Friend to Whom to go to help us out? |
21244 | Do you want anything more?" |
21244 | He replies,"Do you see those balsams? |
21244 | He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father; and how sayest thou then, Show us the Father?" |
21244 | He turned to her and said, with something of his old enthusiasm,"Why should that thought trouble you, my dear? |
21244 | Here is a beautiful illustration:--"WHERE ARE OUR CHILDREN?" |
21244 | How can I help being happy? |
21244 | How can we spare you?'' |
21244 | How is one part more sacred than the other? |
21244 | I believe that dear Jesus will take me to that better land; but, mother, when you come, will you look for me until you find me? |
21244 | I had been very bad, and had got very far away; how could I come back? |
21244 | I quickly said to one of my men,"How much food have we?" |
21244 | I said;"for what are you waiting?" |
21244 | In a spirit that perhaps savoured too much of unbelief I cried out,"How long, O Lord, how long? |
21244 | Is it any wonder that I became deeply attached to these Nelson River Indians? |
21244 | Lifting up his eyes to mine, again he said,"May I say more?" |
21244 | One day, in conversing with an old fine- looking Indian, I said to him,"What is your religion? |
21244 | Said he,"Did you not go to Nelson River with dogs and Indians about two moons ago?" |
21244 | She read it over carefully, and then, after a quiet moment, as was quite natural, asked,"What does this mean?" |
21244 | So keeping my rifle to my shoulder, I shouted out,"Who''s there?" |
21244 | Some of them had several miles to go; but what cared they on this glad day? |
21244 | Somebody else said,"Have you the name of that boy who was accidentally shot in the leg?" |
21244 | Speaking more loudly I said,"Samuel, my brother, you are in the Valley of the Shadow of Death; how is it with you?" |
21244 | Suspecting the purpose for which I wanted it, he said,"What are you going to do with it?" |
21244 | Tell me, Missionary, what must I do to please the Great Spirit, that I may get to that beautiful land, that I may meet my children again?" |
21244 | Their minds were dark; would I soon come back and bring in the light? |
21244 | Then again he asked,"Who did you say was the author or inventor of these characters?" |
21244 | Then he said, while his eyes and voice yearned for the answer,"Does it mean He is my Father-- poor Indian''s Father?" |
21244 | Then we asked,"Are you willing to run the risk, and avail yourselves of this chance to do a glorious act?" |
21244 | This seemed to astonish them, and they said:"What has he got to talk about that is more important than the treaty?" |
21244 | Was not she a Saulteaux, and had not she a right to know of this new way, about which so much was being said? |
21244 | When shall the time arrive when` nations shall be born in a day''? |
21244 | Why do Thy chariot wheels delay?" |
21244 | Why do you make and worship idols?" |
21244 | Why resign your position?" |
21244 | what is that?" |
16793 | Bismarck-- how far? |
16793 | But,said I,"do you sell your bread for fifty cents per loaf?" |
16793 | Did it ever occur to you,said I,"that a man will do for nothing what he would n''t do for money?" |
16793 | From the East? |
16793 | Going down river in a power canoe, eh? |
16793 | Having trouble with your engine, are n''t you? |
16793 | How about Mr. Blank? 16793 How did you find the water?" |
16793 | How far to Rocky Point? |
16793 | How much are you getting? |
16793 | It''s just a little place, is n''t it? |
16793 | Locate the trouble? |
16793 | Say, how long is that piece? |
16793 | Say, you know little old New York, do n''t you? 16793 Shall I get another?" |
16793 | Take money for it? 16793 That so?" |
16793 | Think she''ll go now? |
16793 | What have I neglected? |
16793 | What is it, Little One? |
16793 | What is the trouble? |
16793 | What is there left here to live for? |
16793 | What''s the matter with your engine? |
16793 | Why? |
16793 | Why? |
16793 | You came from Benton? |
16793 | You see that little brass lever back there? 16793 A sordid, brutal story? 16793 After all there is n''t much difference between really tremendous things-- Homer or waterfalls or thunderstorms-- is there? 16793 Am I really digressing? 16793 And I? 16793 And you want to get up and move-- push on through purple distances-- whither? 16793 Are you? 16793 Around what bend? 16793 Bad Lands? 16793 Breathed? 16793 But it is the West that has bred and is still breeding a race of men as beautiful in a virile way( and how else should men be beautiful?) 16793 But modern Benton? 16793 But we were n''t going any farther that night-- were we? 16793 But what are Bad Lands for? 16793 CHAPTER VII ON TO THE YELLOWSTONE At last one evening( shall I confess it?) 16793 Captain Marsh would say,Reopen navigation? |
16793 | Did a cynic name this dry ragged gash in the midst of a bleak black world where nothing lived, where never laughter sounded? |
16793 | Did you ever hear music that made you see purple? |
16793 | Did you ever notice how a lone coyote on a snow- heaped prairie gives you a heartache, whereas the empty waste would only have exhilarated you? |
16793 | Do they raise that breed now? |
16793 | Do you know the difference between a sheepman in Scotland, say, and in Montana?" |
16793 | For what purpose? |
16793 | Got any tailor- made cigarettes about you? |
16793 | Have you cleaned your spark- plug?" |
16793 | How did Broadway look when you were there last? |
16793 | How far was Goodale, would you suppose? |
16793 | How long would it take us to get there? |
16793 | How many foot- pounds did the boy heart of Chatterton beat before it broke? |
16793 | How many horse- power did Shelley fling into the creation of his_ West Wind_? |
16793 | How many were there in our party? |
16793 | How_ did_ they ever manage to get back? |
16793 | I cried in glee;"Is it really a town of importance?" |
16793 | I wanted to feel the mettle of the big typical fellow, and so I said playfully:"Say, Joe, come to confession-- you''re a sheepman, now are n''t you?" |
16793 | Is it not fateful enough to be the foundation of a tremendous Æschylean drama? |
16793 | Is the comparison faulty? |
16793 | It was that sort of purple I saw( or did I hear it like music?) |
16793 | Lights all there yet at night? |
16793 | Only four hundred? |
16793 | Or did the bad man strangle it with that horrid old gasoline?" |
16793 | Put a little more wood on the fire, Kid; and say, Bill, hand me that, wo n''t you? |
16793 | Put a simpler question: In which way were we moving? |
16793 | Say, what did they make this country for? |
16793 | Shall we wait?" |
16793 | Swallowing the last of the chops,"Where will I find the ruins of the old fort?" |
16793 | Swim_ this_? |
16793 | The Kid broke out into boisterous laughter that irritated me strangely:"Where the devil do you suppose our life- preservers are?" |
16793 | The conversation very often proceeded in this manner:"Will you please tell us how far it is to So- and- So?" |
16793 | The quitter that is in all men more or less, often whispered to us when we were weariest:"Why not take the train? |
16793 | The thought is truly appalling-- isn''t it? |
16793 | Three? |
16793 | Was I unfair to old Vergil, think you? |
16793 | We decided to pull in for the night; but in what direction should we pull? |
16793 | Well, what is life for? |
16793 | Were you ever a homesick boy, too proud to tell the truth about it? |
16793 | What could not Homer do with such a man? |
16793 | What is it about the rhythmic stride of many men down a dusty road that grips you by the throat and makes your lungs feel like overcharged balloons? |
16793 | What is it all for?" |
16793 | What is the energy exerted by the Great Falls of the Missouri? |
16793 | What is there about the tang of wood- smoke in a lonesome place that fills one with glories that seem half memory and half dream? |
16793 | What matter? |
16793 | When were you there last?" |
16793 | Whereat the philosopher in me emerges to remark-- but who cares? |
16793 | Which way should we pull? |
16793 | Who knows but that every house has its telltale aura, plain to a vision of sufficient spiritual keenness? |
16793 | Who''s going to get a pail of water?" |
16793 | Would not such a story-- here briefly sketched-- move old Sophocles? |
16793 | _ Fort Benton?_ What a clarion cry that name had been to me! |
16793 | _ Gâteaux à la chansonnette!_ Who would n''t eat them for breakfast? |
16793 | said I mentally;"does its little carburetor hurt it? |
16793 | ventured I timidly, almost pleadingly;"is n''t there-- uh-- isn''t there-- uh--_water enough_?" |
29314 | A good horse, two or three hundred dollars; an extra- good one, four hundred; a fancy one, who knows? |
29314 | Ah,she answers smilingly,"how do I know? |
29314 | But what can you expect under this rotten Turkish government? |
29314 | Did it look like the real house? |
29314 | George,said I to the Bethlehemite, as he sat meditating on the edge of the dry pool,"what do you think of this valley?" |
29314 | I want to know,piped a lady in a green shirt- waist from Andover, Mass.,"is there really and truly any danger?" |
29314 | Is everything ready for the journey, George? |
29314 | Is this our affair with robbers, at last? |
29314 | Was he one of the robbers,I ask,"or one of the robbed?" |
29314 | ( What is the word for a young camel, I wonder; is it camelet or camelot?) |
29314 | A beautiful dark- eyed girl, in a dreadful department- store dress, smiles at us from an open door and says:"Take my picture? |
29314 | And now, in the cool of the evening at Cæsarea Philippi, we ask ourselves whether our desire has been granted, our hope fulfilled? |
29314 | Are the colonists happy, contented? |
29314 | But was Eleazar glad, I wonder, or sorry, that his long vigil was ended? |
29314 | But what do I care? |
29314 | But where is Es Salt? |
29314 | Can you see no shadowy figures sitting there, hear no light whisper of ghostly laughter, no thin ripple of clapping hands? |
29314 | City, did I say? |
29314 | Could any Christian of whatever creed, could any son of woman with a heart to feel the trouble and longing of humanity, turn his back upon that altar? |
29314 | Do the bones of the prophet rest here or at Ramah? |
29314 | Do they not all come to humble themselves, to pray, to seek the light? |
29314 | Do you agree with this? |
29314 | Do you believe it? |
29314 | Do you say"To what purpose is this waste?" |
29314 | Does any one suppose that this is intended to teach us that the sun moves and that on this day his course was arrested? |
29314 | Does it seem at all real or possible to you? |
29314 | Does not the advent of a higher manhood always wait for the hope and longing of a nobler womanhood? |
29314 | Earthquake, pestilence, conflagration, pillage, devastation-- who knows? |
29314 | For what is it that weaves the charm of ruins? |
29314 | Good harvests? |
29314 | Have the hundreds of unknown elements upon which our combination depended been working secretly together for its success? |
29314 | Have the letters, the cablegrams that were sent to them been safely delivered? |
29314 | Have we missed the trail? |
29314 | How else could this sacred shrine of the out- of- doors be preserved? |
29314 | How shall we understand it unless we carry it under the free sky and interpret it in the companionship of nature? |
29314 | How should I write of them all without being tedious? |
29314 | How you do?" |
29314 | How, indeed, should I hope to make them visible or significant in the bare words of description? |
29314 | III RENDEZVOUS Will my friends be here to meet me, I wonder? |
29314 | Is Bryan elected yet? |
29314 | Is he going to settle down there for life? |
29314 | Is the colony prospering? |
29314 | Is this the brook beside which a man once met God? |
29314 | May he keep company with us and make the perilous transit under our august protection? |
29314 | Must we believe that the whole solar system was dislocated for the sake of this battle? |
29314 | The Arabs have a story which runs thus:"What did Allah say when He had finished making the camel? |
29314 | Then what happened? |
29314 | Was it not perfectly shocking?" |
29314 | Was it the promise of reconciliation with his brother that made him say at dawn,"I have seen God face to face, and my life is saved"? |
29314 | Was it the prospect of this dreaded meeting that brought upon Jacob the night of lonely struggle by the Brook Jabbok? |
29314 | Was it the voice of turbulent centuries and the lapsing tides of men? |
29314 | Was there ever a river that began so fair and ended in such waste and desolation? |
29314 | What are they raising? |
29314 | What do we ask of them to make their magic complete and satisfying? |
29314 | What flash of wit amuses them, what nobly tragic word or action stirs them to applause? |
29314 | What is it that makes the wreck of an inn more lonely and forbidding than any other ruin? |
29314 | What kind of fish are they? |
29314 | What must the three mighty men have thought when they saw that for which they had risked their lives poured out upon the ground?" |
29314 | What problem of their own life, what reflection of their own heart, does the stage reveal to them? |
29314 | What sound? |
29314 | What was its ancient name? |
29314 | What''s the news there? |
29314 | What, then, is the difference? |
29314 | Whence came the tradition of the Samaritans that Jacob gave them this well, although the Old Testament says nothing about it? |
29314 | Where was the camp? |
29314 | Who can solve these mysteries? |
29314 | Who can tell how this city came here, hidden in this hollow place almost three thousand feet above the sea? |
29314 | Who can tell? |
29314 | Who was its founder? |
29314 | Who was this"man"with whom the patriarch contended at midnight, and to whom he cried,"I will not let thee go except thou bless me"? |
29314 | Why did they laugh? |
29314 | Why did we come into this heat- trap? |
29314 | Why do they fight and curse one another? |
29314 | Why do they not understand one another? |
29314 | Why should I not speak of it as simply and candidly? |
29314 | Why was it dug here, a hundred feet deep, although there are springs and streams of living water flowing down the valley, close at hand? |
29314 | Will the boats come out to meet us in this storm, or must we go on to Haifâ, fifty miles beyond? |
29314 | You fellows come from America? |
2024 | And what did you do then? |
2024 | And what do you think of the performance_ as_ a performance? |
2024 | And what shall I say after I have said all that? |
2024 | Any Hebrew or Chinese? |
2024 | Are you in bed? |
2024 | But what is the use of saying anything about it at all? |
2024 | Ca n''t we have our mugs open if we like? |
2024 | Come,he says, kindly, trying to lead me on,"what did you think about it?" |
2024 | Do you believe it can be done, then? |
2024 | Do you believe them-- the persons that you say tell you these tales? |
2024 | Does it_ get_ anywhere? |
2024 | Does the whole distance in two and a quarter hours? 2024 Gets to Heidelberg at 4?" |
2024 | Have you got an order, then? |
2024 | How am I going to sleep in that? |
2024 | How do you feel now? |
2024 | How is your mother? |
2024 | How will this do us? 2024 If that''s all these foreigners can manage in their own country, what right have they to come over here, as they do, and grumble about our weather?" |
2024 | Is not Friday rather an unlucky day to start on? |
2024 | Leige-- see the citadel? 2024 My dear fellow,"he rejoined,"do you think I should suggest paying if it were possible to get in by any other means? |
2024 | Please can you tell me,we would say,"the nearest way to the door of the third- class refreshment room?" |
2024 | Savoury? |
2024 | Sure? |
2024 | Well, then where are the clothes? |
2024 | What could have induced these old fellows,I said to B.,"to choose such very uninteresting subjects? |
2024 | What do you mean,''we sit with our mugs open''? |
2024 | What has that to do with you? |
2024 | What should I want to do that for? |
2024 | What''s the good of it to us, then? |
2024 | Why? |
2024 | Yes, but so has the gentleman whose seat you have taken got to get there,I remonstrated;"what about him? |
2024 | Yes,I say, looking over his shoulder;"but do n''t you see the 4 is in thick type? |
2024 | You did n''t throw it out of the window with your sandwiches, did you? |
2024 | ( Is it retribution?) |
2024 | ( The first thing that we ask of men is their faith:"What do you believe?" |
2024 | After all, what does it matter what I say? |
2024 | And whereabouts is this extraordinary theatre? |
2024 | Are you used to long railway journeys?" |
2024 | Berlin, Paris, Brussels, Copenhagen? |
2024 | Besides, if anyone has landed, where is he? |
2024 | But what do I want to say? |
2024 | Cologne, Antwerp, Calais? |
2024 | Could we not have bigger basins and more water and more extensive towels? |
2024 | Describe the funeral? |
2024 | Do n''t you see it''s printed in thick type? |
2024 | Do you see any objection to the play from a religious point of view?" |
2024 | Do you think I''m a fool?" |
2024 | Eliminating, by a strong effort, all traces of nervousness from his voice, he calls out in a tone of wonderful coolness:"Yes, what is it?" |
2024 | Frankfort for Strasburg? |
2024 | Have you any objection to my being English?" |
2024 | Have you him to see where? |
2024 | He said( in Scandinavian, of course):"You speak Norwegian?" |
2024 | He says:"Where''s the bed?" |
2024 | He smokes for a while in silence, and then, taking the pipe from his lips, he says:"Does it matter very much what you say about it?" |
2024 | Here?" |
2024 | Him to see-- anybody-- where?" |
2024 | How on earth were we ever to find each other again? |
2024 | I said:"My friend-- big, great, tall, large-- is he where? |
2024 | I said:"Who''s put me over here? |
2024 | I wonder why it goes round by Brussels, though? |
2024 | Is he where? |
2024 | Is she taking advantage of his being a lonely stranger, far from home and friends, to mock him? |
2024 | Leaves Darmstadt for Heidelberg 5.20, gets to--""That does n''t allow us much time for changing, does it?" |
2024 | Now, tell me, what part of Europe are you going to?" |
2024 | Nuremberg? |
2024 | Of what advantage will it be to us then that we smoked these cigars to- day?" |
2024 | PREFACE Said a friend of mine to me some months ago:"Well now, why do n''t you write a_ sensible_ book? |
2024 | Query, is n''t there a song about this? |
2024 | She said would we call again in about a fortnight''s time, when the family would be at home? |
2024 | We have just finished a light repast of-- what do you think? |
2024 | Well then, where does the 1.45 go to? |
2024 | Well, if it is the bed, then what is it doing out here, on the top of everything else? |
2024 | Well, where does it stop? |
2024 | What can I say that has not been said, and said much better, already? |
2024 | What can I say that the reader does not know, or that, not knowing, he cares to know? |
2024 | What can be expected from such a train? |
2024 | What do you think we are going to do-- camp out?" |
2024 | What does it matter what any of us says about anything? |
2024 | What does it want?" |
2024 | What earthly enjoyment was there in travelling-- being jolted about in stuffy trains, and overcharged at uncomfortable hotels? |
2024 | What had become of him? |
2024 | What is the German for savoury?" |
2024 | What is the use of people giving you advice if you do n''t take it?" |
2024 | When do you start?" |
2024 | Who did he expect was going to buy it? |
2024 | Why did n''t you call out before?" |
2024 | Why should I be a slave and work?" |
2024 | Will you come?" |
2024 | Wurtzburg? |
2024 | You do n''t know any Sanscrit or Chaldean, do you?" |
2024 | and helped the tale along by such ejaculations as,"No, did he though?" |
2024 | answers the station- master, surprised,"where did it come from?" |
2024 | he retorted quite sharply,"what rubbish next? |
2024 | on top?" |
2024 | or,"Was that on the Monday or the Tuesday, then?" |
2024 | the bed, is it? |
2024 | what''s this?" |
48788 | A foreigner? |
48788 | Are there other foreigners here? |
48788 | Are you speaking of Pragmatism? 48788 At billiards?" |
48788 | But I thought you had one year''s furlough every seven? |
48788 | But do n''t you want to see your daughter? |
48788 | But if it is so easy to write a play why do dramatists take so long about it? |
48788 | But what is your explanation? |
48788 | But what on earth makes you stay with the man? |
48788 | But what''s the grave for? |
48788 | But you, do you know what you are doing? |
48788 | Do n''t you think we might leave it till after luncheon? |
48788 | Do they know you''ve come here? |
48788 | Do you believe in fate? |
48788 | Do you care for a game of billiards? |
48788 | Do you know it was found within thirty miles of here, on this side of the Tibetan frontier? |
48788 | Do you know who that is? |
48788 | Do you like them better than paintings? |
48788 | Do you think so? 48788 Do you think so?" |
48788 | Do you think that is why I wear it? |
48788 | Do you? |
48788 | Does it require no more than that to write a play? |
48788 | Everything go off all right? |
48788 | For me? |
48788 | Found where? |
48788 | Have you not noticed that Ibsen uses the same plot over and over again? 48788 Have you read_ Les Avarià © s_?" |
48788 | Have you studied the modern developments of philosophy in America? |
48788 | He had lodgings with you? |
48788 | He''s priceless, is n''t he? |
48788 | Hulloa,he said,"where have you sprung from?" |
48788 | Hume and Berkeley? 48788 Is it not strange,"he said, with his charming smile,"that we Chinese wear this gown because three hundred years ago the Manchus were horsemen?" |
48788 | Nerve, eh? |
48788 | Nice looking fellow, eh? |
48788 | Roads to Freedom? 48788 Shall we say apartments then?" |
48788 | Tell me,I said,"do you believe God will condemn the Chinese to eternal punishment if they do n''t accept Christianity?" |
48788 | They do not go so far as to get out and let the nuns ride in their stead? |
48788 | Well,they said,"did you see the blighter shot?" |
48788 | Well? |
48788 | What are you having a grave dug for? |
48788 | What do you mean? |
48788 | What do you mean? |
48788 | What have you written? |
48788 | What is socialism? |
48788 | What is the reason for which you deem yourselves our betters? 48788 What is your name?" |
48788 | What the devil do you mean by that? 48788 What''s the good of going back to England?" |
48788 | What''s the young man like? |
48788 | When are you going home? |
48788 | When are you going on leave? |
48788 | Who the devil''s that for? |
48788 | Who was this anyway? |
48788 | Why,she asked,"do you English write such silly books about Russia?" |
48788 | Will these American students ever produce anything like this? |
48788 | Wo n''t you also give me a translation? |
48788 | Would you like that? |
48788 | _ Moi?_ Oh, in a day or two. |
48788 | ''But what about the sick?'' |
48788 | ''What is the name of the doctor in charge?'' |
48788 | ''When do they take their holidays then?'' |
48788 | Am I right or am I wrong?" |
48788 | And the string? |
48788 | And what will become of your superiority when the yellow man can make as good guns as the white and fire them as straight? |
48788 | But how can I analyse the subtle quality which distinguished this old man? |
48788 | Do you call yourself a Christian?" |
48788 | Do you know that we tried an experiment which is unique in the history of the world? |
48788 | Do you know what I did?" |
48788 | Do you not know that there are in this country four hundred millions of the most practical and industrious people in the world? |
48788 | Do you not know that we have a genius for mechanics? |
48788 | Do you think it will take us long to learn? |
48788 | England? |
48788 | Has our civilisation been less elaborate, less complicated, less refined than yours? |
48788 | Have our thinkers been less profound than yours? |
48788 | Have you excelled us in arts or letters? |
48788 | Have you seen the last one?" |
48788 | He was always ready to have a drink with you and no sooner was your glass empty than he was prompt with the China phrase:"Ready for the other half?" |
48788 | How long had the kingdom lasted and what tragedy marked its fall? |
48788 | I knew he was drunk, but I did not think he was very drunk, till he asked me suddenly:"What is democracy?" |
48788 | Shall I tell you? |
48788 | Shall we go into the drawing- room?" |
48788 | The moment he got back to his office he called to his number two:"I say, Peters, who''s dead, d''you know?" |
48788 | Then why does the white man despise the yellow? |
48788 | What bold adventurer was he who had penetrated so far towards the East to found a kingdom? |
48788 | What did he care about Shanghai? |
48788 | What did it matter what people thought? |
48788 | What did it mean? |
48788 | What in heaven''s name was to be done? |
48788 | When they had met that afternoon Dr. Saunders had exclaimed:"What on earth has brought you to the city at this time of year?" |
48788 | Why had he ever come? |
48788 | Why should he unless he were a missionary or a Chinese Secretary at the Legation? |
48788 | You could n''t have an hallucination twice, could you? |
48788 | Yü?" |
6818 | ''And the boys?'' 6818 ''Have you seen my journal- bag?'' |
6818 | ''What is the meaning of that, Billy?'' 6818 ''When?" |
6818 | And what,says the pessimist,"is the fly in all this precious ointment?" |
6818 | And you had it the spring before, too, did n''t you? |
6818 | Are you ill? |
6818 | Are you ready? |
6818 | Did n''t we come to shoot? |
6818 | Do you wish to tell me about it? |
6818 | Have you any pain? |
6818 | Hello, boys, what''s up? |
6818 | How are you fixed for whiskey? |
6818 | How did you get it? |
6818 | How long have you had that? |
6818 | Is n''t your husband kind to you? |
6818 | Is this your husband? |
6818 | Look at this, Jarvis,said I;"is n''t it a bad one? |
6818 | No,he replied,"I did n''t; there''s opium in those pills, is n''t there?" |
6818 | No? |
6818 | Preble, is there any reason why we should not push through this floe using poles to move the cakes? |
6818 | Was it a Cree or a missionary that first thought of it? |
6818 | Was it a native idea? |
6818 | What did we come for? |
6818 | What in the world is it? |
6818 | What is it? |
6818 | What is that Sousi? |
6818 | What? |
6818 | Where does it hurt now? |
6818 | Where is your lodge? |
6818 | Where? 6818 Who invented this?" |
6818 | Will he make choice of some prominent tree in view? |
6818 | Would you like something to ease that cough? |
6818 | You say you have n''t slept? |
6818 | About noon, when all had assembled at camp, I said:"Preble, why, is n''t this Lockhart''s River, at the western extremity of Aylmer Lake?" |
6818 | Am I really to see the Wild Buffalo on its native plains? |
6818 | And what is your name?" |
6818 | Are the Buffalo near? |
6818 | Are you ready?" |
6818 | Are you two still at it,"or,"How are you and your friend these times, Preble?" |
6818 | But why was it so far from the forest, 20 miles or more, and a couple of miles from this little grove that formed the last woods? |
6818 | CHAPTER XXXVIII THE FIRST WOODS How shall I set forth the feelings it stirred? |
6818 | Ca n''t you give him something to stop them? |
6818 | Can you get any linseed meal or bran?" |
6818 | Can you go with us as guide? |
6818 | Does not this readiness to assemble at a bait suggest a possible means of destroying them? |
6818 | Had n''t 1 any pepper- juice or brandy? |
6818 | Had they been too foolhardy in their struggle with the terrible stream? |
6818 | Had they, too, been made to feel its power? |
6818 | Have I not found for myself a kingdom and become a part of it? |
6818 | He never quivered, but said:"Is that all? |
6818 | He said nothing to me then, but later complained to Billy, asking,"What did we come for?" |
6818 | He seemed to be beating our march of victory, for were we not in triumph coming home? |
6818 | Here or in the south?" |
6818 | How are we to form an idea of their numbers? |
6818 | How could such a craft ride such a stream for 2,000 miles? |
6818 | How did it get the Chipmunk family without digging them out? |
6818 | How know? |
6818 | How long would it take to get them? |
6818 | How was it to be roasted at an open fire without continued vigilance? |
6818 | I looked from one to the other in doubt, and said:"Laquelle est la malade?" |
6818 | In its stomach was part of a sparrow( white- throat?) |
6818 | Is a man ever content with a single sip of joy long- dreamed of? |
6818 | Is this then the secret of its disappearance? |
6818 | It seemed they were full of fears:"What if they should get caught in that floe, and drift around for days? |
6818 | James Evans, Methodist missionary to the Crees on Lake Winnipeg?" |
6818 | Now what should we do? |
6818 | Ogushen, the Indian trapper at Lac des Quinze, found tracks of a large cat at that place in the fall of 1879(?). |
6818 | On Great Slave Lake you say,"Where are the Caribou?" |
6818 | One morning I heard a white voice outside asking,"Is the doctor in?" |
6818 | One morning when we were grown accustomed to this condition I said to Billy:"How is the meat?" |
6818 | Preble was preparing to portage them, but asked Weeso,"Can we run them?" |
6818 | Scurry back to the fort or go ahead and trust to luck? |
6818 | Seeing it was over, Preble says,"Now where does he go? |
6818 | So wore away the month, the last night came, a night of fireside joy at home( for was it not Hallowe''en? |
6818 | Then came the thought, Why despair while two matches remain? |
6818 | Then in a calm of the storm( which he continued to ignore) Pierre turned to me and said:"Why do n''t you go back and try the canoe route? |
6818 | To the Museum?" |
6818 | To what extent are they being destroyed? |
6818 | Was I content? |
6818 | We now had unlimited food as well as unlimited firewood; what more could any one ask? |
6818 | What a glorious sound of woods and life triumphant it seemed; and why did he drum at night? |
6818 | What if a wind should arise( it had been glassy calm for a week)? |
6818 | What if they could'', not get back?" |
6818 | What will be the ultimate history of this jamb? |
6818 | When one is in Texas the topic of conversation is,"How are the cattle?" |
6818 | Which are they? |
6818 | Why are they so scarce? |
6818 | Why is ice always thickest on the kettles? |
6818 | Why? |
6818 | Will it come? |
6818 | Women do n''t do that way in your country, do they?" |
6818 | You never saw blood- poisoning that colour, did you?" |
6818 | and in New York,"How are you getting on with your novel?" |
6818 | and is it on these far breeding grounds that man has proved too hard? |
6818 | in the Klondike,"How is your claim panning out?" |
6818 | who''s boss?'' |
44745 | Buffalo- steak or antelope? |
44745 | Has she blue eyes, my son? 44745 Have n''t we got the right of way?" |
44745 | Might I? |
44745 | Might I? |
44745 | Oh, no, not Jane, for she-- let me see-- she is waiting for me, is n''t she? |
44745 | Was Aaron Burr tall? |
44745 | What is it, Joe? |
44745 | What shall we do with her? |
44745 | You have n''t used that, have you? |
44745 | ? |
44745 | ? |
44745 | And did the train happen to be running on an Express train''s time, and did you make the flitting in the night? |
44745 | And the poet who so plaintively asked,"Where are the birds that sang An hundred years ago?" |
44745 | And what has become of the reaper, and Longfellow''s, and everybody else''s poetry about him? |
44745 | And what would a June be without roses? |
44745 | And who needs to be told whose footsteps they were that thus kept time with the feeble pattering of childhood''s little feet? |
44745 | And why not? |
44745 | Are people''s memories getting shorter? |
44745 | But the memory of that voyage is pleasant, after all-- after all_ what_? |
44745 | But they were only beginners, and when you asked a man perched upon a wagon- load of Sunnysides the price, he said,"How many, stranger?" |
44745 | But what can you do? |
44745 | But what mattered it all? |
44745 | But whatever you are, did you ever know a boy worth naming and owning who did not try to make a wheel out of a shingle, or a board, or a scrap of tin? |
44745 | But_ was_ it a disaster? |
44745 | By the way, did you ever know any part of a train to be struck by lightning? |
44745 | By- the- by, is the"available"aspirant for office always the cheapest? |
44745 | Can it possibly be of the race that Burns discovered upon the woman''s Sunday bonnet? |
44745 | Can the sleigh- bells''chime and the glittering nights and the laugh of young girls and the measure of old songs charm no more? |
44745 | Could n''t they be used to move an iron- mine from one country to another? |
44745 | Did the mere machinery of a dog''s life light them up so wonderfully, wistfully, sorrowfully? |
44745 | Did you ever lie on your back in the bottom of a shot- tower when they were raining lead? |
44745 | Did you ever ride on a snow- plow? |
44745 | Did you ever see a man who had not ridden a mile a minute, or who did not think he had? |
44745 | Did you ever see an icicle grow? |
44745 | Did you ever see the Bouncers? |
44745 | Did you ever tell anybody that the Locomotive is a familiar acquaintance of yours-- that you are on speaking terms with it? |
44745 | Do I look like a man who needs help for his perishing family? |
44745 | Do you remember the pretty pebbles you used to gather out of the beds of the brooks-- the notes of the sweet low tune they ran by? |
44745 | Do you think I would exchange that dear absurd old day for"the pomp and circumstance"of any later pageant? |
44745 | Does Sir John Franklin? |
44745 | Does anybody remember how Dr. Kendrick used to begin one of his old heart- of- oak sermons? |
44745 | Does_ any_body? |
44745 | Even the turkey has a merry- thought in its breast; and are we not better than a_ flock_ of turkeys? |
44745 | Had I not had the prize, and enjoyed it and shared it and bequeathed it? |
44745 | Has it ever happened to you to be left somewhere, and nothing to get away upon but a freight train? |
44745 | Has it stopped? |
44745 | Have you ever thought of taking up burglary for a livelihood? |
44745 | Have you never met a man who was a sort of_ diachylon_ plaster? |
44745 | He says,"Might I ask how far you are traveling? |
44745 | How about the world? |
44745 | How he towered up behind the low pulpit, like a Lombardy poplar behind a fence? |
44745 | How will it do to amend and let the mouthful of catechism run thus:"What are the precious metals? |
44745 | Is it not either the one extreme or the other? |
44745 | Is she living? |
44745 | Is there a needle or something in the cushion? |
44745 | Is there any becoming posture in public prayer between kneeling and standing? |
44745 | It was the only thing about the house perfectly safe from thieves and rust; for was it not of a truth a treasure laid up in heaven? |
44745 | Might I ask your name?" |
44745 | Might I inquire if you are married? |
44745 | Might I inquire what business you follow? |
44745 | Never? |
44745 | Now,"added the Doctor,"were the two acts alike, or did the hind legs of the quadruped kick out the brains of the intent?" |
44745 | See a picture, see a statue, see a poem, the question_ is_, How long did it take to do it? |
44745 | See that woman in gray? |
44745 | Shall I sing you a song, children?" |
44745 | Shall I sing you a song, or tell you a story? |
44745 | Shall I tell you why? |
44745 | Such as it was, can I ever forget it? |
44745 | The children with whom I joined hands and hearts are--_where_ are they? |
44745 | The pretty dining- room girl startles your left ear at breakfast with,"Buffalo- steak or antelope?" |
44745 | The? |
44745 | There are two things, two blessed doubts, that we know as little about as we ever did, to- wit: Who wrote the Letters of Junius? |
44745 | There used to be a question and answer in the old manuals of Chemistry that shut together like a pair of scissors:"What are the precious metals? |
44745 | There you have him, and_ is n''t_ he cool? |
44745 | Was Mary to be married, or Jane to be wrapped in a shroud? |
44745 | Was it a Persian pig, or some other, that offered a crown jewel for a new dish? |
44745 | Was not the one quite as easy to get as the other? |
44745 | Well, all I want of that doctor is that he shall solicit me once more, when I will say,"Insure? |
44745 | Well, then, my girl, was n''t one of your first ambitions a finger- ring? |
44745 | Were you ever a boy? |
44745 | Were you ever passenger on the Inarticulate Train? |
44745 | What gave those eyes their eloquence? |
44745 | What lacked he to entitle him to two names like a Christian, instead of one? |
44745 | What sort of a figure would Moses have cut with a silk hat, in the last years-- say the thirty- eighth of them-- of his Wilderness wanderings? |
44745 | What spell can we weave to bring them back again? |
44745 | What words can we unsay, what deeds undo, to set back, just this once, the ancient clock of time? |
44745 | What would Robinson Crusoe have done had he been an attorney? |
44745 | Where is your champion cradler, that went in with his skeleton fingers and laid out the grain becomingly, after a Christian fashion? |
44745 | Who drew you out in spite of yourself, and put you at your best, till you were not quite sure what he had been doing to you? |
44745 | Who knows that the ice and snow may not be piled up about the Arctic and Antarctic just to keep the flaming gudgeons as cool as possible? |
44745 | Who were aboard? |
44745 | Who would think,_ without_ thinking, that more than seventeen thousand song birds are annually sold in New York? |
44745 | Why not? |
44745 | Will not an engine pull more than its own weight? |
44745 | You faintly enquire"Where?" |
44745 | You know the man that always wants to go faster? |
44745 | You regard her in a dazed way, and ask"What?" |
44745 | _ Has_ the sparkle of life utterly vanished from the cup? |
44745 | _ Is_ a snow- plow a public conveyance? |
44745 | _ Is_ it a sin to take snuff? |
44745 | and Is there an open Polar Sea? |
6322 | How can those be trusted who know not how to blush? |
6322 | ), which is equally favourable to the plantain, the orange- tree, the coffee- tree, the apple, the apricot, and corn? |
6322 | *(* Is not the Cecropia concolor of Willdenouw a variety of the Cecropia peltata?) |
6322 | *(* Is this the Laurus cinnamomoides of Mutis? |
6322 | Are these pierced rocks hollowed out by the impulse of a current? |
6322 | As the first person is known by an u, the second is designated by an m, the third by an i; maz, thou art; muerepuec araquapemaz? |
6322 | But it may be asked, is the name Parias or Pariagotos, a name merely geographical? |
6322 | But what is the cause of the luminous phenomena which are observed in the Cuchivano? |
6322 | But why, after having knocked one of us down, was he satisfied with simply stealing a hat? |
6322 | Can it be said that the numbers of the Europeans do not extend beyond ten, because we stop after having formed a group of ten units? |
6322 | Can these flames be attributed to the decomposition of water, entering into contact with the pyrites dispersed through the schistose marl? |
6322 | Did motives supposed to be favourable to religion, give rise to this extraordinary theory? |
6322 | Do grottoes belong to every formation, or to that period only when organized beings began to people the surface of the globe? |
6322 | Do these animals come from the bottom of the sea, which is perhaps in these latitudes some thousand fathoms deep? |
6322 | Does its existence prove, that, at some very distant period, the Guanches had connexions with other nations originally from Asia? |
6322 | Does not this fact prove that the bread- fruit might flourish in Calabria, Sicily, and Granada? |
6322 | Does the basis fall on the outside of the curve that I assume?) |
6322 | Does the periodical recurrence of this great phenomenon depend upon the state of the atmosphere? |
6322 | Does this unknown cause act at an immense depth; or does this chemical action take place in secondary rocks lying on granite? |
6322 | Has its name any connexion with those of the cavern and the bird? |
6322 | How can we be expected to know completely the flora of so vast an extent of country? |
6322 | How can we conceive the migration of plants through regions now covered by the ocean? |
6322 | How has this tree been transplanted to Teneriffe, where it is by no means common? |
6322 | In what manner ought we to consider the effect of the friction, or that of the shock? |
6322 | Is it a slight augmentation of temperature which favours the phosphorescence? |
6322 | Is it in fact a reflected or a direct light? |
6322 | Is the atmospheric constitution changed? |
6322 | Is this formation of the same date as that of Punta Araya and Cumana? |
6322 | May there not be in this place some sunken volcanic islet, more easterly still than Barbadoes?) |
6322 | May we believe the existence of those blue eyes of the Boroas of Chile and Guayanas of Uruguay; represented to us as nations of the race of Odin? |
6322 | Must it on this account be admitted, that the Caribbees are an entirely distinct race? |
6322 | Must we admit that emanations which reflect white light, and seem to have some analogy with the tails of comets, are less abundant at certain periods? |
6322 | Should we conclude from this position that they are of more recent formation than the lithoid basaltic lava, which contains olivine and augite? |
6322 | The phalaena which produces it is probably analogous with that of the provinces of Gua[? |
6322 | Was it built by the Romans on the ruins of a Greek or Phoenician edifice? |
6322 | Was this extraordinary refrigeration owing to some descending current? |
6322 | Was this kind of head- dress taken for a turban? |
6322 | We ask at Teneriffe what is become of the Guanches, whose mummies alone, buried in caverns, have escaped destruction? |
6322 | We chose, instead of the direct road, that by the mountains of the Cocollar*(* Is this name of Indian origin? |
6322 | We inquire at the isle of Cuba, at St. Domingo, and in Jamaica, where is the abode of the primitive inhabitants of those countries? |
6322 | Were they albinos, such as have been found heretofore in the isthmus of Panama? |
6322 | Were they of the same race as those Indians of a less tawny hue, whom M. Bonpland and myself saw at Esmeralda, near the sources of the Orinoco? |
6322 | What are the duties of humanity, national honour, or the laws of their country, to men stimulated by the speculations of sordid interest? |
6322 | What becomes of those precious stones, which are sought for at the extremities of the globe? |
6322 | What is the substance, which, for thousands of years, keeps up this combustion, sometimes so slow, and at other times so active? |
6322 | Why do the historians of the sixteenth century affirm that the first navigators saw white men with fair hair at the promontory of Paria? |
6322 | Why is the Iron Tower called in the country by the name of Hercules? |
6322 | ], e finel[? |
6322 | and that it is difficult for him to establish among them a governador, an alcalde, or a fiscal, who may serve him as an interpreter? |
6322 | and that the Guaraons and the Tamanacs, whose languages have an affinity with the Caribbee, have no bond of relationship with them? |
6322 | in that land where nature has covered every mountain and every valley with her marvels? |
6322 | or do they make distant voyages in shoals? |
6322 | or is it inflamed hydrogen that issues from the cavern of Cuchivano? |
6322 | or is it that a new form of disease develops itself among individuals whose susceptibility is highly increased? |
6322 | or is this last of Spanish origin? |
6322 | or upon something which the atmosphere receives from without, while the earth advances in the ecliptic? |
6322 | why art thou sad? |
5891 | A relief? |
5891 | Do you get much rubber round here? |
5891 | Get up, you lazy scamps,is the next exclamation, followed almost immediately by the question,"Why has not this man been buried?" |
5891 | Hatsi soko:--"Who are you?" |
5891 | Have you any tobacco? |
5891 | Hi, hi, do n''t you hear? 5891 How are we going to get through that way?" |
5891 | How long does a palaver usually take to talk round here? |
5891 | Ke Soko?'' |
5891 | N''est- ce pas? |
5891 | No got one, ma? |
5891 | Was I a wife of them Move white man,they inquired--"or them other white man?" |
5891 | What for good him ting for We country, Cappy? 5891 What for good him ting, Cappy?" |
5891 | What if I ca n''t help it? |
5891 | What''s the news? |
5891 | What? |
5891 | What? |
5891 | Where be your husband, ma? |
5891 | Where them Black Man Misery? |
5891 | Where them Black boy live? |
5891 | Where them Smiles? |
5891 | Where''s John Holt''s factory? |
5891 | Where''s the Agent? |
5891 | Why not take the native in the rear, Mademoiselle,said he,"and convert the native gods?" |
5891 | Why you no got one? |
5891 | Why? |
5891 | Why? |
5891 | Yes, do you not see that until it shows there is nothing but forest, forest, forest, and that still stretch of river? 5891 You be Christian, ma?" |
5891 | You kill? |
5891 | You no sabe him clock you done sell me? |
5891 | All of us save one, need I say that one was myself? |
5891 | But repose is not long allowed to that active spirit; he sees something in the water-- what? |
5891 | Captain Verdier exceedingly pleasant and constantly saying"N''est- ce pas?" |
5891 | Cook does not feel these forest charms, and gives me notice after an hour''s experience of mountain forest- belt work; what cook would not? |
5891 | Did you know poor B---? |
5891 | Does any one who knows them feel inclined to tell me that those old palm- oil chiefs have not learnt a thing or two during their lives? |
5891 | Drawbacks, you say? |
5891 | Exit from saloon-- silence-- then:"You sabe five o''clock? |
5891 | Exit-- silence-- then:"You sabe half- past five o''clock? |
5891 | Fearing my two Agents would fight and damage each other, so that neither would be any good for me, I firmly said,"Have you got any rum?" |
5891 | For an hour and a half thought I, Why did I come to Africa, or why, having come, did I not know when I was well off and stay in Glass? |
5891 | He did not answer, and his father said,''Do you wish me to kill a goat?'' |
5891 | He did not answer; his father said,''Do you wish me to give you new wives?'' |
5891 | How can a fish possess land?" |
5891 | How in the world is any one going to take a bath in a house with no doors, and only very sketchy wooden window- shutters? |
5891 | How would you feel? |
5891 | I said,"Why in the world do you throw away in the bush the bodies of your dead slaves? |
5891 | I said,"Why not stay for bush?" |
5891 | I wonder what they will be like when we are up in their home; up atop of that precious wall? |
5891 | I wonder whether the rocks or the trees were there first? |
5891 | Is it? |
5891 | Kefalla soon arrives upon the scene full of argument,"You no sabe this be Sunday, Ma?" |
5891 | Obanjo who had all the time suspected me of having trade motives, artfully said,"What for you come across from Ogowe? |
5891 | Of course the first question was, Why was I there? |
5891 | One important point that you must remember is that the African is logically right in his answer to such a question as"You have not cleaned this lamp?" |
5891 | Surely you have not forgotten your old friend?" |
5891 | The Governor is thus liable to be cut off at any moment in the middle of a conversation with Clarence, and the amount of"Hellos""Are you there s?" |
5891 | The only question is: Do I individually come under this class? |
5891 | The sun which rises and sets, the moon which changes, the tides which come and go:--what do they care? |
5891 | Then came the inquiry,"If a man is not a thief?" |
5891 | Then his father said,''Do you want me to build you a fetish hut?'' |
5891 | Then orders to avoid the night air are still more difficult to obey-- may I ask how you are to do without air from 6.30 P.M. to 6.30 A.M.? |
5891 | Then you say where''s my trade?" |
5891 | This last is evidently a very heavy accusation, but Kefalla says,"What can a man buy with money better than them thing he like best?" |
5891 | This used to be the sort of thing--"Where them Nettlerash lib?" |
5891 | Understand? |
5891 | We did not receive him even civilly; I burst out laughing, and the boys went off in a roar, and we shouted at him,"Where them chop?" |
5891 | Well, we always have been, and they will say it anyhow; and where after all is the harm in it? |
5891 | Well, yes, but where are there not drawbacks? |
5891 | Whatever can this be? |
5891 | When white man blow dat ting and pussin sleep he kin tap wah make dem bwoy carn do so? |
5891 | Where on earth am I to go? |
5891 | Who cares for hotels now? |
5891 | Why do you not make it with something finer?" |
5891 | Would you take the sardines or the pocket- handkerchiefs? |
5891 | You may say, Why not bring home these things in their raw state? |
5891 | You white men will say,"Why go on believing in him then?" |
5891 | but where''s Agonjo? |
5891 | or that a well- matured bush trader has not? |
5891 | or what other air there is but night air, heavy with malarious exhalations, available then? |
5891 | very good as far as it goes, but where is your real estate? |
39718 | A shark? |
39718 | Ah, yes, how did they know? |
39718 | At the time? |
39718 | But how could they know New Zealand was there? |
39718 | Can you tell me anything of the action? |
39718 | Do you believe it is true? |
39718 | Had they compasses? |
39718 | Have you noticed a tree covered in spider webs during a fog? 39718 Have you seen the devil?" |
39718 | Supernatural? |
39718 | Tell us, friend, did you find it on the other side as you had preached? |
39718 | The Maoris had a fair wind then? |
39718 | Well, did you perceive resemblance? |
39718 | Well, did you, for example, see Christ? |
39718 | What bird is it? |
39718 | What do you mean? |
39718 | What have we to do,they say,"with these old historical quarrels which are hardly intelligible to us? |
39718 | What is this ribald nonsense? |
39718 | What''s psychic? 39718 Where did it come from?" |
39718 | Who are you, friend? |
39718 | Why not? |
39718 | You mean fairies and things? |
39718 | You''re sure it was Sir Oliver? |
39718 | ''Who''s that?'' |
39718 | Above all, how did the birds get into the carefully- guarded seance room, especially as Bailey was put in a bag during the proceedings? |
39718 | After all, how much education had the apostles? |
39718 | After all, if enemies are given full play, why should not friends redress the balance? |
39718 | Among other remarkable advertisements was one"What has become of''Pelorus Jack''? |
39718 | And the others? |
39718 | Are they not the pools left behind by that terrible tide? |
39718 | But after all, what''s the odds? |
39718 | But how can anyone win through? |
39718 | But what has a materialist to say to the whole story? |
39718 | But what have Spiritualists had in the main save misrepresentation and persecution? |
39718 | But what of Silesia and of Poland now? |
39718 | But why should I abandon one faith in order to embrace another one? |
39718 | Can a man with a moderate capital get a share of these good things? |
39718 | Can any prophecy be more accurate or better authenticated than that? |
39718 | Can such phrases really mean anything to any thoughtful man? |
39718 | Can they not see that if they grant us one- tenth, they grant us our whole contention? |
39718 | Do they think what they are saying, or does Faith atrophy some part of the brain? |
39718 | Does anyone import Indian nests? |
39718 | Does anyone import queer little tortoises with long, thin necks? |
39718 | Granting that they are Jewish forgeries, how do they get into the country? |
39718 | Had Germany obeyed the moral law would she not now be great and flourishing, instead of the ruin which we see? |
39718 | Has France ever had the credit she deserves for the splendid faith with which she followed that great beneficent genius Lesseps in his wonderful work? |
39718 | Have you ever seen Olver Lodge, sir?" |
39718 | He answered,"Was it not in''_ Light_''office in London?" |
39718 | His words to the sick woman,"Who has touched me? |
39718 | How can a man fail to be earnest then? |
39718 | How can the bulk of the people ever get into touch with a good medium if they are debarred from doing so in the ordinary way of business? |
39718 | How can they hope with their feeble hands to clear the ground? |
39718 | How could the motor- car or the aeroplane have been developed if hundreds had not been ready to give their lives to pay the price? |
39718 | How long has the Aryan race to run? |
39718 | How many cases are on record of the strange changes and wild deeds of individuals? |
39718 | How many of us have, for example, seen the rings of Saturn? |
39718 | How then can any church progress when all its leaders are over that age? |
39718 | I ask again: What is this ribald nonsense?" |
39718 | I have seen three pictures of his,"The Goths,""Who Comes?" |
39718 | I suppose that on such a voyage one should rest and do nothing, but how difficult it is to do nothing, and can it be restful to do what is difficult? |
39718 | I wonder from what heights that old fellow had fallen before he brought up against the public house wall? |
39718 | If He be with us, who is against us? |
39718 | If here and there one had a new idea, how could it survive the pressure of the others? |
39718 | If not, why continue them? |
39718 | If so, what is your charges? |
39718 | If the whole transaction is normal, then where does he get them? |
39718 | If these articles can be got in any normal way, then what is the way? |
39718 | If they are not genuine, where do they come from? |
39718 | Is it possible that under some conditions a mineral may change into a metal? |
39718 | Is not valour the basis of all character, and where shall we find greater valour than theirs? |
39718 | Is there a depot for Turkish copper coins in Australia? |
39718 | Is there at the present moment one single bishop, or one head of a Free Church, who has the first idea of psychic truth? |
39718 | Is there such evidence? |
39718 | The man dies, and then where are these experiments? |
39718 | Then what about 100 Babylonian tablets, with legible inscriptions in Assyrian, some of them cylindrical, with long histories upon them? |
39718 | Then why were they playing tricks upon themselves? |
39718 | Was colonisation to be abandoned, or were these brave savages to be overcome? |
39718 | Was ever such an object lesson in sin and its consequence placed before the world? |
39718 | Was he a lost soul?" |
39718 | Was it fraud? |
39718 | Was it not spirituality? |
39718 | Well, who knows? |
39718 | What are these among so many? |
39718 | What are we to make of such a mixture? |
39718 | What are we to say to that? |
39718 | What did Hippocrates mean when he said,"The affections suffered by the body the soul sees with shut eyes?" |
39718 | What direct proof have we of most of the great facts of Science? |
39718 | What is he up to now?" |
39718 | What is it?" |
39718 | What right had such a man to die, he who had more vim and passion, and knowledge of varied life than the very best of us? |
39718 | What view will the coming Labour governments of Britain take of our Imperial commitments? |
39718 | What was wanting in you to bring you to such a pass? |
39718 | What would not Galileo and all the old untravelled astronomers have given to have one glimpse of this wondrous Southern display? |
39718 | When they speared the cattle of the settlers what were the settlers to do? |
39718 | Where''s that little boy?" |
39718 | Which is better-- that a race be free, immoral and incompetent, or that it be forced into morality and prosperity? |
39718 | Who else could have drawn such fine detail and yet so broad and philosophic a picture? |
39718 | Who loses except themselves? |
39718 | Why do I not see it all the time? |
39718 | Why should anyone invent such a thing, putting an actual name to the person? |
39718 | Why should quartz always be the matrix? |
39718 | Would a hundred million pounds cover the cost of that one? |
8586 | A what? |
8586 | Am I the-- pardon me, I believe I do not understand? |
8586 | And can I take him up the shore and hang him as soon as you are done? |
8586 | Are you comfortable? |
8586 | Certainly he did; but you are not thinking of hanging him without a trial? |
8586 | Could you wait a little? |
8586 | Dead before? 8586 Did n''t I say I was going to hang him? |
8586 | Have you formed or expressed opinions about it? |
8586 | Have you held conversations upon the subject? |
8586 | Have you read the newspaper accounts of it? |
8586 | How? 8586 How? |
8586 | How? |
8586 | Never shook his mother? |
8586 | Not people of any repute? |
8586 | Oh, you do? 8586 On it? |
8586 | Scooped him? |
8586 | The which? |
8586 | Thrown up the sponge? |
8586 | Well, but why should he shake her? |
8586 | What did I understand you to say? |
8586 | What do you want aboard this ship? |
8586 | What''s this for? |
8586 | Why? 8586 A good man, says you? 8586 And ai n''t they cool about it, too? 8586 Are there no hay wagons in from the Truckee? 8586 Are you going to hang him any how-- and try him afterward? |
8586 | Assist at the obsequies?" |
8586 | Begin again?" |
8586 | But did n''t he kill the nigger?" |
8586 | But why go on? |
8586 | Can not you simplify them in some way? |
8586 | Could you say it over once more, and say it slow?" |
8586 | Did n''t he kill the nigger?" |
8586 | Do you reckon a man has got as many lives as a cat? |
8586 | Great Neptune, ai n''t he guilty? |
8586 | Had deceased any religious convictions? |
8586 | He said:"Do you see that ship there at the dock?" |
8586 | How long will it take?" |
8586 | I had been a private secretary, a silver miner and a silver mill operative, and amounted to less than nothing in each, and now-- What to do next? |
8586 | I said:"Higbie, what-- what is it?" |
8586 | If an unknown individual arrived, they did not inquire if he was capable, honest, industrious, but-- had he killed his man? |
8586 | If his Sunday- school class progressed faster than the other classes, was it matter for wonder? |
8586 | It''s a kind of a hard world, after all, ai n''t it? |
8586 | Ned said:"Who goes there?" |
8586 | Now if we can get you to help plant him--""Preach the funeral discourse? |
8586 | On what?" |
8586 | Presently a head appeared in the circle of daylight away aloft, and a voice came down:"Are you all set?" |
8586 | Said Col. Jack:"Ai n''t it gay, though? |
8586 | See?" |
8586 | That is to say, did he feel a dependence upon, or acknowledge allegiance to a higher power?" |
8586 | Then he talked an earnest, persuasive sermon to him, and ended by repeating the question:"Did you kill the nigger?" |
8586 | Then in a whisper to Col. Jim:"But ai n''t these New Yorkers friendly? |
8586 | Then to Col. Jim, with a sounding slap on his thigh:"Ai n''t it style, though? |
8586 | What I was a drivin''at, was, that he never throwed off on his mother--don''t you see? |
8586 | What could the world do without juries? |
8586 | What did I understand you to say?" |
8586 | What do I want to try him for, if he killed the nigger?" |
8586 | What else could one expect? |
8586 | What to do next? |
8586 | What would the boys say if they could see us cutting a swell like this in New York? |
8586 | What''ll you take-- the old thing?" |
8586 | What''s the difference? |
8586 | Where are you going?" |
8586 | Why could not the jury law be so altered as to give men of brains and honesty and equal chance with fools and miscreants? |
8586 | Why did you not say so before? |
8586 | Why, has he ever been dead before?" |
8586 | Why? |
8586 | Yes, you see he''s dead again--""Again? |
8586 | You killed the nigger?" |
8586 | You see, one of the boys has gone up the flume--""Gone where?" |
49039 | An''what does he say? |
49039 | An''what''s he doing now? |
49039 | And do you know who I am? |
49039 | But will it work? |
49039 | How far is it to Willow Spring? |
49039 | How much do you charge? |
49039 | I say, boys,cried Charley,"is n''t this-- ugh-- worth going to California for?" |
49039 | Quantos ligos a Managua? |
49039 | Quantos reales? |
49039 | Roast turkey and plum pudding,answer half a dozen voices,"do n''t you wish you could get some?" |
49039 | Si, mañaña.--"Frijoles?" |
49039 | Si, pan.--"Milk?" |
49039 | Sixty- one days,was the ready and self- satisfied answer;"how long have you?" |
49039 | That''s what made the river rise? |
49039 | There,said he, as I dipped my iron spoon into the shallow tin plate he had provided,"what do you say to that?" |
49039 | There; do n''t you see? |
49039 | Well, Capting, how much has us got to- night? |
49039 | Well, John,asked one, with as much sympathy as could be expected to remain in his oblivious stomach,"how do you feel this morning?" |
49039 | Well, boys,cried our democratic president,"and what shall we do now?" |
49039 | Well, doctor, and how much have you made? |
49039 | What are you doing there? |
49039 | What do yer see-- a whale? |
49039 | What do you say to once a week? |
49039 | What in the d---- are you making such a hullabaloo for, at this time o''night? |
49039 | What name? |
49039 | What they got for dinner? |
49039 | What''s the cap''n doing? |
49039 | What''s the matter? 49039 Where do you wish to go?" |
49039 | Who knows,I said to myself,"but that we may have, before long, to resort to the same expedient?" |
49039 | Women-- yes; but where are the children? |
49039 | Yes, me save; do_ you_ save? |
49039 | You save? |
49039 | --"Cinquo reales por uno?" |
49039 | A thousand dollars is a good deal, I know, to give for a machine; but what of that? |
49039 | But our hombre, instead of stopping, as we expected, held straight on his course, and to our impatient inquiries,"What place is this? |
49039 | But the Burke rocker? |
49039 | But where shall I go? |
49039 | But would it prove a failure? |
49039 | Could it be that the hollow was so deep, or had it,--and I trembled at the thought,--fallen so short a distance as to make no noise? |
49039 | Every change of wind was watched with intense anxiety, and"How''s she head?" |
49039 | Every sigh is a book of Ecclesiastes, and is there any other philosophy like his? |
49039 | For why? |
49039 | Here women and boys seated behind rude tables kept up an incessant cry to attract the attention of some loitering Californian,"Comprar oránges? |
49039 | I vash schmoked myself mit a pipe, and tinking I vished I vash at home, and Hans, I say, you ish von great fool; why you do n''t go home? |
49039 | Is it because it is so far off? |
49039 | Let me see: what is this? |
49039 | Not love to be clean? |
49039 | Sampson the Hoosier or Who za? |
49039 | Shall those rose- coloured recollections, with wings softer than the softest cloud, ever cease to rise in my soul? |
49039 | Tape?" |
49039 | The end when will that be? |
49039 | The mosquitoes were as thick as, what shall I say? |
49039 | The pies would hardly have passed muster with Aunt Chloe;"they were pies sartin, but then what kind o''crust?" |
49039 | The salutations and inquiries usual on such occasions were followed by the never- failing invitation,"Well, boys, what''ill you take to drink?" |
49039 | There are other countries equally distant equally valueless and in the same ocean but they contain no gold; why then I say should California? |
49039 | There are places a plenty now but in fifty years or ten who can tell that there wo n''t be a hundred thousand trampling over my grave? |
49039 | There is no gold in New York-- why should there be any in California? |
49039 | Was it for this that I had braved the hardships of a six months''voyage and the sickness and toil of two years in the mines? |
49039 | Was it for this that I had spoilt forever the beauty of my hands and the delicacy of my complexion? |
49039 | Wash that off and what is there but a withered wrinkled old hag? |
49039 | What have we here? |
49039 | What was that railroad train the other day at Norwalk but a train of hearses a great funeral procession? |
49039 | Where am I? |
49039 | Where is Managua?" |
49039 | Where is my life? |
49039 | Wherever I turned, I was headed off by the ugly question,"If you do n''t go to Ford''s Bar, where_ will_ you go?" |
49039 | Who is there to mourn for Logan? |
49039 | Who would not, for such reward, endure the discomforts of a four months''voyage, even though every week should be like the first? |
49039 | Why in the world was n''t he sick during the voyage when he had nothing else to do? |
49039 | [_ He lays down the paper with a cold shudder._] Who said I was old? |
49039 | _ You_ think I''m drunk?" |
49039 | a man or a fish? |
49039 | and shall I ever grow too old for thee? |
49039 | and who can tell what it will be? |
49039 | bueno?" |
49039 | but where are the mourners? |
49039 | but who''d have thought of ever seeing a swing in California?" |
49039 | comprar lemona? |
49039 | cry to be washed? |
49039 | dead or alive? |
49039 | do the stars miss one of their number? |
49039 | gallina."--"Pan?" |
49039 | how? |
49039 | huevos."--"Gallina?" |
49039 | is that you?" |
49039 | is the ship sinking?" |
49039 | or because it is good for nothing else? |
49039 | or because it lies on the Pacific? |
49039 | or why not wait till he got home when he could have things comfortable about him? |
49039 | piped he, innocently,"is this Sunday? |
49039 | quantos horas?" |
49039 | quantos reales?" |
49039 | repeated the doctor,"Jerusha, do n''t I wish I had some?" |
49039 | said I, in affected surprise, for I really did n''t suppose the poor fellow had any more notion of religion than a Hottentot,"do you work Sunday?" |
49039 | says Jimmy, and"How much to a sheer?" |
49039 | so sudden and effectual in its operations? |
49039 | that dives down so deep to the very root of pride and self- laudation? |
49039 | the soup is all gone"--"can''t help it; it''s all there is"--"give me a mug, I say"--"what the d---- do you call this?" |
49039 | ven all to vunst, I see te pull put ish head in his tail, and come like von vat you call him? |
49039 | when?" |
49039 | where? |
49039 | who was that talking about being buried? |
49039 | who would give thirty dollars to secure you a quiet sleep? |
49039 | will its ashes reach their sphere? |
49039 | wo n''t that make''em stare?" |
49039 | yes,"we replied coldly, for we considered it a duty to dash his enthusiasm somewhat,"that is very fair certainly, but is there any more dirt like it?" |
8479 | ''A dark and dreadful one?'' |
8479 | ''Account for it? |
8479 | ''And the boy knew it?'' |
8479 | ''And what''s the other?'' |
8479 | ''Brothers,''said the leader,''has never any one of you, when fasting, dreamed of some friendly spirit who would aid you as a guardian?'' |
8479 | ''Dashed who in pieces-- her parents?'' |
8479 | ''Do you still travel with it?'' |
8479 | ''Everything about what?'' |
8479 | ''Have n''t you the least idea?'' |
8479 | ''How do you account for it?'' |
8479 | ''How is that?'' |
8479 | ''Is that so?'' |
8479 | ''Is that so?'' |
8479 | ''No, indeed,''said one of the others,''do you not know we were all killed, and that it is our sister who has brought us to life?'' |
8479 | ''Very drunk?'' |
8479 | ''Well, what are they?'' |
8479 | ''Well,''said I,''if you are so light- hearted and jolly in ordinary times, what must you be in an epidemic?'' |
8479 | ''Which one?'' |
8479 | ''Who is a great manito?'' |
8479 | ''Why did n''t you see them Roman soldiers that stood back there in a rank, and sometimes marched in procession around the stage?'' |
8479 | ''Wish you may die in your tracks if you have?'' |
8479 | A citizen asked,''Do you remember when Jimmy Finn, the town drunkard, was burned to death in the calaboose?'' |
8479 | And above Winona you''ll have lovely prairies; and then come the Thousand Islands, too beautiful for anything; green? |
8479 | And what did the husband do? |
8479 | And what will become of you? |
8479 | Are you happy? |
8479 | At last he said in a low voice--''My little friend, can you keep a secret?'' |
8479 | But what can you do? |
8479 | Do all the good people go to your place? |
8479 | Do all whom you send from Hartford serve their Master as well? |
8479 | Do n''t it occur to you, why?'' |
8479 | Do you know how the man came to be burned up in the calaboose?'' |
8479 | How can I give what I would have done with so much pleasure? |
8479 | How do you amuse yourself? |
8479 | How is that? |
8479 | How long have you been in the spirit land? |
8479 | I asked him various questions; first about a mate of mine in Sunday school-- what became of him? |
8479 | I do n''t mean HIS act, I mean yours: would you be a murderer for letting him have that pistol?'' |
8479 | I met him on the street the next morning, and before I could speak, he asked--''Did you see me?'' |
8479 | I said, with admiration--''Why, how in the world did you ever guess it?'' |
8479 | I said--''What is the matter?'' |
8479 | Is n''t that a good deal of a triumph? |
8479 | Is not this true? |
8479 | Is she the maiden of the rock?--and are the two connected by legend?'' |
8479 | Is there much profit on a coffin?'' |
8479 | Now, is that boy a murderer, do you think?'' |
8479 | Presently he asked--''Are you going to give him up to the law?'' |
8479 | Quick-- out with it-- what did I say?'' |
8479 | Some talk followed--''Why-- what should make you suspect that it is n''t genuine?'' |
8479 | The burden of my thought was, How much did I divulge? |
8479 | The chief, looking around, and observing the woman, after some time said to the man who came with her:''Who have you got there? |
8479 | The man was drunk?'' |
8479 | Then this one has actually forgotten the date of its translation to the spirit land? |
8479 | To- day I heard a schoolmistress ask,''Where is John gone?'' |
8479 | Unhandkerchiefs one eye, bats it around tearfully over the stock; says--''"And fhat might ye ask for that wan?" |
8479 | Very well, then, when did you pass away? |
8479 | Well, then, what year was it? |
8479 | Well, when you come to look at it all around, and chew at it and think it over, do n''t it just bang anything you ever heard of?'' |
8479 | Well, would it be murder?'' |
8479 | What became of Winona?'' |
8479 | What do you drink? |
8479 | What do you eat there? |
8479 | What do you read? |
8479 | What do you smoke? |
8479 | What do you talk about? |
8479 | What else? |
8479 | What is it?'' |
8479 | What was to be done''? |
8479 | When did the r disappear from Southern speech, and how did it come to disappear? |
8479 | When did you die? |
8479 | When your friends in the earth all get to the spirit land, what shall you have to talk about then?--nothing but about how happy you all are? |
8479 | Where are you? |
8479 | Where did you get all this youth and bubbling cheerfulness? |
8479 | Why? |
8479 | Would you like to come back? |
8479 | Would you say that under oath? |
8479 | You hear gentlemen say,''Where have you been at?'' |
8479 | in this town?'' |
8479 | profit? |
8479 | who can this be he is leading us to?'' |
8479 | who is a manito? |
12380 | But are you sure he said the first turn to the left? |
12380 | But you would not call them things of beauty? |
12380 | Did they ever find out what became of Morgan? |
12380 | Dobbin, dear old secretive Dobbin, what difference does it make to you whether you feel the guiding hand or not? 12380 Is it yours?" |
12380 | Is this the road to--? |
12380 | Sambo,called out a bystander, making fun of the old darkey,"do you know what you are looking at?" |
12380 | Say, Joe, you''re jokin'',--hev you really got one? |
12380 | Then you do n''t believe in the divine ratio of sixteen to one? |
12380 | Then you judge a sect by its buildings? |
12380 | War that your''n, Joe? |
12380 | What are your impressions of the man? |
12380 | What do they call it, Sambo? |
12380 | What do you know about love- making, Professor? |
12380 | What do you take us fer? |
12380 | What''r given us? |
12380 | What''r ye down t''the stashun fur this hur o''day, Joe? |
12380 | Where''d that feller cum frum with his steam pianer,--Syr''cuse? |
12380 | Who was Miller? |
12380 | Why ar''n''t you? |
12380 | You are a Democrat? |
12380 | You would not class them with the Dowieites? |
12380 | Already the question is commonly asked when a farm is offered for sale or rent,"Is it on a State road?" |
12380 | And if we never really see or know or understand the nature which is about us, how is it possible that we should ever comprehend the people we meet? |
12380 | And why not? |
12380 | And why should not these things be? |
12380 | Are they from other worlds, exiled for a time to this, or are they souls revisiting their former habitation? |
12380 | Are we destined to know each other better by and by, or does our knowledge forever end with what we see on a cloudless night? |
12380 | As he disappeared in the rear we heard his rotund voice,"What''ll you take? |
12380 | Ay, ay; but is''t a breach of the peace? |
12380 | But could n''t I contrive to have a little right on my side? |
12380 | But was it not the Exposition we had come to see? |
12380 | But, then, who knows what any one else thinks or means? |
12380 | Can a man commit a more heinous offence against another than to frighten him? |
12380 | Can the imagination picture existence more inane? |
12380 | Can you fix it?" |
12380 | Compared with these traces of giant handiwork, what are the works of man? |
12380 | Did you ever meet him?" |
12380 | Dim, distant, beacons of suns and planets like our own, what manner of life do they contain? |
12380 | Do I exercise the faith in the divine care and protection which I ought to do? |
12380 | Do I not withhold more than is meet from pious and charitable uses? |
12380 | Do they not fly by night? |
12380 | Do you think Verges, or my little Dogberry ever inquired where the right lay? |
12380 | Does it mean to run it so as not to frighten a man of nerve like the chief of police, or some timid person? |
12380 | Further debate would end the strife; the one query,"Why?" |
12380 | Have I done well to get me a shay? |
12380 | Have I not been proud or too fond of this convenience? |
12380 | If the beau beaus and the baron barons, is not the feminine cup of happiness filled to overflowing? |
12380 | In building automobiles for America or Australia, the only pertinent question is,"What are the roads of America or Australia?" |
12380 | In dry weather,"Is there any deep, soft sand, and are there any sand hills?" |
12380 | In wet weather the last question will be,"Is the road clayey or bottomless anywhere?" |
12380 | Is he immortal, and if immortal whence came he and whither does he go? |
12380 | Is it not our intention to produce or modify motion in this inferior body before us?" |
12380 | Is not the crowd multitude always with us-- or against us? |
12380 | Is there any medium of communication beyond the impalpable ether which brings their light? |
12380 | Is there aught between us beyond the mechanical laws of repulsion and attraction? |
12380 | Lost his life!--who knows? |
12380 | Mechanics has been defined as the application of pure mathematics to produce or modify motion in inferior bodies; what could be more apt? |
12380 | No problems confront them; the everlasting query,"What shall we do to- morrow?" |
12380 | No, foh sure?--dis mawning?--you doan say so; that jes''beats me; to think I live to see a thing like that; it''s a reg''lar steam- engine, ai nt it?" |
12380 | Now can you tell me why the people of Fremont celebrate the second of August?" |
12380 | Now, who shall decide? |
12380 | Poor unknown Britisher, exiled from home, what did he know about the merits of the controversy? |
12380 | Rye? |
12380 | Sandy Beard.--Then you know what is to be done? |
12380 | Sandy Beard.--Why to be sure; what can I mean else? |
12380 | Should I not be more in my study and less fond of diversion? |
12380 | Suppose each had been given then and there the sixty cents he afterwards received and duly receipted for, would it have saved time and trouble? |
12380 | The Professor peered benignly over his glasses at the boy and continued kindly but firmly:"Now, my boy, do you go to school?" |
12380 | The smile fades from the lips, the hollow compliment dies on the tongue, for how is it possible to pretend in the presence of those who know? |
12380 | The spark,--is it there? |
12380 | The two problems of existence are, Whom shall I recognize? |
12380 | Therefore, why should not the preacher go and take the children? |
12380 | Therein lurks the germ of anarchism,--for if evil, why should governments be necessary? |
12380 | We see a town ahead; calling to a man by the roadside,--"What place is that?" |
12380 | What did he care? |
12380 | What is detrimental to public travel? |
12380 | What is the use of serving good wine? |
12380 | What is the use of struggling with the obstacle of a foreign tongue, when our own will not suffice for the communication of thoughts? |
12380 | What is the use of trying to know an Englishman or a Frenchman when we do not know an American? |
12380 | What seems to be the matter?" |
12380 | When did he start?" |
12380 | When we stopped for water, we casually asked a small patriot,--"What are you celebrating?" |
12380 | Where shall I be then? |
12380 | Who can tell what we have in mind when we talk of life? |
12380 | Who is to hold the scale and decide? |
12380 | Who knows? |
12380 | Who would recognize classic Menotomy in the tinsel ring of Arlington? |
12380 | Why do the people come in a week and go in a day? |
12380 | Why should not the sun and the moon and the stars be immortal,--as immortal in their way as we in ours, both immortal in the one all- pervading soul? |
12380 | Why should we exchange the glories of the land we live in for the footworn and sight- worn, the thumbed and fingered beauties of other lands? |
12380 | an''did n''t I hole de hose when you put de watah in? |
12380 | and are not Expositions proverbially expensive-- to promoters and stockholders as well as visitors? |
12380 | and when it is decided, who is to enforce the decision by imposing the authority of the community upon the individual? |
12380 | and, Who will recognize me? |
12380 | are they not children of space? |
12380 | broke axle-- telegraphed-- how many-- four more-- you do n''t say so?-- what''s his name? |
12380 | did not nature in moments of play rear those hills and carve out those distant mountains? |
12380 | glad to see you; whar you come from dis time? |
12380 | if immortal, whence come these new souls which are being delivered on the face of the globe at the rate of nearly a hundred a minute? |
12380 | raise for nine? |
12380 | what are they to us? |
12380 | what are we to them? |
12380 | what''s that, Joe? |
12380 | why do n''t you drive faster?" |
12380 | you heah agen? |
47177 | And is n''t he cunning? |
47177 | And is this one of the water streets you have told us about? |
47177 | And what do you suppose the boys and girls were like in those days? |
47177 | And why did we climb onto this steamer''way out here in the deep water? |
47177 | And why do they wear such odd, pretty clothes? |
47177 | And would I? |
47177 | Are we going to climb Mount Vesuvius? |
47177 | But what_ are_ we going to do, mother? |
47177 | But when are we going to Pompeii to see where all these things were found, father? |
47177 | But why did n''t this boat come to the shore and get us? |
47177 | But will he really stop it? |
47177 | But, Antonio, why did the people want to build a city''way out here in the water? 47177 Did the Italians make it?" |
47177 | Did those men know you wanted to go on this steamer? |
47177 | Did you ever see a street like that in America? |
47177 | Do n''t you like it? |
47177 | Do n''t you like to hear old stories? |
47177 | Do you hear that queer, bubbling noise, Molly? 47177 Do you know what that man on the corner is doing?" |
47177 | Do you suppose that woman is her mother? 47177 Do you suppose they will come out and steal us if we take a picture of their gorge? |
47177 | Does n''t he like to play and to kick with his feet? 47177 Have we really been''way down under that deep water, father?" |
47177 | How did the monks ever build such a great monastery''way up here on the mountain side? |
47177 | How shall we get down to the water''s edge? |
47177 | How shall we get there? 47177 How was such a great cave ever made under this island?" |
47177 | How would you like to drive to a restaurant near by and have one of our nice tea parties? |
47177 | How would you like to take a look under the deep water and see all the strange creatures that live there? |
47177 | Is it brimful of good things to eat? |
47177 | Is it fairyland, or is it heaven? |
47177 | Is it really the roof of the cathedral? |
47177 | Is n''t it strange to think that those trees and farms may be growing on top of an old, old city? |
47177 | Is our boat sinking? 47177 Is that the secret, father?" |
47177 | Is the story really true, father? |
47177 | Is the world going to burn up? 47177 Is the world going to burn up?" |
47177 | Is this Switzerland, father? |
47177 | Is this great church named for St. Peter whom we read about in the Bible? |
47177 | Is this the door into the long, dark tunnel? 47177 It was fun, was n''t it?" |
47177 | May we drive out to see you some day? |
47177 | Must we go over those mountains, father, or can we go through them? |
47177 | O father, may we get out and walk a little way up the street? |
47177 | Oh, what is it? 47177 Oh, where is it?" |
47177 | Or are we just dreaming? |
47177 | Or was it just a fish museum that we were in? |
47177 | Please ca n''t we go somewhere else? 47177 Please may we both ride?" |
47177 | Please may we drive first through the Spanish Piazza and buy some more flowers? |
47177 | Shall we climb up there? |
47177 | Well, children, are you ready for the secret? |
47177 | Well, how would you like to go shopping on an old, old bridge which crosses the river Arno? |
47177 | Well, shall we buy our dinner here, or shall we go to the hotel for it? |
47177 | Well, would n''t you like to hear an old story about some twin boys? 47177 Well,"said their mother,"how would you like to have a picnic dinner to- day?" |
47177 | Were they really, truly fairies? |
47177 | What are we going to do? 47177 What can it be?" |
47177 | What can we buy on a bridge? |
47177 | What is the trouble? |
47177 | What shall we do to- day, father? |
47177 | What would happen if a big storm came up while we were in here? |
47177 | Where are his little feet? |
47177 | Where do you live?? 47177 Where do you live?? |
47177 | Where do you suppose they all come from? 47177 Why are the people waiting on those great stone steps?" |
47177 | Why have n''t we seen one before, and what does it do with so many legs? |
47177 | Why is he tied up so tightly? |
47177 | Why is it called an octopus, father? |
47177 | Why is she doing that, father? |
47177 | Why, that is the Italian name for Mary, is n''t it? 47177 Will you please let me sell your roses for you? |
47177 | Would n''t you like some snail soup, or macaroni, or onions for dinner? |
47177 | Would you rather have come up these stairs on a donkey? |
47177 | Would you really like to have us send it to you when it is finished? |
47177 | _]How far out on the water will the train go?" |
47177 | A fishing village in that dark place, Pippo?" |
47177 | And while I tell the story, would n''t you like to sit near the place where the boys were supposed to have grown up?" |
47177 | Are these boats gondolas?" |
47177 | As they glided along under the arch of a low bridge, May asked,"How can your water streets always look so clean, Antonio? |
47177 | But how can we do it?" |
47177 | But why do they build stairs out of doors?" |
47177 | Do n''t people ever throw things into them?" |
47177 | Do you keep all of your dishes on the walls?" |
47177 | Do you suppose it is snowing at home to- day? |
47177 | Have these men come to rescue us, father? |
47177 | How did you like it?" |
47177 | How much are they?" |
47177 | If she is there, father, may we ask her to drive in the park with us?" |
47177 | Is it here in Rome?" |
47177 | Is n''t he having a good time?" |
47177 | Is n''t it lovely?" |
47177 | Is n''t she lovely? |
47177 | Is that the only door into her house?" |
47177 | Is that the ship that I must stop?" |
47177 | Is there a bridge under us? |
47177 | Is this a volcano?" |
47177 | It is a really and truly sun parlor, is n''t it, mother?" |
47177 | May we buy some of those lovely cherry blossoms?" |
47177 | May we have them? |
47177 | May we have them?" |
47177 | Now are you ready to do something almost as hard as climbing a mountain?" |
47177 | Please may we ride next?" |
47177 | Please, ca n''t we hurry?" |
47177 | Shall we open it and take a look into the fish world?" |
47177 | That is only a few cents, is n''t it? |
47177 | The shore is much too steep for us to land here, is n''t it?" |
47177 | What are we going to see?" |
47177 | What do you suppose he is going to do?" |
47177 | What do you suppose it is?" |
47177 | What if the volcano should boil over while we are on it?" |
47177 | What is it, father?" |
47177 | What is it, father?" |
47177 | What is she saying, Antonio?" |
47177 | What is the surprise, mother?" |
47177 | Where are we going?" |
47177 | Where are we? |
47177 | Where are we? |
47177 | Where are you going?" |
47177 | Who wants some grape juice and some little cakes?" |
47177 | Who wants to drive in the park again to- day?" |
47177 | Who wants to try it?" |
47177 | Who will be ready first?" |
47177 | Why did n''t they stay on the land?" |
47177 | Will our train sink?" |
47177 | Will the fish talk with us, the same as the rabbit and all the other animals talked with Alice?" |
47177 | Will you come with me to- day?" |
47177 | Would I look as beautiful as that if I should swim in this water?" |
47177 | Would the little girls like to ride on our donkeys?" |
47177 | Would you like to buy him?" |
47177 | Would you like to take a look underneath it? |
47177 | Would you like to watch him have his bath?" |
47177 | [ Illustration: The Story of the Twins][ Illustration] THE STORY OF THE TWINS"Shall we visit the very oldest part of the city to- day?" |
47177 | [ Illustration:"_ Is n''t she lovely?_"]"See, she is running down the steps with a tall jar on her head. |
47177 | [ Illustration:_ May shook the reins and away they went_]"And please may I drive the goats?" |
47177 | [ Illustration:_ The drops of water were like strings of lovely opals_]"But what makes them look so strange and lovely in this grotto?" |
47177 | [ Illustration:_ They saw beautiful arches and tall marble columns_]"When are you going to tell us the story, father?" |
47177 | [ Illustration:_"Would the little girls like to ride on our donkeys? |
47177 | [ Illustration]"Is the picnic basket ready, mother?" |
47177 | [ Illustration][ Illustration: A Long Drive][ Illustration] A LONG DRIVE"What''s the secret for to- day, mother?" |
47177 | [ Illustration][ Illustration: The Humpbacked Island][ Illustration] THE HUMPBACKED ISLAND"Where are we going, father?" |
43549 | And how long will he remain there? |
43549 | Are you all Ladakis? |
43549 | But is it not possible that the prisoner may speak to the monk who pushes the_ tsamba_ dish into the loophole? 43549 But what happens if he is ill? |
43549 | But who are you? |
43549 | But why? 43549 Did I not tell you that I was not going to Khotan by the ordinary route, but by roundabout ways which would demand at least two months?" |
43549 | Did you not promise to give me the black horse in exchange for butter? 43549 Does the Sahib remember me?" |
43549 | Does the road cross over high passes? |
43549 | Has he relations? |
43549 | Has that ever happened? |
43549 | How long has he lived in the darkness? |
43549 | How old is he? |
43549 | Is it not beautiful? |
43549 | Is it not just as wrong to kill sheep and eat their flesh? |
43549 | Is not our country hard and terrible to live in? 43549 May he never come out again into the daylight before his death?" |
43549 | Tell us, Bombo Chimbo, is it you, with your glass and measuring instruments, that is keeping back the rain this year? 43549 Then he must have enough light to read by?" |
43549 | What are the names of the others? |
43549 | What colour is he? |
43549 | What does Lobsang think? |
43549 | What horse is that? |
43549 | What if we have to stay here till the lake freezes over, four months hence? |
43549 | What is it? |
43549 | What is the name of the lama who is now walled up in this cell? |
43549 | What is to be done? 43549 What is to be done?" |
43549 | What man is that? |
43549 | What would you do if I quietly disappeared one night? 43549 Whence have you come?" |
43549 | Where does the lake lie? |
43549 | Where has he come from? |
43549 | Where have you come from? |
43549 | Which of you is my cook? |
43549 | Who is the caravan bashi? |
43549 | Why do you weep? |
43549 | You are then eleven men altogether-- three Lamaists and eight Mohammedans? |
43549 | You never know, then, how he is? |
43549 | You will perhaps allow two of my own servants to carry a letter from me to Gyangtse? |
43549 | And he thinks:"What is a short earthly life in darkness compared to the glorious light of eternity?" |
43549 | And if we tried to slink through to Rudok and thence make eastwards? |
43549 | And then? |
43549 | Are you mad? |
43549 | Are you well armed?" |
43549 | But does he clearly conceive what this means? |
43549 | But how much water flows to the lake by underground passages which we could not measure? |
43549 | But how would that be possible? |
43549 | But tell me why you have come back again? |
43549 | But would it be prudent to advance further into Nepal? |
43549 | Can not he get help?" |
43549 | Did I not tell you expressly to take barley for 2½ months?" |
43549 | Did it actually exist? |
43549 | Did you not obey my orders? |
43549 | Does he not hear what we are saying, or, at least, that some one is talking outside his den?" |
43549 | Every time I write in my diary"the first,"I wonder what the new month holds in its lap-- new discoveries or new disappointments? |
43549 | Had I not already brought about Hlaje Tsering''s fall, and would I cause the new Governor of Naktsang to meet the same fate? |
43549 | Had he gone quite off his head? |
43549 | Had he got lost, or was he a scout sent out to see if the ice were broken up on the lakes to the north? |
43549 | Had you not enough last year, when you were obliged to leave the country by the road to Ladak? |
43549 | Had, perchance, the horses strayed away? |
43549 | Has the Gossul monastery been changed by some whim of the gods into an air- ship which is bearing us away to another planet? |
43549 | Have you brought me a message?" |
43549 | He had 2500 rupees with him; had he decamped, or had he been robbed? |
43549 | He said himself that he would crawl to Shyok, but how was he to get across the river? |
43549 | Here you have me again; what do you mean to do with me?" |
43549 | How far would this snow extend? |
43549 | How has it been produced, since the lake is quite peaceful? |
43549 | How have you found the way? |
43549 | How is that possible, and why are you come?" |
43549 | How seldom are all these conditions fulfilled? |
43549 | How was this to be done? |
43549 | How would it all end? |
43549 | I clapped him on the shoulder, saying,"Do you know me again, Pemba Tsering?" |
43549 | I could not avoid Rawling''s and Deasy''s country, but what did it matter? |
43549 | In Turkestan one simply encamps when a storm comes on, but what is the use of encamping to await the end of a storm which lasts thirty days? |
43549 | In a corner surely waves a Swedish flag? |
43549 | Is June to be reckoned among the winter months? |
43549 | Is not the Bombo Chimbo''s country( India) better?" |
43549 | It is very kind of you to say so, but would it not be better if you were to love your own country a little more? |
43549 | Late at night two horsemen rode past our camp; the watchmen called out"Who''s there?" |
43549 | May I hear which way you really wish to take?" |
43549 | Mundang is marked on the English maps of Nepal, but who was Lo Gapu,"the King of the Southern Land"? |
43549 | Nothing could be done with the leather waistcoat and the fur coat; they would not be dry by night, but what did it matter? |
43549 | On the morning of May 27 the weather was really fine after a minimum of only 23 °; had the spring come at last? |
43549 | Or what did I mean? |
43549 | Shall we leave it on the right or left? |
43549 | Shall we turn back? |
43549 | Should I never cross the Trans- Himalaya again? |
43549 | Should we be able to cross it with our little caravan? |
43549 | Should we be successful, and be able to complete this exceedingly important meridional traverse through an unknown part of Tibet? |
43549 | Should we succeed, or should we be forced back when we had traversed only half the distance across the blank space? |
43549 | Should we try to make a road along which the animals could be helped over the blocks by the united strength of the men? |
43549 | Should we venture in our little canvas boat on the lake, exposed to all the winds? |
43549 | Should we venture to creep along the shore southwards so as to reach a point opposite the camp? |
43549 | Stags''horns are set up on a_ mani_ heap; where do they come from? |
43549 | Then the thought shot through my mind:"Is the boat moored securely? |
43549 | Was it now the turn of the men after half the caravan had been lost? |
43549 | Was it one of the men who had been drowned in the winter? |
43549 | We are a little beyond the promontory; would it not be better to turn back? |
43549 | We are certainly past the early days of August, but is it possible that autumn is already beginning? |
43549 | We see the boat filling slowly-- shall we reach the bank before it sinks? |
43549 | Were the dogs keeping together, or were they seeking us along different paths, having lost each other? |
43549 | Were they afraid of us or were they suspicious? |
43549 | Were they spies? |
43549 | Were we hurt at all, and would we come up into the monastery and spend the night in their warm rooms? |
43549 | What could the Tibetans be thinking of? |
43549 | What did they want? |
43549 | What do you mean to do then?" |
43549 | What has become of the earth, if all is sky and clouds? |
43549 | What if I went down into Nepal and came back again into Tibet by unguarded roads? |
43549 | What if we went through the Chang- chenmo valley to Pamzal and the Lanak- la? |
43549 | What in the world did this mean? |
43549 | What is the use of looking forward to spring when the days are darker as time goes on? |
43549 | What is your occupation?" |
43549 | What news?" |
43549 | What shall we do then? |
43549 | What would she do when night came down with its dreadful darkness and its prowling wolves? |
43549 | What would they say, what would they do, if we were drowned like cats in this raging lake? |
43549 | Where are the others?" |
43549 | Where was she? |
43549 | Which was more expedient-- to travel north- east or south- west? |
43549 | Who was he? |
43549 | Why do you ask the names of the valleys?" |
43549 | Why had we not started an hour earlier, instead of watching the religious ablutions of the Hindus? |
43549 | Why have you come back again?" |
43549 | Why have you travelled in winter? |
43549 | Why is the beautiful view concealed and the daylight excluded? |
43549 | Why then do you travel by this dangerous side route? |
43549 | Will you agree to accompany me to Kamba Tsenam''s tent, four days''journey from here? |
43549 | Will you instead have the kindness to follow us to Semoku by the Tsango, on the_ tasam_, which is only two days''journey to the south- west? |
43549 | Would he keep his word? |
43549 | what was she doing at this moment? |
36962 | Mr. Roberts-- After you reached the station and found the trunk, what did you and the committee do regarding the instruments? 36962 Mr. Roberts-- That is, in the baggage- room of the station? |
36962 | Mr. Roberts-- Was any test of those instruments made by any member of the committee to ascertain whether or not the instruments were inaccurate? 36962 Mr. Roberts-- Were the instruments all taken out? |
36962 | Mr. Roberts-- Your trunk? 36962 What does it all mean?" |
36962 | What the devil is it all about? |
36962 | 1961, pages 21 and 22):"Mr. Roberts-- How did the instruments come down? |
36962 | And why does black burn snow when white does not? |
36962 | And, furthermore, why had Mr. Peary told no one on his ship of his own success until he neared Battle Harbor? |
36962 | Are we any farther along than were those who put Columbus in chains and stoned the Prophets and nailed the Christ to the Cross? |
36962 | Are we at the point where even an impartial investigation can not be had into the controversy as to who discovered the North Pole? |
36962 | Are we like the crazy base ball fan who cheers a pitching hero when he wins and insults him with all kinds of vile epithets when he loses? |
36962 | Are we so engrossed in the material things that all questions of honor are of no concern to us? |
36962 | As the long, tedious marches were made, I asked myself the questions: Why is snow white? |
36962 | But are such men dependable experts? |
36962 | But if Mr. Peary must question me, why did he stoop to the hypocrisy of doing it through others? |
36962 | But is not the obliteration of a geographic name for money a kind of geographic larceny? |
36962 | But were they carefully examined by the august body who so eagerly decided he reached the Pole? |
36962 | But what about the image of the sun upon the artificial horizon? |
36962 | But what could we do without either dogs or rifles? |
36962 | But why did he suppress the information which Captain Adams''letter contained? |
36962 | But why was the negative faked? |
36962 | CAN THE GOVERNMENT ESCAPE THE RESPONSIBILITY? |
36962 | Can it be doubted that the Peary- Parker- Brown propaganda of hypocrisy and dishonor in Alaska is guided by no other spirit than that of Mr. Peary? |
36962 | Could I sit down and invent observations? |
36962 | Could a pedestrian make such speed? |
36962 | Could we blame him? |
36962 | Could we cross the dreadful river on the morrow? |
36962 | Could we not profit by their superb scenting instinct and find the blow- holes? |
36962 | Did I actually reach the North Pole? |
36962 | Did the Peary interests have any control over the American press or its sources of news distribution? |
36962 | Do honest men, believing in themselves, besmirch their own honor by deliberate lying? |
36962 | Do honest men, with honest intentions, buy perjured documents? |
36962 | Does that look as if I tried to hoax the world for sordid gain, as my enemies would like the public to believe? |
36962 | Had I gone through 30,000 square miles of land? |
36962 | Had we a knife to spare? |
36962 | Had we not a similar necessity? |
36962 | Has Mr. Peary reached that point? |
36962 | Has the press lied, or has Bartlett lied? |
36962 | How could we get it? |
36962 | How did he come by them? |
36962 | How, with Peary thousands of miles away, hundreds of miles from the most northerly wireless station, did he sense the amazing feat? |
36962 | I felt( as what young man does not?) |
36962 | If Dr. Cook has discovered the North Pole, are we acting the part of fellow countrymen by shirking our duty? |
36962 | If I had planned to deceive the world for money, is it reasonable to believe I should have thrown away huge sums for this simple show of courtesy? |
36962 | If Mr. Peary knew this, why did he not bring them? |
36962 | If he is an honest man, why did he stoop to this dishonesty? |
36962 | If not, how does it happen that Professor Gore is in possession of this faked, forged, and perjured stuff? |
36962 | If so, then in all fairness, should we not share in his trials and tribulations? |
36962 | If this was so in Peary''s belief, why did he not bring them back? |
36962 | Is Mr. Bridgman a psychic medium? |
36962 | Is a retired Admiral less important in the eyes of the world than the Lieutenant- Governor of Illinois, or has the"old tar"taken an immunity bath? |
36962 | Is any other clarifier or any other evidence required to prove the pro- Peary frauds? |
36962 | Is it a matter of no concern whether or not the North Pole has been discovered? |
36962 | Is it not, therefore, our duty as a Nation to dispel the cloud of contention resting over the glory of Polar attainment? |
36962 | Is it reasonable to suppose that Mr. Peary did not know of this? |
36962 | Is there any one sure shoulder upon which we can hang the mantle of polar conquest? |
36962 | Is there any positive proof for a problem of this kind? |
36962 | Is this verdict based upon either science or justice, or honor? |
36962 | My appearance was such that I was not surprised by the governor''s question:"Have you any lice on you?" |
36962 | Now what were the facts? |
36962 | Now, what are Polar ethics? |
36962 | Or might the black space not hopelessly widen during the night? |
36962 | Share his honors? |
36962 | Should our school children be taught that Peary discovered the Pole if Dr. Cook was there first? |
36962 | Should we fail now, after our long endurance, now, when the goal was so near? |
36962 | The time nears to get a peep of the sun at noon, but what is local noon? |
36962 | Then shall we believe anything further from them? |
36962 | These charges have remained unanswered for three years-- Why? |
36962 | Under the circumstances has not the President been made the recipient of stolen goods? |
36962 | Was I competent to take observations? |
36962 | Was President Taft speaking for the American people when he called Dr. Cook''s achievement the pride of all Americans? |
36962 | Was this under Mr. Peary''s instructions? |
36962 | Were he and Peary in telepathic communication? |
36962 | Were we ready to share Cook''s joys? |
36962 | What could we do to keep the springs of life from snapping in such a world of despair? |
36962 | What did I hope to gain? |
36962 | What humbug has this club and its shameless president next to offer? |
36962 | What is its name? |
36962 | What is our fate? |
36962 | What right had Mr. Peary to take these things? |
36962 | What was the mysterious occupation of Mr. Peary? |
36962 | What were the relations between Dunkle and Loose, Peary''s friends, the New York_ Times_, and the National Geographic Society? |
36962 | What were we to do with the faithful dog survivors? |
36962 | What would be our fate here? |
36962 | What, I asked myself, was to be our fate now? |
36962 | What, if successful, did I expect to reap as the result of my dreams? |
36962 | Where could I go to get rest from it all? |
36962 | Where is the negative? |
36962 | Where, I asked in desperation, were we to obtain subsistence for that last thirty days? |
36962 | Who are the thieves who congregate there to deposit their booty? |
36962 | Who discovered the North Pole? |
36962 | Who had the power to grant a license to seek the Pole? |
36962 | Who is responsible for the death of this group of innocent wild folk? |
36962 | Who is responsible for these deaths? |
36962 | Who is responsible for this humbug? |
36962 | Who, or what, could it be? |
36962 | Why all this agitation? |
36962 | Why did I desire so ardently to reach the North Pole? |
36962 | Why did he bury it?" |
36962 | Why did he not strike? |
36962 | Why does he have them? |
36962 | Why does nature, in the dog, expend its best effort in growing the finest fur over a seemingly useless line of tail bones? |
36962 | Why has Mr. Peary never been asked to explain his miraculous speed and the discrepancy between his statement and Henson''s? |
36962 | Why has Mr. Peary suppressed this important information? |
36962 | Why has it been refused? |
36962 | Why has it been suppressed? |
36962 | Why is the sky blue? |
36962 | Why not? |
36962 | Why should I be interviewed? |
36962 | Why the theft of a part of my book? |
36962 | Why was the Adams letter suppressed, when it was charged that I had told no one? |
36962 | Why was the news to Mr. Peary''s liking given, while that which he did not like was ignored? |
36962 | Why was this fact ignored? |
36962 | Why was this omitted? |
36962 | Why was this? |
36962 | Why were conveniently lost with him certain data that might disprove Peary''s case? |
36962 | Why, I asked, has the dog a tail at all? |
36962 | Why, he further asked, had I not taken reputable witnesses with me on such a trip? |
36962 | Why, may we ask, should a Government official be muzzled with a bid for commercial gain? |
36962 | Why? |
36962 | Why? |
36962 | Why? |
36962 | Why? |
36962 | Will we shirk when he calls upon his countrymen for a square deal? |
36962 | Will you close these dark chamber doings to the light of justice? |
36962 | Will you endorse it? |
36962 | With all conditions in my favor, might I not, by one powerful effort, achieve the thing that had haunted me for years? |
36962 | With this letter in his pocket, why did Mr. Peary say that no one had been told? |
36962 | Would I see them? |
36962 | Would a man of Marvin''s experience and intelligence neglect such a precaution? |
36962 | Would the ice bear us? |
36962 | Would the ice freeze? |
36962 | Would the"too- loo- ah"go to Eskimo Lands and deliver their messages? |
36962 | Would we not get her a few boxes of matches in exchange for a narwhal tusk? |
36962 | Would we not place ourselves at ease and stay for a day or two, as their husbands would soon return? |
7014 | What would these animals eat, if we did not pass this way? |
7014 | Why,says Aristotle in his curious book of Problems,"why is sound better heard during the night? |
7014 | *(* Does this formation of secondary limestone of the Llanos contain galena? |
7014 | *(* Que le han parecido los zancudos de noche? |
7014 | Are storms the effect of this unequal charge of the different superincumbent strata of air? |
7014 | Are there any gold- washings more to the south, toward the Uaupe, on the Iquiare( Iguiari, Iguari), and on the Yurubesh( Yurubach, Urubaxi)? |
7014 | Are these animals fatigued by long flight? |
7014 | Are these cetacea peculiar to the great rivers of South America, like the manatee, which, according to Cuvier, is also a fresh water cetaceous animal? |
7014 | Are these pure waters produced by condensed vapours?) |
7014 | Are they led thither by female turtles, which adopt the young as by chance? |
7014 | Are they the remains of islets in the midst of an inland sea, that covered the flat ground between the Sierra Parime and the Parecis mountains? |
7014 | Besides, does not this problem reduce itself to the simple question, whether the salt be owing to new or very ancient inundations? |
7014 | But what can we conclude from simple terminations which are most frequently foreign to the roots? |
7014 | But what is this root Teo? |
7014 | But where shall we find the names of Yurubesh and Iquiare, given by the Fathers Acunha and Fritz? |
7014 | By what accident has our Rosa centifolia become wild in this country, while we nowhere found it in the Andes of Quito and Peru? |
7014 | Cacao: Cacavua*(* Has this word been introduced from a communication with Europeans? |
7014 | Can it really be the rose- tree of our garden?) |
7014 | Can we admit that so many alternating rocks, imbedded one in the other, have a common origin? |
7014 | Como stamos hoy de mosquitos?) |
7014 | Did nations farther advanced in civilization descend from the mountains of Truxillo and Merido to the plains of the Rio Apure? |
7014 | Did the course of the waters direct her way? |
7014 | Did the word chellal penetrate with the Moors into the west of Africa? |
7014 | Did we see in fact the internodes( parts between the knots) of a gramen of the tribe of nastoides? |
7014 | Do the neighbouring rocks of mica- slate and gneiss contain veins? |
7014 | Does it belong to the trap- formation of Parapara? |
7014 | Does not the impulse of the air against the elastic spangles of mica that intercept the crevices, contribute to modify the sounds? |
7014 | Does the Amazon- stone come from the rocks of euphotide, which form the last member of the series of primitive rocks? |
7014 | Does the word cannibal, applied to the Caribs of the West India Islands, belong to the language of this archipelago( that of Haiti)? |
7014 | Does this ground, composed probably of primitive rocks, like that which I examined more to the east, contain disseminated gold? |
7014 | Dost thou know what sort of life they lead here? |
7014 | He asserts that he observed[ sometimes?] |
7014 | How are we to account for this singular course in the development of knowledge? |
7014 | How are we to- day for the mosquitos? |
7014 | How can we account for these contrasts between the temperate and the torrid zone? |
7014 | How can we explain the origin of the sulphuretted hydrogen? |
7014 | How can we imagine domestic happiness in so unequal an association? |
7014 | How have the unlearned inhabitants of one hemisphere become cognizant of a fact which, in the other, so long escaped the sagacity of the scientific? |
7014 | How then do the tortuguillos find these pools? |
7014 | If the jaguar were not pressed by hunger, why did it approach the children at all? |
7014 | Is it of the same formation as that of Guire, on the coast of Paria, which contains sulphur? |
7014 | Is there an action propagated through the great aerial ocean from the temperate zone towards the tropics? |
7014 | Is there any authenticated instance of a dog having recognized a full length picture of his master? |
7014 | Is this a hunter''s tale, or a fact that has really been observed? |
7014 | Is this difference caused by the position of the electric organ, which is not double in the gymnoti? |
7014 | Is this diminution more rapid now than in former ages? |
7014 | Is this phenomenon independent of the nature of the rocks? |
7014 | Is this predilection founded on the facility with which the savage procures ochreous earths, or the colouring fecula of anato and of chica? |
7014 | Is this sulphuretted hydrogen mixed with a great proportion of carbonic acid or atmospheric air? |
7014 | May not the mosquitos themselves increase the insalubrity of the atmosphere? |
7014 | May we suppose that there are some trees with flowers purely monoecious, mingled with others furnished with hermaphrodite flowers? |
7014 | Of what nature is the milk of mushrooms?) |
7014 | Salutations were made heretofore in the Celestial empire in the following words, vou- to- hou, Have you been incommoded in the night by the serpents? |
7014 | Should we not spell this word matpara? |
7014 | The Urubaxi, or Hyurubaxi( Yurubesh), falls into the Rio Negro near Santa Isabella; the Iguari( Iquiare?) |
7014 | The puchery, or pichurim, which is grated like nutmeg, differs from another aromatic fruit( a laurel?) |
7014 | We were surprised at not hearing thunder; but possibly this was owing to the prodigious height of the storm? |
7014 | What are the causes of the diminution of the waters of the lake? |
7014 | What can be the cause of this increased intensity of sound, in a desert where nothing seems to interrupt the silence of nature? |
7014 | What idea can we form of the action of the water, which produces a deposit, or a change of colour, so extraordinary? |
7014 | What is it that causes the want of homogeneity in the vertical strata of the atmosphere to disappear instantaneously?) |
7014 | What is the cause of these alternations of motion and rest? |
7014 | What is the monocotyledonous plant* that furnishes these admirable reeds? |
7014 | What is this brownish black crust, which gives these rocks, when they have a globular form, the appearance of meteoric stones? |
7014 | What must have been the state of those low countries of Guiana that now undergo the effects of annual inundations? |
7014 | What must we conclude from this narration of the old missionary of Encaramada? |
7014 | What name shall we give to these majestic plants? |
7014 | What prevents the electricity from descending towards the earth, in air which becomes more humid after the month of March? |
7014 | What then are the causes of this rupture of the equilibrium in the electric tension of the air? |
7014 | When two persons meet in the morning, the first questions they address to each other are: How did you find the zancudos during the night? |
7014 | Why did we find no river white near its springs, and black in the lower part of its course? |
7014 | Why do so many naked natives paint only the face, though living in the neighbourhood of those who paint the whole body? |
7014 | Why does it not fill that vast space that reaches as far as the Cordillera of the coast, and which is fertilized by numerous rivers? |
7014 | Why does not the great forest of the Orinoco extend to the north, on the left bank of that river? |
7014 | Why may there not be an alluvial auriferous soil to the east of the Cordilleras, as there is to the west, in the Sonoro, at Choco, and at Barbacoas? |
7014 | of this commencement and duration of the rainy seasons? |
7014 | of this continual condensation of the vapours into water? |
7014 | of this interruption of the breezes? |
7014 | or did they come from the south by the Rio Topayos, which descends from the vast table- land of the Campos Parecis? |
7014 | or have these walls of rock, these turrets of granite, been upheaved by the elastic forces that still act in the interior of our planet? |
7014 | or may this carex be perhaps a cyperaceous plant* destitute of knots? |
7014 | or must we admit that they go up from the sea against the current, as the beluga sometimes does in the rivers of Asia? |
7014 | or must we seek for it in an idiom of Florida, which some traditions indicate as the first country of the Caribs?) |
7014 | than that of the orang- otang, given rise to the fable of the salvaje? |
6018 | ''A good scholar, sir?'' |
6018 | ''Are you of that opinion as to the portraits of ancestors, whom one has never seen?'' |
6018 | ''Ay, and what we''( looking to me)? |
6018 | ''Ay, sir,''he replied;''but how much worse would it have been, if we had been neglected?'' |
6018 | ''But consider, sir; what is the House of Commons? |
6018 | ''But is not the case now, that, instead of flattering one person, we flatter the age?'' |
6018 | ''But is there not reason to fear that the common people may be oppressed?'' |
6018 | ''But what do you say, sir, to the ancient and continued tradition of the Church upon this point?'' |
6018 | ''But what motive could he have to make himself a Laplander?'' |
6018 | ''But, sir, if they have leases, is there not some danger that they may grow insolent? |
6018 | ''But,''said I,''if the duke invites us to dine with him to- morrow, shall we accept?'' |
6018 | ''But,''said she,''is it not enough if we keep it? |
6018 | ''Do n''t you know that I can hang you, if I please?'' |
6018 | ''Do you think, sir, that Burke has read Cicero much?'' |
6018 | ''From whence, then, does all this money come?'' |
6018 | ''Have you the Idler?'' |
6018 | ''How can there,''said he,''be a physical effect without a physical cause?'' |
6018 | ''If it were so, why has it ceased? |
6018 | ''Is he an oculist?'' |
6018 | ''Nor no woman, sir?'' |
6018 | ''Pray,''said he,''can they pronounce any LONG words?'' |
6018 | ''Sir, do n''t you perceive that you are defaming the countess? |
6018 | ''Then Hume is not the worse for Seattle''s attack?'' |
6018 | ''Upon what terms have you it?'' |
6018 | ''Very rich mines?'' |
6018 | ''What do you say to the Bishop of Meaux?'' |
6018 | ''What if we had him here?'' |
6018 | ''What is Pekin? |
6018 | ''What is to become of society, if a friendship of twenty years is to be broken off for such a cause?'' |
6018 | ''What, sir? |
6018 | ''Why is not the original deposited in some publick library, instead of exhibiting attestations of its existence? |
6018 | ''Why, John,''said I,''did you think the king should be controuled by a parliament?'' |
6018 | ''Why, sir, if moral evil be consistent with the government of the Deity, why may not physical evil be also consistent with it? |
6018 | ''Why,''said Sir Allan,''are they not all my people?'' |
6018 | A young lady of quality, who was present, very handsomely said,''Might not the son have justified the faults?'' |
6018 | About one he came into my room, and accosted me,''What, drunk yet?'' |
6018 | After saluting him, Malcolm, pointing to the sea, said,''What, John, if the prince should be prisoner on board one of those tenders?'' |
6018 | And had he not also a perpetual feast of fame? |
6018 | And should not we tire, in looking perpetually on this rock? |
6018 | And what was this book? |
6018 | Are we not to believe a man, when he says he has a great desire to see another? |
6018 | Are you baptized?'' |
6018 | Are you not rather too late in the year for fine weather, which is the life and soul of seeing places? |
6018 | As I was going away, the duke said,''Mr Boswell, wo n''t you have some tea?'' |
6018 | At breakfast, I asked,''What is the reason that we are angry at a trader''s having opulence?'' |
6018 | Being told that Dr Johnson did not hear well, Lochbuy bawled out to him,''Are you of the Johnstons of Glencro, or of Ardnamurchan?'' |
6018 | But may it not be answered, that a man may be altered by it FOR THE BETTER; that his spirits may be exhilarated, without his reason being affected? |
6018 | But what could he do? |
6018 | But, as a learned friend has observed to me,''What trials did he undergo, to prove the perfection of his virtue? |
6018 | Can you name one book of any value, on a religious subject, written by them?'' |
6018 | Consider, sir; what is the purpose of courts of justice? |
6018 | Did he envy us the birth- place of the king?] |
6018 | Did he ever experience any great instance of adversity?'' |
6018 | Do n''t you believe that I was very impatient for your coming to Scotland?'' |
6018 | Do n''t you know that, if I order you to go and cut a man''s throat, you are to do it?'' |
6018 | Do you think, sir, they ought to have such an influence?'' |
6018 | Dr Johnson again solemnly repeated''"How far is''t called to Fores? |
6018 | Dr Johnson asked, what made the difference? |
6018 | Dr Johnson said,''A wind, or not a wind? |
6018 | Dr Johnson said,''How THE DEVIL can you do it?'' |
6018 | Finding that there was now a discovery, Malcolm asked,''What''s to be done?'' |
6018 | For, when I asked him,''Would not you, sir, start as Mr Garrick does, if you saw a ghost?'' |
6018 | From whom can it be, in this commerce, that I desire to hide any thing? |
6018 | Garrick was asked,''Sir, have you a free benefit?'' |
6018 | He asked, how did the women do? |
6018 | He asked,''Is this Mr Boswell?'' |
6018 | He had told me, that one day in London, when Dr Adam Smith was boasting of it, he turned to him and said,''Pray, sir, have you ever seen Brentford?'' |
6018 | He laughed heartily at his lordship''s saying he was an ENTHUSIASTICAL farmer;''for,''said he,''what can he do in farming by his ENTHUSIASM?'' |
6018 | He looked at me, as if I had talked of going to the North Pole, and said,''You do not insist on my accompanying you?'' |
6018 | He spoke of Prince Charles being here, and asked Mrs Macdonald,''WHO was with him? |
6018 | How can you talk so? |
6018 | I am desiring to become charitable myself; and why may I not plainly say so? |
6018 | I asked if this was not unlucky: would not they hurt one another? |
6018 | I put him in mind of it to- day, while he expressed his admiration of the elegant buildings, and whispered him,''Do n''t you feel some remorse?'' |
6018 | I said,''Would not the same objection hold against the Trinity as against transubstantiation?'' |
6018 | If this be the case, why are not these distinctly ascertained? |
6018 | Is not a great part of it chosen by peers? |
6018 | Is there shame in it, or impiety? |
6018 | It was striking to hear all of them drinking? |
6018 | Let Dr Smith consider: Was not Mr Hume blest with good health, good spirits, good friends, a competent and increasing fortune? |
6018 | Let us consider; can there be more wanting to complete the Meditation on a Pudding? |
6018 | M''Leod asked, what is the particular excellence of Burke''s eloquence? |
6018 | Must we never have more convenience than Rorie More had? |
6018 | Now, how low should a price be? |
6018 | Of such ancestry who would not be proud? |
6018 | Or is it, perhaps, better to be brought about by indirect means, and in this artful manner? |
6018 | Pray, what do you know about his motions? |
6018 | Quo vagor ulterius? |
6018 | Sir, he would reason thus:"What will it cost me to be there once in two or three summers? |
6018 | The contest now is, What HAS he?'' |
6018 | The landlady said to me,''Is not this the great Doctor that is going about through the country?'' |
6018 | The serjeant asked,''Who is this fellow?'' |
6018 | The wish is laudable: why should I form designs to hide it? |
6018 | Tuesday, 14th September Dr Johnson said in the morning,''Is not this a fine lady?'' |
6018 | Was it upon that occasion that he expressed no curiosity to see the room at Dumfermline, where Charles I was born? |
6018 | What can the M''Craas tell about themselves a thousand years ago? |
6018 | What have your clergy done, since you sunk into presbyterianism? |
6018 | What is it then that I am doing? |
6018 | What is it to live and not to love?'' |
6018 | What made you buy such a book at Inverness?'' |
6018 | What part of Bayle do you mean? |
6018 | What principle is there, why a loadstone attracts iron? |
6018 | When Dr Johnson came in, she called to him,''Do you choose any cold sheep''s- head, sir?'' |
6018 | Which of all these dishes is unwholsome?'' |
6018 | Who CAN like the Highlands? |
6018 | Why a tree grows upwards, when the natural tendency of all things is downwards? |
6018 | Why an egg produces a chicken by heat? |
6018 | Why do n''t we see men thus produced around us now? |
6018 | Why does he not tell how to fill it?'' |
6018 | Why is not the form of the petition brought nearer to the meaning? |
6018 | Why not as well be Rorie More all over, as live upon his rock? |
6018 | Why, at least, does it not keep pace, in some measure, with the progress of time? |
6018 | Your old preceptor repeated, with much solemnity, the speech How far is''t called to Fores? |
6018 | but instantly corrected himself,''How can you do it?'' |
6018 | is this the case?'' |
6018 | or what degree of confidence should there be to make a bargain be set aside? |
6018 | said Dr Johnson,''you must have a very great trade?'' |
6018 | sir, what can a nation that has not letters tell of its original? |
6018 | who is it that I would impose on? |
7499 | Did He die for me--_me_? 7499 Did you notice he went to the west? |
7499 | Do you want this girl? |
7499 | Is the caraà ® in? |
7499 | Is the head cut off? |
7499 | They eat their dinners and go to sleep-- and could they do better? |
7499 | What are carapatas? |
7499 | Where was the quiet, peaceful scene of a few weeks before? 7499 Why have you come?" |
7499 | Would Jesus save_ me_? |
7499 | _ What is to be the future of these natives? 7499 ''Will you die instead of all the people?'' 7499 After a toilsome journey, and no supper at the end:Would you like to eat?" |
7499 | After all, are the Indians more blind to the future than we are? |
7499 | After having passed a wretched night myself, I have asked them,"How did you sleep?" |
7499 | After this close scrutiny, they are asked:"Do you want this man?" |
7499 | All men, women and children, take up the cry, and soon the whole encampment resounds with,"Who brought the sticks?" |
7499 | Are those rocks the everlasting recorders of some old history-- some deed of Indian daring in days of old? |
7499 | As they thus linger, the witch- doctor asks,"Is the dog killed?" |
7499 | Ask him his age, he answers"_ Dy- qui_"To your question:"Are you twenty or one hundred and twenty?" |
7499 | At midnight of the third day we landed them at Corrientes, and the women, in their white(?) |
7499 | Belgium has 220 people occupying the space one person has in Argentina, so who can prophesy as to its future? |
7499 | But, my reader asks,"Do the people implicitly believe all the priest says?" |
7499 | Can a Church which deceives the people teach them true religion? |
7499 | Can man or beast be expected to work when the temperature stands at 130 degrees Fahrenheit in the shade? |
7499 | Can such as she be changed? |
7499 | Could anything be more eloquent than the prosperity of the land of the Pilgrim Fathers in proclaiming the value of the open Bible? |
7499 | Could it be true that, after years of hardship, I had found a fortune? |
7499 | Could the strange- looking being who suddenly reined up his horse before me be a man? |
7499 | Darwin relates that he asked two men the question:"Why do n''t you work?" |
7499 | Did I write the word religion? |
7499 | Did they take a particular liking to us because we were all males? |
7499 | Do they need light, or are they sufficiently illumined for time and eternity? |
7499 | Do you not think, O reader, the words are most truly applied? |
7499 | Does he pass it over, believing, with many, that imitation is the sincerest form of flattery? |
7499 | Does the Indian worship this awful majesty out of fear, as the Chinaman worships the devil? |
7499 | Does the reader wish an instance? |
7499 | Does the reader wish to journey to that inland town with him? |
7499 | During my journey I was asked: Would I like to go to the wake held that night at the next house, three miles away? |
7499 | Eat a potato?" |
7499 | Frequently we asked ourselves:"Is that the sun''s radiance, or are those rocks the fabled''Cliffs of Opal''men have searched for in vain?" |
7499 | Had I discovered some descendants of this vanished race? |
7499 | Had I discovered the_ Garden of Eden_, the place from which man had been wandering for 6,000 years? |
7499 | Had he brought water from his house, for there was none nearer, or was it watered by his tears? |
7499 | Had they scented water somewhere and drank? |
7499 | Has the interior of South America gone forward or backward since then? |
7499 | His majesty(?) |
7499 | How can he live if he deceives not? |
7499 | How can the priest teach what he is himself ignorant of? |
7499 | How could I mistake vapor for clear, gurgling water? |
7499 | How could you expect anything else?" |
7499 | How many good Christians at home think Brazil is a Christian country?" |
7499 | How shall I describe the metropolis of the Argentine, with its one- storied, flat- roofed houses, each with grated windows and centre_ patio_? |
7499 | I ask again,"Do they need missionaries?" |
7499 | If I were asked the old question,"What''s in a name?" |
7499 | In what better place could they be? |
7499 | Is it cause for wonder that the Spanish- American Republics have been so backward? |
7499 | Is the Great God, who sees these sheep left without a shepherd, Himself angry? |
7499 | Is the preaching of Mary the preaching of Christ?_[ Footnote:"Mission In South America,"Robert B. |
7499 | It may be asked, Can the savage be possessed of pride and of self- esteem? |
7499 | Ladies(?) |
7499 | Many with departed relatives( and who has none?) |
7499 | May he not be one of these neglected Indians? |
7499 | Mosquitos? |
7499 | No sooner was the gift in their hand, however, after supper, than they would put it back in mine and say,"Give me some more food?" |
7499 | Of whom should I ask this grace but of Thee? |
7499 | One after another had been taken from him, and now he had gone, for"when he is forsaken, withered and shaken, what can an old man do but die?" |
7499 | One, to whom a Bible was offered, became so infuriated that he said:''If it were not such a public place? |
7499 | Perhaps He is supposed to sit in solitary grandeur while the saints administer His affairs? |
7499 | Perhaps the missing Scotch engineer was on his way to the Pole, in order to be found sitting there on its discovery by----(?) |
7499 | Rich? |
7499 | Riding through the"hungry belt"I would be famishing, but to my question:"Are you hungry?" |
7499 | Since returning to more civilized lands, I have been asked: But do they really worship the Virgin, or God, through her? |
7499 | Soul, did I say? |
7499 | Surely it is well to ask? |
7499 | Surely no suffering creatures under the sun cry out louder for mercy than those in Argentina? |
7499 | That custom is still kept up by the Christian(?) |
7499 | The Argentine law- keeper(?) |
7499 | The first question is,"What name does it bring?" |
7499 | The first use to which the women put the little round tin looking- glasses, which I used for barter, was to admire their pretty(?) |
7499 | The hut was certainly inhabited-- of that I saw abundant signs-- but where were the people? |
7499 | The other side, you say? |
7499 | The questions,"Where have you come from?" |
7499 | The school- books read: Which is the greatest country? |
7499 | Their christening has been a tardy one, for who can tell what ages have passed since they first came into being? |
7499 | They would fill up the holes and ruts, and, in such intense heat, why do needless work? |
7499 | This petition he granted, and off she trudged with her divine(?) |
7499 | To the question:"Who is my neighbor?" |
7499 | To whom should a loving son go but to his beloved Mother? |
7499 | To whom the weak sheep cry but to its divine shepherdess? |
7499 | Was it a day''s journey? |
7499 | Was it human? |
7499 | Was it not because of this tradition that the Indian who later shot Mr. Grubb with a poisoned arrow was himself put to death by the tribe? |
7499 | Was it possible that I had unwittingly discovered a diamond field? |
7499 | Was the adoration of the Sun more civilizing than the worship of the Virgin? |
7499 | Was the beast in then? |
7499 | Well does she know the meaning of it, and a glad light flashes in her dark eyes as she cries out,"Who brought the sticks?" |
7499 | Well might the little girl, on seeing a centipede for the first time, ask:"What is that queer- looking thing, with about a million legs?" |
7499 | Well, how shall I conclude this short but pregnant chapter of my life? |
7499 | Were the inmates fiends that they let me sit there, knowing well that there was no other habitation within miles? |
7499 | Were we aground again? |
7499 | Were we to be asphyxiated there after all? |
7499 | What could it be? |
7499 | What has Romanism done for the Indians of Bolivia in its four hundred years of rule? |
7499 | What long- lost civilizations have ruled these now deserted solitudes? |
7499 | What place will he occupy in the life that is to be? |
7499 | What shall I say of the domestic life of these people? |
7499 | What shall the harvest be? |
7499 | When Mr. Grubb and his helpers first landed, they were immediately asked,"Are you the Imlah?" |
7499 | When the groans of these beasts of burden reached the ears of the good(?) |
7499 | Where, oh, where is the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals? |
7499 | Who is she? |
7499 | Who is the greatest man? |
7499 | Whom invoke those in affliction but the mother of consolation? |
7499 | Whom seek the sick, but the celestial doctor? |
7499 | Why do they do this? |
7499 | Why should a freeborn Brazilian lift dogs out of the street? |
7499 | Why should they, when he can truthfully boast that his territory is larger than that of the United States? |
7499 | Why were they thus carved? |
7499 | Why? |
7499 | Will He save me now?" |
7499 | Will the reader accompany me? |
7499 | Will the reader reverently stand with me, in imagination, beside an Indian grave? |
7499 | Will you, for the poor sum of one dollar, leave your loved ones to burn in purgatory for ages? |
7499 | With an authoritative voice, which even the chief himself does not use, he demands,"Who brought the sticks?" |
7499 | Without this music(?) |
7499 | Would I bury her? |
7499 | Would I give them some of"the stuff that resembles the eggs of the ant?" |
7499 | Would he take pity on them and accept that sum? |
7499 | Would she come with me? |
7499 | Would the Master of patience and forbearance, who Himself showed righteous anger, enter into it? |
7499 | Would the ever- present Spirit, who wrote"Be ye angry"not understand? |
7499 | [ Footnote: Would the suffragettes disagree with the writer here?] |
7499 | he would cry,''Can you sit in silence?'' |
10345 | ''Tis my business must settle that, I expect? |
10345 | A frock? 10345 A what?" |
10345 | Aground? 10345 And Shakspeare, sir?" |
10345 | And do you give the money to your mother? |
10345 | And is your wife alive too? |
10345 | And you will not enforce these regulations_ si necessaires_, Monsieur? |
10345 | Are any of you ill? |
10345 | Are you going far with it? |
10345 | But what is it the people mean by talking of feeling the revival? 10345 Chintzes? |
10345 | Do you calculate upon stopping long when you get to your journey''s end? |
10345 | Do you look to be making great dealings in produce up the country? |
10345 | Do you make no difference in your occupations on a Sunday? |
10345 | Have you chicken to sell, my boy? |
10345 | Hebe,sneered the man of taste,"What the devil has Hebe to do with the American eagle?" |
10345 | I am ready to go,she said, in the same quiet tone,"but what will you do for your three dollars?" |
10345 | I calculate you''ll find the markets changeable these times? |
10345 | I calculate, then,''tis not there as you stop? |
10345 | I expect you''ll be from New York? |
10345 | I guess that''s true, too; but you''ll be for making pleasure a business for once, I calculate? |
10345 | It is from a sense of duty, then, that you all go to the liquor store to read the papers? |
10345 | It is your health, I calculate, as makes you break your good rules? |
10345 | No? 10345 Not understand it, madam? |
10345 | Qui est cette dame? |
10345 | Right!--there they go-- that''s just their way-- that will do in Europe, may be; it sounds just like English tyranny, now do n''t it? 10345 Supposing George''s house at Kew Were burnt, as we intend to do, Would that be burning England too?" |
10345 | Surely you only say this for the sake of hearing what Mrs. M. will say in return-- you do not mean it? |
10345 | Then, may be, it is not the Springs as takes you this line? |
10345 | Tolerable, I thank ye, how be you? |
10345 | Well now, so you be from the old country? 10345 Well, but what is a revival?" |
10345 | Well, madam, can there be a higher praise? |
10345 | When shall you return, Charlotte? |
10345 | Who are you for, sir? |
10345 | Who is it who has passed this judgement, sir? |
10345 | Would you believe it? 10345 Yes to be sure, why not?" |
10345 | You fix them? |
10345 | what is the reason of it? |
10345 | ''"Am I so grave, Miss Blair?" |
10345 | ''"And why does your wisdom ask that question?"'' |
10345 | ''"Are you so grave, Miss Blair? |
10345 | ''"Does Mr. Skefton stay long?" |
10345 | And for what? |
10345 | And now the day was their own, what should they do next? |
10345 | And the poor English ladies, how fared they the while? |
10345 | Are bread stuffs up?" |
10345 | As I looked into the altered eyes of my companions, I was tempted to ask,"Look I as cross as you?" |
10345 | As the Persians write,"What can I say more?" |
10345 | At what time can the taste be formed? |
10345 | But how am I to describe the sounds that proceeded from this strange mass of human beings? |
10345 | But how shall I find room for myself afterwards?" |
10345 | But what do you chiefly call your most particular branch?" |
10345 | But you ca n''t suppose I mean to bear it quietly? |
10345 | Can any blame their wish to obtain it? |
10345 | Can any lament that they succeeded? |
10345 | Come, Miss Clarissa, what is it?" |
10345 | Could any thing be better imagined than such a government for a people so circumstanced? |
10345 | Did Franklin think that all were equal when he shouldered his way from the printing press to the cabinet? |
10345 | Did Washington feel them to be so, when his word outweighed( so happily for them) the votes of thousands? |
10345 | Did the men of America value their women as men ought to value their wives and daughters, would such scenes be permitted among them? |
10345 | Did the venerable father of the gang believe it? |
10345 | Do n''t I see that it is not a frock? |
10345 | Do n''t he?" |
10345 | Do they fear these self- elected, self- ordained priests, and offer up their wives and daughters to propitiate them? |
10345 | He gave me a keen glance, and said,"You do n''t know I.--When will you be wanting the chickens?" |
10345 | His look said plainly, what is that to you? |
10345 | How can a correct and polished style, even of speaking, be acquired? |
10345 | How can they breathe the balmy air, and not think of the tainted atmosphere so heavily weighing upon breasts still dearer than their own? |
10345 | How could they live without it? |
10345 | How did you catch it, sir?" |
10345 | How is the markets, sir? |
10345 | I asked for what purpose this nocturnal attendance was necessary? |
10345 | I could not but ask myself if virtue were a plant, thriving under one form in one country, and flourishing under a different one in another? |
10345 | I expect your little place of an island do n''t grow such dreadful fine corn as you sees here?" |
10345 | I then asked him, if he thought it was going to rain? |
10345 | I, at last, asked the reason of this, and why they did not remonstrate? |
10345 | If not, may I ask, in what respect have I passed these limitations? |
10345 | In what is their condition better than that of the kidnapped negroes on the coast of Africa? |
10345 | Is he not a free- born American? |
10345 | Is it meant that a foreigner is excluded from these privileges? |
10345 | Is it not attributing genius to the author, and what is teaching compared to that?" |
10345 | M.?" |
10345 | M.?" |
10345 | Monsieur, comment trouvez- vous la liberte et l''egalite mises en action?" |
10345 | Nick?" |
10345 | One lady asked me very gravely, if we had left home in order to get rid of the vermin with which the English of all ranks were afflicted? |
10345 | One of these men roared out in the coarsest accents,"Do you want to go to hell tonight?" |
10345 | Or did he too purchase his immortality by a lie? |
10345 | Or is it strange that they are contented with it? |
10345 | Pray, sir, has the black ox trod upon your toe since we parted?" |
10345 | Shall I guess, Miss?" |
10345 | To doubt that talent and mental power of every kind exist in America would be absurd; why should it not? |
10345 | Trollope?" |
10345 | Well, I look then you''ll be making for the Springs?" |
10345 | What ails you, sir?" |
10345 | What did the mother country do for them? |
10345 | What else may it generate? |
10345 | What had become of the immense quantity of wood which had been precipitated? |
10345 | What is the American pendant to this? |
10345 | What is the difference?" |
10345 | What may be your biggest article of produce?" |
10345 | What was I to read next? |
10345 | What was it Joseph hated the most? |
10345 | What was it that Jesus was never even accused of? |
10345 | What was that cavern of the winds, of which we heard of old, compared to this? |
10345 | Where is the alchymy that can extract from Captain Hall''s work one thousandth part of the ill- will contained in this one passage? |
10345 | Wherefore is it? |
10345 | Whether they would avoid the hell he had made them see? |
10345 | Who could refuse a tear to this earnest wish for death in one so young and so lovely? |
10345 | Who could refuse? |
10345 | Who is it that says America is not picturesque? |
10345 | Who was the disciple that Jesus chose for his friend?" |
10345 | Why are taxes assessed unless they are collected? |
10345 | Why, what''s the smoothness of a road, put against the freedom of a free- born American? |
10345 | Your papers ben''t like ourn, I reckon? |
10345 | and how long shall we stay here?" |
10345 | and not the"where?" |
10345 | and the extacy of the revival?" |
10345 | and waiting in spirit for the revival? |
10345 | are you so ignorant?" |
10345 | ca n''t you find room for two?" |
10345 | ca n''t you make room for two? |
10345 | do they not look English? |
10345 | do you pretend you do n''t know what chintzes are? |
10345 | do you really jab this into yourself sevagarous?" |
10345 | my own dear mother? |
10345 | only me and my daughter?" |
10345 | or when can the fruit of the two thousand years of past thinking be added to the native growth of American intellect? |
10345 | or where could he reap a higher reward in this world, than seeing that wilderness growing into fertile fields under the hands of his flock? |
10345 | to see how little you knows of a free country? |
10345 | was the reply,"if I wanted a glass of water during the night, what would become of me?" |
10345 | what are chintzes?" |
10345 | what can you say to that?" |
10345 | why is not the two side joined together? |
1866 | But what,I asked,"would be the effect were he to tell you to put out all your fires at eight o''clock?" |
1866 | But will they be shot? |
1866 | Do you like our institutions, sir? 1866 Sir, what do you think of our Mr. Jefferson Brick? |
1866 | Surely you would have destroyed their bridge? |
1866 | Then would it not be cheaper to let them go? |
1866 | They wear their shirts till they drop off their backs,said he;"and what can you expect from such men as that?" |
1866 | What do you mean by a dressing- room, and why do you want one? |
1866 | Who is he,an American would say,"that he comes and judges us? |
1866 | Who is he,an Englishman would say,"that he comes and teaches us? |
1866 | Why are they not exchanged? |
1866 | Why can not you consume your own smoke? |
1866 | After that who can believe that Stevens was himself allowed to pocket the whole amount of the plunder? |
1866 | After that who will believe that Mr. Morgan had the whole of that £20,000 for himself? |
1866 | After that who will believe that all the money went into Beard''s pocket? |
1866 | All articles manufactured of cotton, wool, silk, worsted, flax, hemp, jute, india- rubber, gutta percha, wood(? |
1866 | And after all what matters the ugly nature of such an occupation when a man is used to it? |
1866 | And had they so promised, would the South have believed them? |
1866 | And is it not well that such tales should be told? |
1866 | And now shall he be divided and shorn? |
1866 | And those ladies of New York-- is it not to be confessed that they are somewhat imperious in their demands? |
1866 | And what can be expected from one who is counting the last lingering hours of his existence? |
1866 | And what living English politician will say even now, with all its troubles thick upon it, that it is the smallest of the five? |
1866 | As for the Van Wyck committee, have I not repeated the tale which you have told yourselves? |
1866 | As to Congress, what could Congress do? |
1866 | At what rate shall we tax coffee so as to get at the people''s money? |
1866 | But how then about the justice? |
1866 | But if they could emancipate those four million slaves, in what way would they then treat them? |
1866 | But is it not the case that every city is beautiful from a distance? |
1866 | But now they must part; and how shall the parting be made? |
1866 | But of what class are the books that are so read? |
1866 | But then comes the great question, What duty will really give the greatest product? |
1866 | But then what would those Americans think of them;--of them and of the country which produced them? |
1866 | But to whom is the power, or rather the duty, of exercising this discretion delegated? |
1866 | But what excuse shall we find for that other dirt? |
1866 | But what if such rebellion be justifiable, or even reasonable? |
1866 | But what individual chooses to yield to such demands; and if not an individual,--then what people will do so? |
1866 | But what shall be done with any State that declines to evince such patriotism? |
1866 | But what then? |
1866 | But who does know to what General Halleck or other generals may come; or how soon a curfew- bell may be ringing in American towns? |
1866 | But who has heard of Polk, of Pierce, and of Buchanan? |
1866 | But who shall say whether or no it be a man''s business to sell horses? |
1866 | But who wastes a thought upon either of these men? |
1866 | But, it will be said,--was it not well to prepare for a growing city? |
1866 | Could any city be safe when such implements of war were about upon the waters? |
1866 | Could they promise to hold their peace about slavery? |
1866 | Do not all great men suffer such ere their greatness be established and acknowledged? |
1866 | Do we not all of us feel assured by the intense nationality of an American that he will not desert his nation in the hour of her need? |
1866 | Does any one imagine that we would not have borrowed faster, if by faster borrowing we could have closed the war more speedily? |
1866 | Eighteen or twenty millions of people who have lived under it,--in what way do they regard it? |
1866 | Faces, houses, doors, and haunts, where are they now? |
1866 | From whence are to come the senators and the members of Congress; the governors and attorney- generals? |
1866 | From whence is to come the national spirit of the two States, and the salt that shall preserve their political life? |
1866 | Had I been comfortable? |
1866 | Had there not been enough at Washington of cotton lords and cotton laws? |
1866 | Has his young life been a dream, and not a truth? |
1866 | Have I as yet said that Washington was dirty in that winter of 1861- 1862? |
1866 | Have they the thews and muscles, the energy and endurance, the power of carrying which we possess? |
1866 | Have we not all declared that some check to that career was necessary? |
1866 | He would probably be a man honoured in the nation; but who now can make a guess as to the next President? |
1866 | How has it come about that in American ears the word politician has come to bear a similar signification? |
1866 | How shall the constitution be constitutionally amended while one- third of the States are in revolt? |
1866 | How should any idle man live in such a country? |
1866 | How should it be otherwise with men of such a race? |
1866 | How would they feed them? |
1866 | How, at least, could the South have escaped slavery any time during these last thirty years? |
1866 | If one thinks of it how could they have been made to contain Christian food? |
1866 | If the future as it has since come forth had then been foretold for it, would not such a prophecy have been a prophecy of success? |
1866 | In a matter of taxation why should States agree to an alteration proposed with the very object of increasing their proportion of the national burden? |
1866 | In what way would they treat the ruined owners of the slaves, and the acres of land which would lie uncultivated? |
1866 | In what way, then, when the question has been settled by the force of arms, will these classes find themselves obliged to act? |
1866 | In whose ears is not their names familiar? |
1866 | Is it to them an old woman''s story, a useless parchment, a thing of old words at which all must now smile? |
1866 | Is not that the best evidence that can be had respecting it? |
1866 | It did not pay him,--but what could he do? |
1866 | It is hard enough, for how could the South have escaped slavery? |
1866 | It was bad enough with us, but what were our numbers compared with those of the southern States? |
1866 | May it not be thought well for us if, with such work on our hands, any scraps of iron shall be left to us with which to pursue the purposes of peace? |
1866 | Moreover, who in England ever dreamed of raising 600,000 new troops in six months, out of a population of thirty million? |
1866 | Must it not be said that a curse has fallen upon the land? |
1866 | Shall he be hemmed in from his ocean and shut off from his rivers? |
1866 | Shall he have a hook run into his nostrils, and a thorn driven into his jaw? |
1866 | Shall he never reach that giant manhood which the growth of his boyish years has promised him? |
1866 | Shall men say that his day is over, when he has hardly yet tasted the full cup of his success? |
1866 | Shall our eldest child become bankrupt in its first trade difficulty; be utterly ruined by its first little commercial embarrassment? |
1866 | Starbuck was merely an agent, and who will believe that he was allowed to pocket the whole difference of £1600? |
1866 | Such a state of things has its picturesquely patriarchal side; but what would be the state of such a man if he were emancipated to- morrow? |
1866 | The question is this,--Should the government have paid so vast a sum for one man''s work for six months? |
1866 | The secessionists of Maryland and of Virginia may consent to live in obscurity; but if this be so, who is to rule in those States? |
1866 | They care nothing for the graces,--or shall I say, for the decencies of life? |
1866 | They form the wealth of the South; and if they were bought, what should be done with them? |
1866 | They have got our blood in their veins, and have these qualities gone with the blood? |
1866 | To what is it that the government of a country should chiefly look? |
1866 | Trollope?" |
1866 | Under such circumstances and with such a lesson, could it be expected that the southern States should learn to love abolition? |
1866 | Under such circumstances how can food be made eatable? |
1866 | Was any people ever truly served by eulogy; or an honest cause furthered by undue praise? |
1866 | Was it not well to lay down fine avenues and broad streets, so that future citizens might find a city well prepared to their hand? |
1866 | Was it probable that General Maclellan should have time to answer questions about Ball''s Bluff,--and he with such a job of work on his hands? |
1866 | What American is proud of them? |
1866 | What Englishman has devoted a room to books, and devoted no portion of that room to the productions of America? |
1866 | What blessing above these blessings was needed to make a people great and happy? |
1866 | What city has done better than this? |
1866 | What concession could they make? |
1866 | What farmer could work or have any hope for his land in the middle of such a crowd of soldiers? |
1866 | What great race has ever been won by any man, or by any nation, without some such fall during its course? |
1866 | What might then be the fate of the cotton- fields of the Gulf States, who shall dare to say? |
1866 | What other town of the same size has done as well in the same short space of time? |
1866 | What special advantages do we expect from our own government? |
1866 | What was I doing in such a galley as that? |
1866 | What was the acquisition of Texas against such hosts as these? |
1866 | When this war be over between the northern and southern States will there come upon us Englishmen a necessity of fighting with the Americans? |
1866 | Where are now the constitutions which were written for France? |
1866 | Where is now the glory of the Antilles? |
1866 | Which of us two could take a thrashing from the other and afterwards go about our business with contentment? |
1866 | While this was so, is it to be conceived that Congress should ask questions about military matters with success? |
1866 | Who does not owe to some of them a debt of gratitude? |
1866 | Who is there among us in England who has not been the better for these men? |
1866 | Who now knows the landlord of an inn, or cares to inquire whether or no there be a landlady? |
1866 | Who shall declare the value of a barrel of wooden nutmegs; or how shall the Excise- officer get his tax from every cobbler''s stall in the country? |
1866 | Who trusted it? |
1866 | Who would buy boots or coats, or want new saddles, or waste money on books, in such days as these, in such a town as Alexandria? |
1866 | Who would put their faith in Seward and Cameron? |
1866 | Who, then, can dare to wish that all that has been done by the negro immigration should have remained undone? |
1866 | Whose arm shall be long enough to stay us, or whose bolt shall be strong enough to strike us?" |
1866 | Why did I speak with such eager enmity of those poor women in the New York cars, who never injured me, now that I think of it? |
1866 | Why had I brought all that useless lumber down to Rolla? |
1866 | Why had I come to Rolla, with no certain hope even of shelter for a night? |
1866 | Why is it that a stout Englishman bordering on fifty finds himself in such a predicament as that? |
1866 | Why need I have told of the mud of Washington, or have exposed the nakedness of Cairo? |
1866 | Why should not General Halleck be as well able to say what was good for the people as any law or any lawyer? |
1866 | Will the Americans honestly wish to pay the bill; and if they do so wish, will they have the power to pay it? |
1866 | With which side shall go this child, and who shall remain in possession of that pleasant homestead? |
1866 | Would Captain Wilkes have been right according to the existing law if he had carried the"Trent"away to New York? |
1866 | Would I come back to him? |
1866 | Would I not remain? |
1866 | on all incomes in each State; but what will be done if Pennsylvania, for instance, should decline, or Illinois should hesitate? |
1866 | was sufficient? |
1866 | what if the rebels have cause for their rebellion? |
1866 | where the riches of Mexico, and the power of Peru? |
1865 | And are wages here paid pretty punctually? |
1865 | And as to the slaves? |
1865 | And is that common? |
1865 | And what will England do for cotton? 1865 And you believe, then, that the South will beat the North?" |
1865 | Are you going this morning? |
1865 | But does not the law set him right? 1865 Did he want a sitting- room?" |
1865 | Do you always have it as hot as this? |
1865 | Have you rooms? |
1865 | Have you seen any of our great institootions, sir? |
1865 | Is that dinner any way ready? |
1865 | What do you think, you in England-- what do you all believe will be the upshot of this war? |
1865 | Why did the Romans run away with the Sabine women? |
1865 | Why do n''t you go? |
1865 | Will there be any chance of dinner here? |
1865 | You like our institutions, ma''am? |
1865 | A pool, so called, was supposed to contain but a small amount of water, and how could the Devil, being so large, get into it? |
1865 | A woman is subject to the law; why then should she not help to make the law? |
1865 | After all, what is wanted in this world? |
1865 | An ill- natured person might turn on me, and where should I be then?" |
1865 | And how few can travel without hearing such stories against themselves? |
1865 | And how was it possible that they should have avoided this war? |
1865 | And how would England be affected by a union of the British North American colonies under one Federal Government? |
1865 | And if not, how are the men to get wives if the women elect to remain single? |
1865 | And if such be the law of the land, is it worth a woman''s while to marry and put herself in such a position? |
1865 | And if the States have so risen since they left their parent''s apron- string, why should not British North America rise as high? |
1865 | And what earthly efforts ever led to grander results? |
1865 | And what is eating one''s bread in the sweat of one''s brow but making money? |
1865 | And what is their advice to us? |
1865 | And why may not the passion for the Union be as strong with the northern States, as the passion for the Crown is strong with us? |
1865 | And why should it be assumed that so suicidal a power of destroying a nationality should be inherent in every portion of the nation? |
1865 | And would they like to see a woman driving a cab? |
1865 | Any news in the City to- day? |
1865 | Are they going back to the divine right of any sovereignty? |
1865 | As to the nature of those alleged infringements, are they not written down to the number of twenty- seven in the Declaration of Independence? |
1865 | But as I have said, it is not specially interesting to the eye-- what new town, or even what simply adult town, can be so? |
1865 | But as to saying their prayers? |
1865 | But has education been so general, and has it had the desired result? |
1865 | But has opinion ever been free anywhere on all subjects? |
1865 | But having struck that one blow, and having found that it did not suffice, could she then withdraw, give way, and own herself beaten? |
1865 | But how would this affect England? |
1865 | But what about those who are not Christians? |
1865 | But what shall be the new form of government for the new kingdom? |
1865 | But what then? |
1865 | But who ever before heard of giving a man glory for achievements so little glorious? |
1865 | But why does New York with its suburbs boast a million of inhabitants, while Montreal has 85,000? |
1865 | But, nevertheless, what shall we do for those women who must earn their bread by their own work? |
1865 | Can not broadsword, goose- step, and double quick time be instilled into young hands and legs in any field of thirty, forty, or fifty acres? |
1865 | Can the Pope shake hands with Victor Emmanuel? |
1865 | Could King Bomba have welcomed Garibaldi to Naples? |
1865 | Could any newspaper be produced in England which advocated the overthrow of the Queen? |
1865 | Could the English have surrendered to their rebel colonists peaceable possession of the colonies? |
1865 | Did my surprise arise from the insular ignorance and idolatrous self- worship of a Britisher, or was my American friend labouring under a delusion? |
1865 | Do we cultivate our kitchen gardens with success, or am I under a delusion on that subject? |
1865 | Does not that include everything, providing that they eat and drink enough, read and write without restraint, and say their prayers without hypocrisy? |
1865 | Does she hold them, in fact, for her own benefit, or does she hold them for theirs? |
1865 | Had any compromise been possible by which the war might have been avoided, and the rights and dignity of the North preserved? |
1865 | Had he at the best done anything beyond a policeman''s work? |
1865 | Had the North given to the South cause of provocation? |
1865 | Had the South been fair and honest in its dealings to the North? |
1865 | Had things gone with them so sadly, was the struggle for independence so hard, that all the softness of existence had been trodden out of them? |
1865 | Has it been so usually with Anglo- Saxon pluck? |
1865 | Have the Northern States of the American Union taken upon themselves in 1861 to proclaim their opinion that revolution is a sin? |
1865 | How many cataracts does the habitual tourist visit at which the waters fail him? |
1865 | How many of my readers can boast that they know anything of Milwaukee, or even have heard of it? |
1865 | How should there be anything there to see of general interest? |
1865 | I want to go and live at West Point, and why should I be prevented? |
1865 | If on the whole they would not have more, for what good result is the movement made? |
1865 | If one might secede, any or all might secede, and where then would be their property, their debt, and their servants? |
1865 | If women can do without marriage, can men do so? |
1865 | In doing this he showed no lack of spirit, for it might be his duty; but where was his spirit when he submitted to be thanked for such work? |
1865 | In such case as that would there have been no mention of those two dogs, Brag and Holdfast? |
1865 | In the best- built strongholds of freedom have there not always been questions on which opinion has not been free; and must it not always be so? |
1865 | Is Covent Garden well supplied with vegetables, or is it not? |
1865 | Is it not notorious that such is the wish of us all as to our daughters? |
1865 | Is it not that men should eat and drink, and read and write, and say their prayers? |
1865 | Is it not this, that his sons shall go forth and earn their bread, and that his daughters shall remain with him till they are married? |
1865 | Is it possible that a frontier man should be scrupulous and at the same time successful? |
1865 | Is not that the mother''s wish? |
1865 | Is that the way of men''s minds, or of the minds of nations? |
1865 | Is there no law against debtors?" |
1865 | Is this to be the doctrine of United States''citizens,--of all people? |
1865 | It demanded that he should be impassioned, for of what interest can any address be on a matter of public politics without passion? |
1865 | It is revolutionary, but what then? |
1865 | Looking at the general sadness of her position, who can grudge her such happiness? |
1865 | May it not even be presumed that a man of this class is of all men the least fitted for such a work? |
1865 | Of course Jones thinks that I''m a brute; but what can I do? |
1865 | Of course the movement is revolutionary; and why not? |
1865 | Should it not have been a policeman''s truncheon? |
1865 | Should we endeavour to make the recurrence of unhappy circumstances more general or less so? |
1865 | Sugars have fell; how are teas?" |
1865 | The South rebelled against the North, and such being the case, was it possible that the North should yield without a war? |
1865 | The matter would remedy itself elsewhere, and does it not do so here? |
1865 | The question is, whether would good or evil result from such a change? |
1865 | Then comes the question whether Mr. Lincoln or his Government could have prevented the war after he had entered upon his office in March, 1861? |
1865 | Was it legally within the power of New York to place the six States of New England in such a position? |
1865 | Was that to be the moment for a peaceable separation? |
1865 | We soon learn the rules on these subjects;--but who make the rules? |
1865 | What can twelve ladies do scattered about a drawing- room, so- called, intended for the accommodation of two hundred? |
1865 | What circumstances of blood or food, of early habit or subsequent education, have created for the latter- day American his present physiognomy? |
1865 | What could I say but that they were all very pretty? |
1865 | What does any tradesman, any professional man, any mechanic wish for his children? |
1865 | What earthly aspirations were ever higher than these, or more manly? |
1865 | What feeling is so hot as that of a friend when his dearest friend refuses to share his quarrel or to sympathize in his wrongs? |
1865 | What is the cry even of the Canadians-- of the Canadians who are thoroughly loyal to England? |
1865 | What man could now- a- days buy jewels, or even what woman, seeing that everything would be required for the war? |
1865 | What two men ever had a quarrel in which each did not think that all the world, if just, would espouse his own side of the dispute? |
1865 | What will she do for cotton when her operatives are really pressed? |
1865 | What will they do in England? |
1865 | What would he say of an English statesman who should speak of putting up the Union Jack on the State House in Boston? |
1865 | When the holy men were had in at the lecture, were they doing stage- work or church- work? |
1865 | When was she to take the first step towards peace? |
1865 | When you have flogged them into a return of fraternal affection, are they to keep their slaves or are they to abolish them?" |
1865 | Where would the world have been, or where would the world hope to be, without rebellion? |
1865 | Which is the better for the woman herself? |
1865 | Who can come to them, and create even a hope that such an enterprise may be remunerative? |
1865 | Who has ever travelled in foreign countries without meeting excellent stories against the citizens of such countries? |
1865 | Who has heard of the legislature of New York or of Massachusetts? |
1865 | Who shall dare to say that he is wrong, seeing that in general matters of design and luxury the French have won for themselves the foremost name? |
1865 | Why has that babe in years, Chicago, 120,000, while Toronto has not half the number? |
1865 | Why not elect him for eight, for twelve, or for life?--for eternity if it were possible to find one who could continue to live? |
1865 | Why should a married woman be able to possess nothing? |
1865 | Why should a young woman, for whom no father is able to provide, not enjoy those means of provision which are open to a young man so circumstanced? |
1865 | Why should he attempt to see the falls for nothing, seeing that this woman has a vested interest in the showing of them? |
1865 | Why should not the great Mr. Mudie emulate Mr. Bates, and open a library in London on the same system? |
1865 | Why should not young ladies have their letters sent to their houses, instead of getting them at a private window? |
1865 | Why should the colonies remain true to us as children are true to their parents, if we grudge them the assistance which is due to a child? |
1865 | Will England regard us who are by treaty her friend, as she does a people that is in rebellion against its own government?" |
1865 | Will she break the blockade? |
1865 | Will she insist on a right to trade with Charlestown and New Orleans? |
1865 | Will that young lady ever again sleep quietly in her bed? |
1865 | Would England let Ireland walk off by herself if she wished it? |
1865 | Would it have been well for the North then to say,"If the South wish it we will certainly separate?" |
1865 | Would not any plain, however ugly, do for military exercises? |
1865 | do we not all feel that it must be so, let the philanthropists be ever so energetic? |
12874 | , notHow easy?" |
12874 | And of these, which is the greater? |
12874 | Could n''t you show some respect? |
12874 | Do they? |
12874 | Do you like these? |
12874 | Good? 12874 H.B.C.,"I remark,"are n''t you rather infringing on a right, taking that trade- mark?" |
12874 | Have you spoken to God this morning? |
12874 | How old is Ann? |
12874 | Is Canada loyal to England? |
12874 | Is it the clang of wild- geese? 12874 Like it? |
12874 | The world''s record in lying, do you mean? |
12874 | Was it that fur- pup of the Hudson''s Bay? |
12874 | Well, a day,_ I_ take it, is as far as you can go without stoppin''--it never gets dark, so how is a man to know what''s a day? |
12874 | Well, what makes a day? |
12874 | Well, why do n''t you try? 12874 What are the two greatest things on earth?" |
12874 | What are them? |
12874 | What for this fellow, huh? |
12874 | What in the world do you do after six? |
12874 | What? 12874 Where did your fathers see this animal?" |
12874 | Where is it? 12874 Who spoke?" |
12874 | Why? |
12874 | You are interested? |
12874 | You going to make better man, you get Outside-- make him like Emmie- ray? |
12874 | You like it, do you not? |
12874 | ''Standing, what the blazes do you mean?'' |
12874 | A big Irish policeman is talking to a traveller who has stepped off a transcontinental train, and who asks with a drawl,"What makes Winnipeg?" |
12874 | A scoffer at my elbow grins,"Why should they bother to dig wells? |
12874 | A smart young man from Toronto filtered in one day to Chipewyan, and asked the old blacksmith,"Came from the Old Country, did n''t you? |
12874 | And his working partner? |
12874 | And is n''t it Caesar himself who declares,"Better be first in a little Iberian village than second in Rome?" |
12874 | And the Midnight Sun? |
12874 | And the fellow- passengers? |
12874 | And the priest?" |
12874 | And what man dare pronounce on the purity of another? |
12874 | And what of the men who followed the gleam? |
12874 | Are not oil and whalebone drugs in the market? |
12874 | Are there as good fish in the sea as have come out of it? |
12874 | Are these Eskimo, Christians? |
12874 | Are they_ civilised_? |
12874 | Are we so sure of results that we are in a position to force our rule upon the Eskimo? |
12874 | As Count von Hammerstein says,"What means a camel to a Cree? |
12874 | As he sees us digging out our tents and dunnage, the porter asks,"Then yer not comin''back?" |
12874 | As man and beast returned wearily in the evening, the teachers asked,"Well, what happened to- day, Charlie?" |
12874 | Asked why she thought so, she replied,"You have been down to the land of the caribou, eh? |
12874 | Being told that ladies are on board, he breathlessly asks,"What colour?" |
12874 | But what could I do?" |
12874 | But why is it cruder to enjoy seal''s brains_ â la vinaigrette_, than to tickle our taste with brains of the frolicking calf? |
12874 | But why? |
12874 | CHAPTER XIII FORT MACPHERSON FOLK"I have drunk the Sea''s good wine, Was ever step so light as mine, Was ever heart so gay? |
12874 | Calling across to the white man, Oo- vai- oo- ak said,"How is it, brother, have you any fish?" |
12874 | Can I offer"( politely)"to exhilarate you ladies with vanilla?" |
12874 | Can anything compare with the dear delights of travelling when you do not know and nobody knows just what lies round the next corner? |
12874 | Can we ever forget the generous kindness extended to us within these walls? |
12874 | Can you tell me how long it will take, what it will cost, and how I make my connections?" |
12874 | Chimerical? |
12874 | Compelling is the association of ideas, and the thought grips one that muskrat_ must_ taste as domestic rats( are rats domestic?) |
12874 | Did it pay? |
12874 | Did n''t you faint with the awful pain?" |
12874 | Do we wonder that Indians worship the great forces of Nature? |
12874 | Faint, me? |
12874 | For instance, if you say to Roxi,"Was n''t that a grey goose we heard overhead?" |
12874 | For is not the coming of the treaty party the one event of the Fond du Lac year? |
12874 | Hard luck? |
12874 | Has she not gained in both kudos and capital? |
12874 | Have we not all the tame nights of the after- days for slumber? |
12874 | Have you got any whiskey?" |
12874 | He spelled it out letter by letter,''H- a- g- a- r,--what was the matter with him?'' |
12874 | Heathens? |
12874 | How about their families, the camp of waiting ones left behind in the woods? |
12874 | How can a man, a tribe, a people, hope to escape? |
12874 | How cold does it get? |
12874 | How did she happen to break away from the bonds that limit and restrain most Red brides? |
12874 | How did she happen? |
12874 | How do the people of Macpherson divide into day and night their largesse of light? |
12874 | How does it work out? |
12874 | Into what land are they drifting? |
12874 | Is it not Pliny who gives us a delightful account of Hippo''s enamoured dolphin? |
12874 | Is it not sufficient glory to say,"On the Peace River we_ had_ a lobstick"? |
12874 | Is it the Indian''s yell, That lends to the voice of the North- wind The tones of a far- off bell?" |
12874 | Is it too daring a conjecture to trace in these, which Eskimo men so sedulously cherish and resolutely refuse to talk about, a religious significance? |
12874 | Is n''t it Johnson who says,"I love to browse in a library"? |
12874 | Is she an outcast among her people? |
12874 | Is the fur- trade diminishing? |
12874 | Is this American invasion to be feared politically? |
12874 | It was of men such as Kennedy that Kipling warns,"Do not expect him to speak, has he not done the deed?" |
12874 | Its foundation reaches back to when the Second Charles ruled in England,--an age when men said not"How cheap?" |
12874 | May I close with a purely personal note? |
12874 | Meanwhile his flesh has become mine, and what will happen to us both on the final resurrection day?" |
12874 | Mentally and morally, what type will prevail? |
12874 | One Sunday was review day, and this question arose:"And how did God punish Adam and Eve for their disobedience?" |
12874 | One is inclined to ask with suspicion,"Is naming a lost art?" |
12874 | Physically, what will be the result? |
12874 | Shall I dig them out for you?" |
12874 | Should the most valuable fox that runs be called a black- fox, or a silver- fox? |
12874 | So he said to Carlton,"Did you ever write a story?" |
12874 | The Eskimo has proven a valued aid to this industry; how has the intrusion of the whites into his ancestral sea- domain affected the Eskimo? |
12874 | The causes? |
12874 | The daintiest of dainty slippers calls forth the question,"Where are you going to find the Cinderella for these?" |
12874 | The elements that compose it? |
12874 | The most incongruous lot that Fate ever jostled together into one corner,--who are they? |
12874 | The one at the bow( does a log have a bow?) |
12874 | The one conjecture round the bar and in the home is,"When will the rabbits run this year?" |
12874 | The scientist, interested, queried,"And do you do the same when you go duck- hunting or goose- hunting or when you are after seal?" |
12874 | The second sturgeon- head carries seven members of the Royal Northwest Mounted Police, jolly laughing chaps, for are not they, too, like us, off duty? |
12874 | The two gents met next Christmas in New York, and the Yankee he sez,''And how did you like the bath?'' |
12874 | The_ Primrose_ from stem to stern is not big enough to swing a cat in, but who wants to swing a cat? |
12874 | To what end? |
12874 | Up in Edmonton the Galicians( Ruthenians?) |
12874 | Was it worth while? |
12874 | Watching, fascinated, the lightning play of the machine,"Much hard that, I think, harder than bead- work, eh?" |
12874 | We have M''Clure''s record of the incident and the little girl''s questioning wonder,--"Of what animal is this the skin?" |
12874 | We question,"Are you not lonely, especially in the winter?" |
12874 | We rest, so far as the mosquitoes think it proper we should rest, on a bed of reindeer moss(_ cladonia rangiferina_? |
12874 | We walked on down the stairs to the next landing in silence, when he turned to me with,"And you taught school-- for twen- ty five years?" |
12874 | What are the books which this sub- Arctic library sent out? |
12874 | What causes the changed standard? |
12874 | What did Henry the Fifth say on the eve of Agincourt,--"For he to- day who sheds his blood with me shall be my brother"? |
12874 | What did we find there? |
12874 | What did you think of Toronto?" |
12874 | What do they learn? |
12874 | What do we do with baleen? |
12874 | What has the policeman''s hard wheat done for Winnipeg? |
12874 | What haunts us as we look at the white houses, that crescent beach of pinkest sand? |
12874 | What have we? |
12874 | What is a whale? |
12874 | What is the highest price ever paid for a fox- skin? |
12874 | What is then the ice- widow''s condition? |
12874 | What is this choice tidbit? |
12874 | What is whale- gum like? |
12874 | What made the charm of this life to these men? |
12874 | What matter all the creeds that come and go, The many gods of men? |
12874 | What more would you? |
12874 | What more would you? |
12874 | What of Inspector Pelletier, Walker, Joyce, and Conway, essaying the traverse from Resolution to Hudson Bay? |
12874 | What of the new Canadian who will step out? |
12874 | What other changes is the yearly presence of American whalers among them making in Eskimo evolution? |
12874 | What then must we call these splendid fellows so full of integrity and honour, whose every impulse is a generous one? |
12874 | What were the"libraries"in which this Arctic Apostle did his work? |
12874 | When we place this delightful trait alongside the fish- stories we are familiar with, who would seek to change the heathen? |
12874 | When we run this line of 55 ° westward what do we strike in Asia? |
12874 | When we used to sit on uneasy school- benches and say our"joggafy"lesson, what did that term spell for us? |
12874 | When you ask them why they came to America, they say,"Did not our Lief Ericcson discover this continent, why should n''t we come?" |
12874 | Where did the Eskimo get his versatile ability? |
12874 | Who are these people, and whence came they? |
12874 | Who can tell what they whisper to him of the sweet Alsace so far away? |
12874 | Who hungers for whitefish- stomachs or liver of the loche? |
12874 | Who is this patient? |
12874 | Who knows what possibilities may be buttoned up under that ragged jacket?" |
12874 | Who shall say? |
12874 | Who shall say? |
12874 | Who would envy kings? |
12874 | Who would napkins bear, or finger- bowls? |
12874 | Who would worry about mosquitoes with that splendid spectacular of the Grand Rapids at our feet? |
12874 | Why attempt the impossible? |
12874 | Why had the allowance of Mrs. Blueskin( née Running Rabbit) been exceeded? |
12874 | Why should I enter the lists and take up icy spear for my Eskimo fellow British subject? |
12874 | Why should we not be happy? |
12874 | Why so? |
12874 | Will he hold up? |
12874 | Will he take to a gully? |
12874 | Will there be any left? |
12874 | Would you like to see the letters that_ The Teaser, The Twin, Johnny Little Hunter_, and_ Mary Blue Quill_ are sending out to their parents? |
12874 | You teach it to me, eh? |
12874 | [ Illustration: Farthest North Football] What of the little girls? |
12874 | [ Illustration: Roxi and the Oo- vai- oo- ak Family] How does the young wife fit in? |
12874 | [ Illustration: Sir William Van Horne, First President of the Canadian Pacific Railway] The Americanisation of Canada? |
12874 | [ Illustration: Smith''s Landing]"How did Smith''s Landing get its name?" |
12874 | [ Illustration: Two Little Ones at Herschel Island] Is there much money in whales to- day? |
12874 | [ Would Mr. Roosevelt second this?] |
12874 | but"How good? |
12874 | but"How well?" |
9497 | ''And the baby?'' |
9497 | ''And where is he now?'' |
9497 | ''Are they so far up?'' |
9497 | ''Are you English, then?'' |
9497 | ''Are you also?'' |
9497 | ''Are you going over the Gothard?'' |
9497 | ''Better than_ I Spettri_?'' |
9497 | ''But did n''t you mind giving up all your work?'' |
9497 | ''But does that prevent you from marrying?'' |
9497 | ''But is it not just the same as managing the shop at home?'' |
9497 | ''But it''s fine, is n''t it? |
9497 | ''But were n''t you tired?'' |
9497 | ''But what,''I asked,''brought you back?'' |
9497 | ''But why do they come here, so many?'' |
9497 | ''But why so early?'' |
9497 | ''But why,''I said,''why do you live alone? |
9497 | ''But why,''I said,''why? |
9497 | ''Can I go and look at them?'' |
9497 | ''Can I have a bed,''I said,''for the night?'' |
9497 | ''Did you enjoy it?'' |
9497 | ''Do all the Swiss want to serve their time in the army?'' |
9497 | ''Do n''t you want to go back?'' |
9497 | ''Do you dislike women?'' |
9497 | ''Do you want to be shot?'' |
9497 | ''Does the steamer stop here all night?'' |
9497 | ''English? |
9497 | ''Have you been a soldier?'' |
9497 | ''How do you write it?'' |
9497 | ''How long did you know your Signora before you were married?'' |
9497 | ''How long has it taken you to do that much?'' |
9497 | ''How long should we have had to wait if we had n''t got through now?'' |
9497 | ''I suppose you will rest when you get to London?'' |
9497 | ''Is n''t it fine?'' |
9497 | ''It''s better like this, two men?'' |
9497 | ''May I listen?'' |
9497 | ''On foot?'' |
9497 | ''The women in America, when they came into the store, they said,"Where is John, where is John?" |
9497 | ''Then why ca n''t you marry? |
9497 | ''This much? |
9497 | ''What are they doing?'' |
9497 | ''What do you say?'' |
9497 | ''What does the Government do? |
9497 | ''What is all the noise?'' |
9497 | ''What is he called?'' |
9497 | ''What time will you be going on?'' |
9497 | ''What will you drink?'' |
9497 | ''What woman?'' |
9497 | ''What?'' |
9497 | ''What?'' |
9497 | ''When is the first steamer?'' |
9497 | ''Where do you come from?'' |
9497 | ''Where have you come from?'' |
9497 | ''Where?'' |
9497 | ''Which woman is it to be?'' |
9497 | ''Why are these Governments always doing what we do n''t want them to do? |
9497 | ''Why did you come on foot all down the valley when you could have taken the train? |
9497 | ''Why did you do so much?'' |
9497 | ''Why live with a woman?'' |
9497 | ''Why must he not go out?'' |
9497 | ''Why should we have a Government? |
9497 | ''Why,''I said,''do n''t you marry? |
9497 | ''Why? |
9497 | ''Will you have soup and boiled beef and vegetables?'' |
9497 | ''Wine or beer?'' |
9497 | ''Wo n''t you go back some time?'' |
9497 | ''Would you like omelette after the beef?'' |
9497 | ''You are Austrian?'' |
9497 | ''You are a German?'' |
9497 | ''You are coming to your room?'' |
9497 | ''You do n''t look forward to it?'' |
9497 | ''You live quite alone?'' |
9497 | ''_ Couvre- toi de gloire, Tartarin-- couvre- toi de flanelle._''Why should it please me so that his cloak is of red flannel? |
9497 | ''_ Quanto costa l''uva?_''were my first words in the south. |
9497 | ''_ Voyez, monsieur-- cet-- cet-- qu''est- ce que-- qu''est- ce que veut dire cet-- cela?_''He shows me the paper. |
9497 | ''_ È bello-- il ballo?_''he asked at length, one direct, flashing question. |
9497 | After all, why should I not eat, after the long walk? |
9497 | Am I greater than he, am I stronger than he? |
9497 | And I wondered, Why am I here, on this ridge of the Alps, in the lamp- lit, wooden, close- shut room, alone? |
9497 | And for what? |
9497 | And how much had they cost? |
9497 | And how much has that old imperial vanity clung to the German soul? |
9497 | And what is the rest, that which is- not the tiger, that which the tiger is- not? |
9497 | And yet, was she not herself finished in this work? |
9497 | Between the clerical party and the radicals and the socialists, what canons were left that were absolute? |
9497 | But I said in German:''May I look?'' |
9497 | But I, what am I? |
9497 | But do you live in Switzerland?'' |
9497 | But how does it come to pass in Christ? |
9497 | But is there nothing else? |
9497 | But the maestra came inflammably on that Thursday evening, and were we not going to the theatre, to see_ Amleto_? |
9497 | But the vine-- one crop--?'' |
9497 | Did not the German kings inherit the empire of bygone Rome? |
9497 | Do I know a consummation in the Infinite, I, the prey, beyond the tiger who devours me? |
9497 | Does it pass away, or does it only lose its pristine quality? |
9497 | Has the creature no sense? |
9497 | Have I only the negative ecstasy of being devoured, of becoming thus part of the Lord, the Great Moloch, the superb and terrible God? |
9497 | How can he know anything about being and not- being when he is only a maudlin compromise between them, and all he wants is to be a maudlin compromise? |
9497 | How could she be conscious of herself when all was herself? |
9497 | I asked him,''Used you to think of it, the lake, the Monte Baldo, the laurel trees down the slope?'' |
9497 | I did not dare to say,''Am I so far down?'' |
9497 | I forget everything except I will kill him--''''But you did n''t?'' |
9497 | If not, what, then, is being? |
9497 | Is there an affirmation, behind my negation, other than the tiger''s affirmation of his own glorious infinity? |
9497 | It is two years that I have not spoke, not a word-- so, you see, I have--''''You have forgotten it? |
9497 | It makes us work, it takes part of our wages away from us, it makes us soldiers-- and what for? |
9497 | O-- Nicoletta, where is the Giovann''?'' |
9497 | On Christmas Day the padrone came in with the key of his box, and would we care to see the drama? |
9497 | She is twice my age, but what is age in such circumstances? |
9497 | Should one ever go down to the lower world? |
9497 | That his body was in California, what did it matter? |
9497 | The boy comes to me and says:''Do you know, Signore, what they are singing?'' |
9497 | The issue, is it eternal not- being? |
9497 | The kingdom of the world had no significance: what could one do but wander about? |
9497 | The landlord came--''And bread?'' |
9497 | The landlord turned to us with the usual naïve, curious deference, and the usual question:''You are Germans?'' |
9497 | They argue among themselves for a moment: will the Signoria understand? |
9497 | To be or not to be King, Father, in the Self supreme? |
9497 | To be perfect, to be one with God, to be infinite and eternal, what shall we do? |
9497 | Was it worth it?'' |
9497 | What can be so fiercely gleaming when all is shadowy? |
9497 | What did they want when they came together, Paolo and she? |
9497 | What does a Government mean? |
9497 | What is government for?'' |
9497 | What is he brooding, then? |
9497 | What is it that he secretly yearns for, amid all the placidity of fate? |
9497 | What is that which parted ways with the terrific eagle- like angel of the senses at the Renaissance? |
9497 | What is the Oneness to which I subscribe, I who offer no resistance in the flesh? |
9497 | What is the reason? |
9497 | What is this Government? |
9497 | What is this? |
9497 | What should he choose for his great occasion, this broad, thick- set, ruddy descendant of the peasant proprietors of the plain? |
9497 | What then of her young breasts and her womb? |
9497 | What then, if a man come to me with a sword, to kill me, and I do not resist him, but suffer his sword and the death from his sword, what am I? |
9497 | What was all his courage but the very tip- top of cowardice? |
9497 | What, then, is being? |
9497 | What_ is_ the consummation in Christ? |
9497 | Where is the transcendent knowledge in our hearts, uniting sun and darkness, day and night, spirit and senses? |
9497 | Wherein am I perfect in this submission? |
9497 | Wherein are we superior? |
9497 | Who wants it? |
9497 | Why am I here? |
9497 | Why are the women so bad at playing this part in real life, this Ophelia- Gretchen role? |
9497 | Why are they so unwilling to go mad and die for our sakes? |
9497 | Why must you live alone?'' |
9497 | Why not? |
9497 | Why was I getting out at this wayside place, on to the great, raw high- road? |
9497 | Will he ever find himself in prison? |
9497 | Yet what should become of the world? |
43497 | Am I, then, to travel through the air, or sink down to the lower regions? |
43497 | And how old is the monastery? |
43497 | And west of that? |
43497 | And west of the Caspian Sea? |
43497 | And what is there to the west of this ocean? |
43497 | And where do you come to when you continue to travel westwards? |
43497 | And you will send my letter to Gyangtse? |
43497 | Are they civil to you? |
43497 | Are they in fairly good condition? |
43497 | Can you depend on your wife''s faithfulness for so long a time? |
43497 | Can you find your way, and are you sure that your supplies will last out? |
43497 | Certainly; but which way do you think of taking? 43497 Do you know the way to the south?" |
43497 | Do you see the small white swirls in the south- west? 43497 Does not the Sahib hear something?" |
43497 | Does not the Sahib think it dangerous to go further when the lake is bottomless? |
43497 | Does the Bombo Chimbo remember that I tried to detain him five and a half years ago with a large levy? |
43497 | Does the Devashung know that I am here? |
43497 | Has, then, Rabsang played a trick on me and the Babu Sahib? |
43497 | Have you any fresh information? |
43497 | Have you any horses you can sell us? |
43497 | Have you any yaks for sale? |
43497 | Have you heard anything more of the Governor? |
43497 | Have you heard that Hedin is in Srinagar? |
43497 | How are the hired horses? |
43497 | How can the Sahib regain his strength if he eats so little? |
43497 | How can you remember all that? |
43497 | How do you know that? |
43497 | How goes it with the animals? |
43497 | How is Hlaje Tsering getting on? |
43497 | How long can the animals hold out, if we find no pasture? |
43497 | How long is it by the nearest way to Shigatse?'''' 43497 How long will it take a messenger to reach him?" |
43497 | How many do you want to manage the caravan? |
43497 | How many more animals have we? |
43497 | How much do you want? |
43497 | How much longer will the storm last? |
43497 | In which direction have the robbers retired with their booty? |
43497 | Is Hlaje Tsering still ruler of Naktsang? |
43497 | Is he bringing with him as large a following as last time? |
43497 | Is there nothing here, then, that we can burn? 43497 It was agreed that you should accompany us as far as the Yeshil- kul; do you mean to break your word?" |
43497 | Master,suggested Robert, who always addressed me thus,"would it not be more prudent to land again before the storm reaches its height? |
43497 | May it not be Changpas? |
43497 | No, really? 43497 Now you see that I was right; how often have I told you that we should be ordered to halt at the Bogtsang- tsangpo?" |
43497 | Ordered to halt? |
43497 | Shall you have more of such lake voyages, Master? |
43497 | Tell me, Hlaje Tsering, do you think that I shall be stopped in the territory of the Labrang? |
43497 | Tell me, Ma Daloi, do you think that the Tashi Lama will receive me? |
43497 | That is all very fine, but have you any proof that the Tashi Lama will assume the responsibility of forwarding your letters? 43497 The road to the east is also barred?" |
43497 | WHERE ARE YOU GOING? |
43497 | We are, then, in the province of Tang- yung? |
43497 | We shall, then, have more losses soon? |
43497 | What are you afraid of? |
43497 | What are you talking about? 43497 What are your terms?" |
43497 | What do they say to my remaining away so long? |
43497 | What happens if she misconducts herself with another man? |
43497 | What is it? |
43497 | What is the matter? |
43497 | What is the news? |
43497 | What is their intention, do you think, Muhamed Isa? |
43497 | What lies to the west of Yarkand? |
43497 | What time is it, Master? |
43497 | What, in your opinion, do they mean to do with us? |
43497 | When? |
43497 | Where are you going? |
43497 | Where do you come from? |
43497 | Where do you think that the soldiers are waiting for us? |
43497 | Where is he? 43497 Where is the Governor of Naktsang?" |
43497 | Where? |
43497 | Which way will they ask us to take this time? |
43497 | Whither are you travelling? |
43497 | Who founded it, then? |
43497 | Who has brought the mail? |
43497 | Why did you not close the way to me? 43497 Why do you put these questions?" |
43497 | Why have you come to my tent, Karma Tamding? 43497 Why is it that it has just been so dark?" |
43497 | Why, then, have we not seen the fire before? 43497 Why,"they then both asked,"did you not show us this paper at once? |
43497 | Will it, then, be still colder than now? |
43497 | Will you be so good as to sell us yaks, Karma Tamding? |
43497 | Will you give us some of your sheep? |
43497 | Will you go on a long journey with me? |
43497 | Will you guide us? |
43497 | Will you procure us guides? |
43497 | Will you sell me some horses for them? |
43497 | You have not heard, then, that any messenger from Shigatse has been inquiring about us? |
43497 | A coarse fellow asked shortly and boldly( Illustration 89):"What are you?" |
43497 | A curious feeling of awe took possession of me; had I insulted them through some want of delicacy? |
43497 | A thought occurs to me: shall we travel on to the mouth of the Ki- chu and thence go up to Lhasa on foot? |
43497 | After all the severe trials and adventures we had experienced should we succeed in reaching our goal? |
43497 | Ah, where would my dreams again be shattered and my aspirations cease to pulsate? |
43497 | And why should they not be endowed with intelligence? |
43497 | And why? |
43497 | And with what object? |
43497 | And, besides, how long do you expect to have to wait here for the answer? |
43497 | Are they walls erected across my path by hostile spirits, or do they await my coming? |
43497 | Are you disposed to accompany me on a journey of two years through the high mountains?" |
43497 | But could we carry ourselves enough provisions to last us through this uninhabited country? |
43497 | But he must know something about me, or how could Ngurbu Tundup''s arrival at Ngangtse- tso with the letters be explained? |
43497 | But tell me, are you not the_ Peling_ who came five years ago with two companions to Nakchu, and was compelled by the Governor to turn back?" |
43497 | But what is that? |
43497 | But where are our men? |
43497 | But why is this?" |
43497 | But why was he so late? |
43497 | But, tell me, how have you got on since we last saw one another?" |
43497 | Can I have the kidneys for dinner to- morrow?" |
43497 | Can he be Amitabha himself? |
43497 | Could I not buy some of these charming figures? |
43497 | Could the boat provide us with shelter? |
43497 | Could we keep alive till the sun rose? |
43497 | Did spring set in so early in these more southern regions? |
43497 | Does the Maharaja of Kashmir lay claim to it, or the Dalai- Lama, or is it a part of Chinese Turkestan? |
43497 | Each community remains together on the journey, but how do they choose a leader? |
43497 | Had Ganpat Sing lost the letters, or had they never reached Leh? |
43497 | Had Hlaje Tsering received secret orders from Lhasa? |
43497 | Had I not here a task before me much more profitable than following in the steps of Tommy Atkins to Lhasa? |
43497 | Had he been informed that the Tashi Lama was really expecting me? |
43497 | Had it, perchance, tributaries deriving their water from the heart of the mysterious country to the north? |
43497 | Had the wolves torn him in pieces? |
43497 | Has anything happened to him? |
43497 | Has one of your superiors sent you?" |
43497 | Have they not come this very day to stop our further progress?" |
43497 | Have you one from the Tashi Lama? |
43497 | He was given the particulars he wanted, and then he asked:"Will the Bombo Chimbo be so kind as to wait here until the answer comes back?" |
43497 | Hlaje Tsering bristled up at once and exclaimed:"To the Dangra- yum- tso? |
43497 | How can they love a wife whom they possess in common with others, so that there is no room for the idea of faithfulness in marriage? |
43497 | How could I foresee that I should one day reckon him among my best friends, and think of him with warm respect and admiration? |
43497 | How is the caravan?" |
43497 | How long is it to the dawn? |
43497 | How long would it be before the boat would ground on the hard, salt bottom, if it found itself in a trough between two waves? |
43497 | How should we prosper? |
43497 | How were we to pass the night with 29 degrees of frost, and wet clothes already stiffened into cuirasses of ice? |
43497 | I look in vain for the beacon of my servants; have they not obeyed my orders, or are they so far from the shore that the fire is invisible? |
43497 | If I let you go, which road will you take?" |
43497 | Is it to be wondered at that a stranger feels happy in this house, where he is surrounded daily with kindness and hospitality? |
43497 | Is not the following menu tempting? |
43497 | Is the river one of the forbidden paths of Tibet? |
43497 | Is there a lake in the neighbourhood? |
43497 | It is evident that we must leave Shigatse, but by which route? |
43497 | It is well and naturally executed--_pia fraus!_"When was the monastery founded?" |
43497 | Might it not be better to make for the unknown country west of the Dangra- yum- tso, which after all was the main object of my journey? |
43497 | Nay, should I ever have enough of it? |
43497 | Now all the militia must stand under arms to----""You surely do not intend to detain me again?" |
43497 | Now the only question was: should we be able to drag ourselves along to inhabited districts? |
43497 | On October 1 I wrote in my diary:"What will be our experiences in this new month? |
43497 | Or should we seek out the nearest nomads at once, and beg them for assistance? |
43497 | Or tell me to what Power this land belongs? |
43497 | Robert and I rolled ourselves together in a bunch, but of what use was it? |
43497 | Several months?" |
43497 | Shall we remain together so long? |
43497 | Should I be tired of it? |
43497 | Should we all remain together till we fell in with the first nomads? |
43497 | Should we be received as open enemies, and after all wish ourselves back with the wolves on the banks of Yeshil- kul? |
43497 | Should we perish one after another in these icy deserts of the Tibetan Alps? |
43497 | The post? |
43497 | Three antelope tracks we crossed were regarded as a good sign; there must be pasturage somewhere about, but where? |
43497 | Twilight falls; I feel my heart beating; shall we succeed? |
43497 | Was it another traveller, or had hunters wandered thus far? |
43497 | Was it certain where the source of the Brahmaputra lay? |
43497 | Was it possible? |
43497 | Was it, perhaps, impossible, for political reasons, to send me my letters from India? |
43497 | Was the spring coming? |
43497 | Was, perhaps, the Raga- tsangpo the main stream? |
43497 | Were there warm springs at the bottom which prevented the lake from freezing over in parts? |
43497 | What are you gazing at?" |
43497 | What did it matter what time it was? |
43497 | What did it matter whether the Tibetans would be friendly or hostile? |
43497 | What did this most unexpected change of front mean? |
43497 | What did we care if the air was raw and cold? |
43497 | What did we talk about? |
43497 | What do you think of doing now?" |
43497 | What is to happen then?" |
43497 | What on earth can he have to tell them that they have not heard already twenty times over? |
43497 | What would become of the re- incarnation when no one knew where the two popes were dwelling? |
43497 | What would it have profited me to have made them anxious by anticipating troubles? |
43497 | What would the next year bring? |
43497 | When and where would these leaves come to rest after flying over endless stretches of unknown country? |
43497 | When did he come?" |
43497 | Where have you been yourself?" |
43497 | Where would our grand progress come to a standstill, checked by a peremptory"Thus far and no farther,"backed up by muzzle- loaders and sabres? |
43497 | Who would have looked for a true prairie up here in North Tibet? |
43497 | Why did I not understand him when he so plainly said a last good- bye? |
43497 | Why did they not signal by lighting a fire? |
43497 | Why should they speed away at random like soulless flying- machines? |
43497 | Why? |
43497 | Would it be granted me to find once more my home unchanged? |
43497 | Would it not be better to land and wait for the day? |
43497 | Would opposition still continue, or would the Tibetans prove more friendly than Europeans? |
43497 | Would the 13th be unfortunate for us also? |
43497 | Would the lama monasteries of Tibet give us such a friendly welcome? |
43497 | the culminating point of my career or a retrogression? |
31557 | Aha,say you,"and what is a Black Boy?" |
31557 | And how did you know that crane to be a spirit? |
31557 | And what is Devil- work? |
31557 | But when,I asked,"shall we come to your coffee plantation?" |
31557 | Captain, is it permitted to come on board? |
31557 | Did he lose a ship of John Hart''s? |
31557 | Did you ever see an evil spirit? |
31557 | Do none of you smell flowers? |
31557 | Do you know what the name of that spirit was? 31557 Do you like bathing?" |
31557 | Do you like school? |
31557 | Do you mean to refuse me what I ask? |
31557 | Do you not know they are murdering your king? |
31557 | Had you hidden a tapu? |
31557 | How else can a man prove himself to be brave? |
31557 | How is this? |
31557 | How many pathom he high? |
31557 | How much you got? 31557 How much you want?" |
31557 | How on earth do you know that? |
31557 | How shall I repay your great kindness to me? 31557 How?" |
31557 | If a white chief came up here and smelt this, how would you feel? |
31557 | In short, I am to look for no support, whether physical or moral? |
31557 | Is that royal? |
31557 | Is that true, George? |
31557 | Is the island on the spree? |
31557 | Like Mahinui? |
31557 | My patha he tell me he see: you think he lie? |
31557 | My patha he tell me,or"White man he tell me,"would be his constant beginning;"You think he lie?" |
31557 | Now what is your motive in this? |
31557 | Under what form? |
31557 | What are you doing here? |
31557 | What chief? |
31557 | What did she say to you? |
31557 | What do you want with a gun, Arick? |
31557 | What have you in the canoe that I should smell carrion? |
31557 | What is it? |
31557 | What is that? |
31557 | What is the matter with the man? 31557 Where are you going?" |
31557 | Who asked the Great Powers to make laws for us; to bring strangers here to rule us? |
31557 | Who is that man, father? |
31557 | Who is that? |
31557 | Why do they call themselves Mormons? |
31557 | Why do you not go to help him? |
31557 | Why do you not take these? |
31557 | Why, what is the meaning of all this? |
31557 | Will you be at school to- morrow? |
31557 | Will you take a cigar? |
31557 | With two husbands? |
31557 | You are old,they argued;"soon you will die; what use will it be to you?" |
31557 | You got copra, king? |
31557 | You like some beer? |
31557 | _ Et vos gargouilles moyen- âge_,cried I;"_ comme elles sont originales!_""_ N''est- ce pas? |
31557 | _ Mitai ehipe?_I asked. |
31557 | _ Pas de cocotiers? 31557 ''Melican mate he go away?'' 31557 ''What you go do''Melican mate?'' 31557 ''You like blackee coat?'' 31557 ''You like file- a''m?'' 31557 (_ Pantomime._) He say Missa Whela,''Ma''Whala?'' 31557 A chief in Little Makin asked, in an hour of lightness,Who is Kaeia?" |
31557 | A sedge- like grass( buffalo grass?) |
31557 | About one- third of the troops believed him this time; how many will believe him the next? |
31557 | After all, what was there to complain of? |
31557 | And how about the current? |
31557 | And how was the point brought again before his Honour? |
31557 | And now it might beat upon these ruins, and who should assemble? |
31557 | And shall I not be a little loyal to Mataafa? |
31557 | And suppose the king should fall, what would be the fate of the king''s friends? |
31557 | And the end of it? |
31557 | And this is my mamma? |
31557 | And was he not wise, since that was his complaint, to go to folks who could do more? |
31557 | And where? |
31557 | And why should they be at the bother of two walks? |
31557 | And will you not help me? |
31557 | And you know how much afraid the natives are of the evil spirits in the wood, and how they think all sickness comes from them? |
31557 | Asked why there was a sleeping- mat, he retorted indignantly,"Why have you mats?" |
31557 | Bishop:"Why are the Hawaiians Dying Out?" |
31557 | But to whom can we address ourselves? |
31557 | But what had he to do with it? |
31557 | But what were the Consuls doing in this matter of inland administration? |
31557 | But which? |
31557 | But why are these so different? |
31557 | But why are they dead? |
31557 | But why were they previously left in the dark? |
31557 | But why( it will be asked) spin out by these excessive methods a thread of such tenuity? |
31557 | By what criterion is the convert to distinguish the essential from the unessential? |
31557 | By what powers of law was this result attained? |
31557 | By what process known to diplomacy has he risen from his one- sixth part of municipal authority to be the Bismarck of a Polynesian island? |
31557 | Did she understand? |
31557 | Did they like it? |
31557 | Do these unfortunates like the king? |
31557 | Do you not hear something supernatural?" |
31557 | Does it permit a state of society in which a citizen can live and act with confidence? |
31557 | For do we not find, in the case of the municipal treasury, the same disquieting features? |
31557 | For the poor treaty officials, what have they but rights very obscurely expressed and very weakly defended by their predecessors? |
31557 | For why should a mere meteor frequent the altars of abominable gods? |
31557 | Fresh points at once arise:"What are the Israelites? |
31557 | He looked at the missionary, and what did he see? |
31557 | He say chief:--''Chief, you like things of mine? |
31557 | Here it is:"The king, he good man?" |
31557 | Him they approached with honeyed words and carneying manners--"You are So- and- so, son of So- and- so?" |
31557 | How does their own poet sing? |
31557 | How else could a man prove he was brave? |
31557 | How if both were fathers, one natural, one adoptive? |
31557 | How if the founder of the monarchy, while he worked for his brother, worked at the same time for the child of his loins? |
31557 | How if the heir of Tembaitake, like the heir of Tembinok''himself, were not a son, but an adopted nephew? |
31557 | I ask you, which of these two persons was slain by Kamehameha? |
31557 | I begin to be alarmed; and because I am afraid I ask you to confront a certain danger"? |
31557 | I felt guiltless upon all; but how to show it? |
31557 | I would not have taken copra in a gift: how to express that quality by my dinner- table bearing? |
31557 | I wrote of Parker that he behaved like a boy of ten: what was he else, being a slave of sixty? |
31557 | If he was with Malietoa''s men, which is the real gist of his offence, we who are not Germans may surely ask, Why not? |
31557 | Is a father- in- law one of a man''s own family? |
31557 | Is it a law at all? |
31557 | Is this English law? |
31557 | It is great fun( I have tried it) for the child, and I never heard of it doing any harm to the fishes, so what could be more jolly? |
31557 | It was surely fortunate that there was no one drunk; but, drunk or sober, where else would a scene so irritating have concluded without blows? |
31557 | Kekela he say;''why you want?'' |
31557 | Meanwhile, the calf stood looking on, a little perplexed, and seemed to be saying:"Well, now, is this life? |
31557 | Meanwhile, there was the cow, with the board over her eyes, left tied by a pretty long rope to a small tree in the paddock, and who was to milk her? |
31557 | Now, do you remember Misifolo-- a tall, thin Hovea boy that came shortly before you left? |
31557 | On what ground is Malietoa a rebel? |
31557 | Or is not rather the repulsion mutual? |
31557 | Should I not approach her on the still depending question of my rent? |
31557 | So much was accomplished: what was to follow? |
31557 | Something wrong? |
31557 | Taipi might; he ought; it was a chief part of his duty; but would any one regard the inhibition of a Beggar on Horseback? |
31557 | The Captain was got safe off the wicked horse, but how was he to get back again to Apia and the_ Alameda_? |
31557 | They now face empty- handed the tedium of their uneventful days; and who shall pity them? |
31557 | Uncle Lloyd and Palema made a malanga[21] to go over the island to Siumu, and Talolo was anxious to go also; but how could we get along without him? |
31557 | Was it Luheluhe?" |
31557 | Was it not the same with unchastity, it may be asked? |
31557 | Was not the Polynesian always unchaste? |
31557 | What can they do? |
31557 | What circumstance is common to them all, but that they lived on islands destitute, or very nearly so, of animal food? |
31557 | What do the little girls in the cellar think that Austin does? |
31557 | What else should we expect? |
31557 | What had the man been after? |
31557 | What is the difference between their cases? |
31557 | What is the nature of the obligation assumed at such a festival? |
31557 | What step could be taken? |
31557 | What was the business? |
31557 | What was their right to interfere? |
31557 | What were the arguments with which they overcame the resistance of the Government? |
31557 | When had it begun again? |
31557 | When had it stopped? |
31557 | Who can blame them for their timidity? |
31557 | Who is Dr. Knappe, thus to make peace and war, deal in life and death, and close with a buffet the mouth of English Consuls? |
31557 | Who is responsible now for the care and good treatment of these political prisoners? |
31557 | Who is responsible? |
31557 | Who is the unknown power that sent Mataafa in a German ship to the Marshalls, instead of in an English ship to Fiji? |
31557 | Who told them so? |
31557 | Who was responsible for this? |
31557 | Who was to be punished?--the whaler guilty of the act, the missionary whose denunciation had provoked the scandal? |
31557 | Why ca n''t he talk?" |
31557 | Why go to such lengths for four months longer of fallacious solvency? |
31557 | Why should I wonder? |
31557 | Why should he? |
31557 | Why this change? |
31557 | You ask if we have seen Arick? |
31557 | You remember Tauilo, and what a fine, tall, strong, Madame Lafarge sort of person she is? |
31557 | You would not like to be very sick in some savage place in the islands, and have only the savages to doctor you? |
31557 | and had not every country its own customs? |
31557 | and that keeps separated Faamoina and his wife? |
31557 | and what kind of torrent was that which had swept us eastward in the interval? |
31557 | and what the Kanitus?" |
31557 | and what was their sentiment towards the ruler? |
31557 | he asked, and then, with a sneer,"Are you afraid of your life?" |
31557 | pas de popoi?_"she asked. |
31557 | that has decreed since that he shall receive not even inconsiderable gifts and open letters? |
31557 | you like whaleboat?'' |
4229 | Ah, but how do you know they have it as cold as this? 4229 All ready? |
4229 | And what about the Pole? 4229 Are you going to look at the Fram?" |
4229 | But look here,cried an impatient voice:"are n''t we going to have Borghild Bryhn to- night?" |
4229 | But,I ventured to object,"are you sure it is as strong as the others?" |
4229 | Do you hear that noise? 4229 Doubt? |
4229 | Had you any special object? |
4229 | He ca n''t be taking anything but air now, can he? |
4229 | How could I have been such an ass as not to think of it long ago? |
4229 | How is it going? |
4229 | How''s it getting on to- day-- is it coming? |
4229 | Is this really a Polar ship? |
4229 | Look there, in the snow- wall-- just under our feet-- can you see the light? |
4229 | No; what are you talking about? |
4229 | Now, Stubberud, what''s the temperature to- day? |
4229 | Shall we try it? |
4229 | Snow- blind? 4229 Such an everyday affair: what''s the use of making a fuss about it?" |
4229 | Want a pilot, captain? |
4229 | Was that the stuff? |
4229 | What do you think of the lashings now, Hanssen? |
4229 | What made you choose that particular direction? |
4229 | What on earth is Uroa scenting? |
4229 | What on earth is that shining over there through the fog? |
4229 | What,I said,"more whips?" |
4229 | -- How''s the coal- supply getting on?" |
4229 | -- What do you think? |
4229 | -- there could not be one of those mountains of cake to every man? |
4229 | --"What does the crevasse look like?" |
4229 | --"What sort of handles?" |
4229 | --"What''s it like outside?" |
4229 | A high, perpendicular face of ice, up which we should have to haul our things laboriously with the help of tackles? |
4229 | A last look behind me:"All ready?" |
4229 | And Lindström? |
4229 | And evidently they must have had enough food, but where on earth had they got it from? |
4229 | And if it came to that, would any of them survive the voyage round the formidable promontory? |
4229 | And if so, under what conditions? |
4229 | And why not? |
4229 | And why? |
4229 | And yet even to- day we hear people ask in surprise: What is the use of these voyages of exploration? |
4229 | And yet, I wonder whether there was not a little feeling of melancholy in the midst of all our joy? |
4229 | And, after all, whose fault was it? |
4229 | As we stood there, afraid to begin, one of us-- it must have been Lindström, or Hanssen perhaps, or was it myself? |
4229 | At Hassel''s? |
4229 | At last it slipped out of Gjertsen:"Have you been there?" |
4229 | At least two hours might be saved, I had no doubt of that-- but how? |
4229 | Besides, were there not dogs enough, and good dogs too, in Alaska? |
4229 | But how long should we have to wait for clear weather? |
4229 | But now we snapped our fingers at the weather; what difference did it make to us if the wind howled in the guy- ropes and the snow drifted? |
4229 | But the circumstances we were now in were not normal-- or was it, perhaps, myself who was not normal? |
4229 | But there, in the opposite direction, what was there? |
4229 | But wait: what is that? |
4229 | But was it so? |
4229 | But what does the dazzling day to the south conceal? |
4229 | But what had become of Hassel? |
4229 | But what in the world had become of Captain Larsen and the Antarctic? |
4229 | But what was that? |
4229 | But why had he brought in eight-- two enormous dishes with four on each? |
4229 | Can anyone be surprised if one gets fond of such a ship? |
4229 | Can anyone be surprised that we called it the Devil''s Glacier? |
4229 | Can anyone grasp what such an offer meant at such a spot, made to a man who, to tell the truth, is very fond of a smoke after meals? |
4229 | Can anyone who reads these lines form an idea of the effect this had upon us? |
4229 | Can anything more inexplicable be imagined? |
4229 | Can anything more topsy- turvy be imagined? |
4229 | Can it be that the dog has not understood his master? |
4229 | Could it be true? |
4229 | Could that great white, unbroken plain over there be real, or was it only an illusion? |
4229 | Did n''t you get sick of all those dogs? |
4229 | Did you hurt yourself? |
4229 | Do these animals possess a power of communicating with each other? |
4229 | Do you know what it was? |
4229 | Do you know what it was? |
4229 | Does the glacier go smoothly on into the plateau, or is it broken up and impassable? |
4229 | For what had happened only a few days before? |
4229 | Hanssen did not take long to make up his mind, but what was the use? |
4229 | Have you been there?" |
4229 | Hot cakes? |
4229 | How can one be in doubt about what one has heard with one''s own ears and seen with one''s own eyes?" |
4229 | How did that moss come there? |
4229 | How many would there be among us, who numbered nine? |
4229 | How on earth did you manage to keep them alive? |
4229 | How were we going to begin to bring order out of this chaos? |
4229 | How, then, shall I describe our grief when, on the day we were to wear our beautiful sea- boots, we discovered that most of them were useless? |
4229 | I could see that the passage was continued, but where did it lead? |
4229 | I glance at the thermometer; it shows+50 ° F. But how can this be? |
4229 | I squeeze in between the bundles of clothing, and what do I see? |
4229 | I think it took about five minutes for the steam to disappear, and what did I see then? |
4229 | I thought; ca n''t you see? |
4229 | I understood, of course, that he saw something, but what? |
4229 | I was really the only one to blame; why in the world had I not got away faster? |
4229 | If he staked his life and abilities, would it not have been natural if we had been proud of having such a man to support? |
4229 | In my diary I see that I conclude the day with the following words"What will the next surprise be, I wonder?" |
4229 | Is it likely? |
4229 | Is such a thing possible? |
4229 | Is there no end to it? |
4229 | It must be the Bay of Whales that we were looking down into, but what were those black things moving up and down? |
4229 | It was no loss to us, as it happened; but who could tell which way these creatures had gone? |
4229 | It was not without a certain feeling of suspense that we looked forward to our arrival at the harbour we were seeking What state should we find it in? |
4229 | It was quite exciting to go up; what should we see at the top? |
4229 | It will naturally be asked, What could be the cause of this? |
4229 | Not till an hour later, when we had discussed all kinds of other things, did I enquire"Well, of course you have been at the South Pole?" |
4229 | Now came the great question: What was there on the other side of the ridge? |
4229 | Oh, Lindström, how long will this order last? |
4229 | On account of the great geographical discoveries, the important scientific results? |
4229 | One of the watch below, who had just come on deck, exclaimed:"What the devil is this beastly mess you fellows have got into?" |
4229 | One often hears it asked, How is it possible to make the time pass on such a trip? |
4229 | One often hears it asked, Which is to be preferred, severe heat or severe cold? |
4229 | Or a great and dangerous fissure, which we should not be able to cross without going a long way round? |
4229 | Or are they digging side by side on different lines? |
4229 | Or is it the master who has not understood his dog? |
4229 | Or would Nature present insurmountable difficulties? |
4229 | Shall we meet again? |
4229 | Shall we start?" |
4229 | Should we go on? |
4229 | Something extraordinary must await us farther on, but, what? |
4229 | That was strange-- could all ten have gone down crevasses? |
4229 | The formations appeared to promise it, and yet-- had we been so often deceived by these formations that we now refused to offer them a thought? |
4229 | The light is so wonderful; what causes this strange glow? |
4229 | The limestone is probably of older Palæozoic age(? |
4229 | The question was, what would those two do when at last they had come up with their sledges? |
4229 | Then comes Bjaaland; I wonder whether he is as smart at this game as he is on ski? |
4229 | Then there was a hearty welcome home on all sides"Where''s the Fram?" |
4229 | There had been five days of absolute calm; why should it not last out the week? |
4229 | These looked very well, no doubt, freshly dyed as they were, but the question was, What would they look like after a couple of months''use? |
4229 | They had the sun to go by, certainly, when they started, but who could say how long it would last? |
4229 | Up on the Barrier all was absolutely still, and there was not a sign of life; indeed, what should anything live on? |
4229 | Very strange, I thought; what can this be? |
4229 | Was it possible that we were on our way down through the mountains again? |
4229 | Was it possible? |
4229 | Was it possibly instinct that told us this? |
4229 | Was it the same desperate confusion, or would the ground offer better facilities? |
4229 | Was it witchcraft? |
4229 | Was n''t it he who was sent home from the Discovery after the first year? |
4229 | Was there then any race to be first? |
4229 | We knew that an enormous amount of weight could be saved, but how much? |
4229 | We set traps, but what was the use of that, when the cargo consisted exclusively of provisions? |
4229 | Were they going over to the other side? |
4229 | What could this mean? |
4229 | What did it mean? |
4229 | What do you say to that? |
4229 | What do you say to that? |
4229 | What do you think of a bite of a mouth like that?" |
4229 | What does he want to go out for again? |
4229 | What does the end look like? |
4229 | What good do they do us? |
4229 | What in the world does that mean? |
4229 | What in the world does the man mean? |
4229 | What in the world was the meaning of this? |
4229 | What in the world was this hall used for? |
4229 | What is it that imposes this simultaneous stop? |
4229 | What kind of country should we have to deal with? |
4229 | What more can one wish?" |
4229 | What on earth became of all these people? |
4229 | What should we see when we got there? |
4229 | What sort of a report would they bring of the result? |
4229 | What was coming next? |
4229 | What was it I had stumbled over? |
4229 | What was it he talked about? |
4229 | What was the object of taking all these dogs on board and transporting them all that long way? |
4229 | What was the use of all these planks and boards? |
4229 | What was to be done? |
4229 | What wonder was it that this spot exercised a strong attraction upon each of us at the moment when we were to turn our backs upon it for good? |
4229 | What would Steen say? |
4229 | What would it be like when we had to get on to the plateau? |
4229 | What would it be like? |
4229 | What would it bring? |
4229 | What would the result be, after marching blindly for so long and over such impossible ground, as we had been doing? |
4229 | What would you do? |
4229 | What, then, is the reason? |
4229 | When I looked at this one, what do you think I saw? |
4229 | When should we see those five again, who had just disappeared from view on the boundless plain, and in what conditions? |
4229 | When we were going south, it certainly looked impassable between us and the mountains; but who could tell? |
4229 | Where could he be? |
4229 | Who cared to think of coming troubles? |
4229 | Who could tell? |
4229 | Who would have guessed that such splendid weather was to be found in these parts? |
4229 | Why was the whole after- deck full of coal? |
4229 | Why? |
4229 | Will they meet? |
4229 | Would it be unreasonable if those who have endured and achieved so much had now come home to rest? |
4229 | Would it be vouchsafed to us to uphold this honourable tradition? |
4229 | Would it continue in this boundless plain without hindrance of any kind? |
4229 | Would it not have been much more convenient to take all that kind of goods on board in''Frisco? |
4229 | Would it prove impossible to land at all conveniently? |
4229 | Would not Fix take advantage of the occasion to assume the position of boss? |
4229 | Would they soon be coming? |
4229 | Would they turn and go home, or would they drive up to the starting- point? |
4229 | Yes, circumstances work wonders; for I suppose one need not make Providence responsible for these trifles? |
4229 | and do you want to know where I found it? |
4229 | ca n''t you hear? |
4229 | there was Lindström lying on his stomach up in the loft, and handing down through the trap- door-- what do you think? |
4229 | what can they have meant by this howling? |
15171 | Mr. Bauer is not half appreciated yet; he is considered a very great artist, but what is that to what he was? 15171 1 Cyprinidae, Streams from A brown fish, with irregular Oreinus? 15171 69 Barbus? |
15171 | 70 Gonorhynchus?" |
15171 | 72 Cyprinoid,"73"Gonorhyncus, Gurmab, Same as 70? |
15171 | 998 common, Chenopodioid? |
15171 | A curious question arises, what is the frond of a fern? |
15171 | A curious tendency is observed in Pomaceae, Ceraseae to have the stamina of the same colour as the petals, thereby_ showing their origin_? |
15171 | A fine arborescent Wendlandia, Bignonia indica? |
15171 | A small Lycopodium, Gmelina asiatica? |
15171 | A_ Sarcopyramis Sonerilae_ was also found, but rather past flowering, and an Acrostichum? |
15171 | After leaving Panga we came on to a place called Minzapeeza, here Adiantum, Aspidium? |
15171 | Again, why do some plants flower sooner at such elevations than at other lower places? |
15171 | All genuine aquatic types have leaves involute in vernation? |
15171 | Also the sheath may not have adhesive powers at its apex to prevent the escape of the radical at that point: witness Hyacinth roots? |
15171 | An arborescent Urticea( Baehmeria?) |
15171 | An both longitudinally and Opsarion? |
15171 | Aralia or Panax, four or five species, Croton malvaefolium, Justicia, Adhatoda, Peristrophe, Amaranthaceae, Artemisia, Urtica urens? |
15171 | Are all Myrtaceae dicarpellar? |
15171 | Are they barren from mere deficiency in supplies, such as may result from many circumstances; or are the antheriform ramenta deficient? |
15171 | Artemisiae one or two, Centaurea spinosa, Salsola cordifolia and aphylla? |
15171 | Astragalus, and Peganum, are the most common; Muscoides, Plantaginacea reoccur, a curious_ leaved_ Composita? |
15171 | At 10,000 feet, the Spilus microphyllus, Polygonum, as well as on ascent Gaultheria nummularioid., swards abounding with Gramen nardoides(? |
15171 | At 8,000 feet, Hamiltonia? |
15171 | At 9,300 feet, Morina Wallichiana, Osmundioid, Dipsacus, Scabiosa? |
15171 | At the nullah, Fici sp., Saccharum Megala, Verbenacia? |
15171 | At the raised Marine Fossil Beach, a queer Cephalanthus? |
15171 | At the same elevation Parnassia, Epilobium monus, Gnaphalium densiflor., Vaccinium pumilum, Gentiana, Polygonum(?) |
15171 | Below this a little, woods commence chiefly of Bogh Pata, Cerasus, Salix, Rosa fructibus hispidis, Acers, Abelia? |
15171 | Berberis asiatica, Hamamelidea? |
15171 | Berberis asiatica, Viburna, Spiraea_ bella_? |
15171 | But wherever I turn, the question suggests itself, what business have I here collecting plants, with so many in Calcutta demanding attention? |
15171 | Can it be cultivated solely for the straw? |
15171 | Can the Mahaseer not reach this? |
15171 | Chilwa, Perilamp,? |
15171 | Commelina bengalensis? |
15171 | Does this indicate its being of a more tropical nature than the others? |
15171 | During the latter portion of the journey, I gathered a Passiflora? |
15171 | Euphorbia ramis 4-gonis, foliis? |
15171 | Ferns occur in more abundance, thence downwards Woodwardia, Dicksonia? |
15171 | Ficus elastica? |
15171 | Hamamelidea, Cedrela? |
15171 | Horsemen to the number of 100? |
15171 | How can I reconcile my own splendid opportunities with those of more deserving naturalists in other branches? |
15171 | How can one account for the small elevation at which fish are found in the Himalayan? |
15171 | Hymenophyllum, Davallia atrata, Diplazium, Begonia Malabarica? |
15171 | I am horridly idle, and yet what can I do without books; yet with regard to books, the more originality we possess, the less we require them? |
15171 | I hope to be particular in hereafter comparing the floras of all the deserts? |
15171 | I met with Sarcostemma ciliatum; Wall.? |
15171 | In addition a Polygala, a Crucifera with bracteae and white flowers, an Acanthacea, Prenanthes? |
15171 | In cornfields Fumariaceae, Adonis, Cruciferae, Pulmonaria, Arenaria, Hordei sp., Tulipa lutea, and Hyacinthus? |
15171 | In one place I gathered Lonicera heterophylla, a fragrant Valeriana? |
15171 | In several cases, each pinna appears to have scales only which become barren lobes? |
15171 | In the ditches Typha, Butomus, watercresses, Alomioides, Ceratophyllum, Lemna_ gibba_? |
15171 | In the fields a young Ranunculus in profusion, Veronica agrestis, Euphorbia, Festuca annua? |
15171 | In the vine the ancient tendrils are perfectly woody, although this may not be true wood, yet it is truly fibrous, and I ask, from what is it formed? |
15171 | Is it not rather a Viticea, owing to the absence of the 5th stamen? |
15171 | Is it, or is it not, subservient to reproduction? |
15171 | Is there any plant existing with two sorts of gemmae, so differently constituted? |
15171 | It obviously has much analogy? |
15171 | It would be curious to enquire why the powers of variation change so completely in the different families? |
15171 | Khurda, ditto Trichopterus? |
15171 | Kydia continues; a fine Palm, caudex 8- 10-pedali; it probably belongs to the genus Wallichia? |
15171 | Lichens abundant on black_ limestone_? |
15171 | Loaches, Perilamps, and especially an Oreinus? |
15171 | Micaceous slate? |
15171 | Musci Lichens and fungi abound in the wood, as also Circaea and Herminium? |
15171 | No such thing as a petiolate leaf occurs in acrogens, all are attached by a broad base? |
15171 | Nobody answering him, he continued,"Do you hear what I say?" |
15171 | One tree occurs with a Fraxinus? |
15171 | Painted partridges were seen; and the eggs of a large bird like a plover? |
15171 | People may object and say, why were not more met with_ opened_? |
15171 | Phoenix becoming more frequent and finer, P. acaulis? |
15171 | Poinciana pulcherrima, both red and yellow, Rhus? |
15171 | Query, is this a sign of the greater development of Morus? |
15171 | Query-- In which part of a fish intestines like that of the Mahaseer, is the chief digestion carried on? |
15171 | Query-- Why are Carduaceae,( Artemisia) so adapted to aridity? |
15171 | Rhododendron(?) |
15171 | Some change is to be observed in the vegetation, see Catalogue, two or three Labiata, an Ononis, an Aconite, Tussilago? |
15171 | Spathoglottis, and Anthogonum occur on the flat rocks, which frequently prevail; Arundinaria is seen every where as well as a Smithia? |
15171 | Spiraea bella, Conaria, Erythrium, Elaeagnus spinosus, Salix? |
15171 | Staminis laciniis alternatis? |
15171 | That they should have no sexes, reproductive organs, and two sorts of gemmae, or sexes, reproductive organs, or gemmae of one evident kind? |
15171 | The Cymbidioid has pollena 4, incumbentia postice aliquoties minore, glandula nulla? |
15171 | The Tankervellia( or Pharus?) |
15171 | The chief cultivation about here is_ Nihi- joari_, then_ Bajra_--why is the former always bent? |
15171 | The chief cultivation of the hills, Atriplex sanguinea,_ bhatoo vena_, some fine walnut trees, mulberries, also Celtoidea? |
15171 | The cultivation consists of rice, millet, Soflong? |
15171 | The game birds are quail, three species of partridge, a huge Ptarmigan? |
15171 | The grasses of the summit are two Andropogons: an Arundo Festucoidea, Panicum, Isachne, Nardus ceasing below, it is towards this that Crepis? |
15171 | The herbaceous plants are very numerous, Compositae, Cruciferae, small Leguminosae, Berberideae, Isopyroides, Crocus? |
15171 | The humidity which may appear connected with the rapid evaporation in these countries, and which obtains? |
15171 | The marshes which are frequented by a few snipe, present grasses, the usual Cyperaceae, Xyris, occurs but is not common; Panicum stagninum? |
15171 | The mosses of this side were Brachymenium, Tortula, Famaria, Trichostomum, Neckerae, Polytrichum fuscum, Zygodon? |
15171 | The most common plants are Artemisiae two or three species, Centaurea spinosa, Salsola luteiflora, Almond groves, Iris crocifolia? |
15171 | The most common tree here, is Urticea procera? |
15171 | The only new plants were a Celtis? |
15171 | The plants which were particularly conspicuous about Churra, were past flowering in the interior; thus Osbeckia Nepalensis? |
15171 | The timber trees, or rather trees not producing fruit, and which the_ Moolla_ thinks very lightly of, are the_ Chenar_,( plane),_ Pudda_,( Poplar? |
15171 | The water of this river or portion of the Megna? |
15171 | The water plants continue the same as at Cabul; Hippurus and Triglochin, Mentha, Cochlearia, Naiad? |
15171 | The wild form of_ Oryza sativa_,_ Panicum interruptum_ and_ Leersia_? |
15171 | The wind inclining to be hot, but it is cool up to 7.5 or 8 A.M. Alaudo cristata? |
15171 | Then along the wooded banks, Wendlandia,_ Pomacea_? |
15171 | There were two species of Laridae, neither of which I had seen before, several small Tringae, the very long red shanked bird, Hematopus? |
15171 | These lines are united by smaller oblique ones, whence their origin? |
15171 | Thorns of Prionites, what are they? |
15171 | Thus Bayfield asked his writer, who such a one standing near him was, whether a Shan or Singpho? |
15171 | Thus Greville and Arnott, angrily ask, what do persons mean by saying that mosses have pistilla, etc.? |
15171 | Thus, Jonesia and Peronema, Jack? |
15171 | To what extent do these agree with coal? |
15171 | To what is this owing? |
15171 | Trichonema, Crocus, and one or two other monocotyledons, Labiatae? |
15171 | Urticeae?! |
15171 | Verbena chamaedrys, Rubi 3 or 4, Tetrantherae? |
15171 | Verbena chamaedrys? |
15171 | Vines numerous, of large size, running up mulberry trees; forests seen on Kooner mountain? |
15171 | What can be the cause of this tropical elevation at such altitudes? |
15171 | What could have induced the Mussulmans to build on such horridly hard barren and hot places, with no water near? |
15171 | What further proof can be wanted of the maritime and insular nature of the world during the reigns of the Saurian reptiles? |
15171 | What is Burnes''holly oak, or lily oak? |
15171 | What is the cause of the plurality of radicles in certain species of Lemna, and their blank in others? |
15171 | What is the reason of the ruined forts so common in this country? |
15171 | What more conclusive can be expected about the appearance of new species? |
15171 | What particular plants and what parts of these appear to have formed coal? |
15171 | Whence do these people get their curious grey eyes, and light hair? |
15171 | Whence do they derive their singular situation? |
15171 | Where did the profusion of Justicia Adhatoda which I find here come from, is it not a distinct species? |
15171 | Which is the most probable? |
15171 | Why should not compound and simple microscopes each have their merits? |
15171 | Will any one show me an instance of a proved gemma taking upon itself the form of one of these anthers? |
15171 | With regard to Nicotiana and Nolana; have these one or two rows of carpella? |
15171 | Yesterday evening saltpetre was visible in abundance on some of the higher banks, and on these_ Phulahi_,_ Jhow_, a Composita, and Salsola? |
15171 | _ 5th_.--To Maidan, distance eight miles? |
15171 | _ 7th_.--Kilah- i- Kajee, lies one mile to the eastward: distance of to- day''s march, nine miles? |
15171 | _ Bura Raiwah_.--Gobio Rewah, a very handsome, eight- cornered, scaled fish, with orange fins and golden sides: takes no bait? |
15171 | _ Daisoo_, Urtica urens? |
15171 | _ Fly wheel_(?) |
15171 | _ Hence_? |
15171 | altera? |
15171 | and heterophylla, Pogostemon, Triumfetta,( these occupy the old cleared spots,) Castaneae sp.? |
15171 | are the most common plants, Euonymus and Malpighiacea? |
15171 | as before, Lemna, Valisneria_ verticillata_? |
15171 | corollae? |
15171 | fluitans? |
15171 | how do they expect that we are to demonstrate its application to the pistil, and the subsequent steps? |
15171 | is it to their being more completely under the thumb of a rapacious governor? |
15171 | magis composita esse debet; laciniis anticis? |
15171 | microphyllus( are these two species confounded by me, as the larger- leaved one never descends so low? |
15171 | of Astragalus, Solanum jacquini? |
15171 | of Ceratostemma( Gay Lussacium?) |
15171 | one Ochnacea? |
15171 | or Lomaria? |
15171 | or at least one of the involucrate Vitices occurred, as well as a large Byttneria? |
15171 | or is it in any way analogous to that progressive development existing during the growth of every animated being? |
15171 | or to all these causes together? |
15171 | probably Marsdenia tinctoria-- Fourth,--? |
15171 | so there may be a law requiring such plants to flower in wintery situations by a certain time? |
15171 | such as Cardamine, here past flower, but not commencing at Cabul; is it because this plant will flower in the winter in Cabul? |
15171 | to the insecurity of property, or to defect in the laws? |
15171 | valvato? |
15171 | very common, with rose, Parnassia, Saxifraga, Composita arenoid, Gentiana, Polygonum(? |
15171 | with the Drongo shrikes in habits, and in forked tail: as well as in lengthened body? |
14384 | ''Are they all gone?'' 14384 ''Eathen?'' |
14384 | ''How many people were there in your day?'' 14384 ''What, you an American citizen?'' |
14384 | ''Where was she born?'' 14384 A man lives only a little while,_ hein_? |
14384 | And Climber of Trees Who Was Killed and Eaten? |
14384 | And the procession, was it successful? |
14384 | And what will you do with that ten minutes? |
14384 | And_ popoi_ and pigs? |
14384 | Another god on the altar then? |
14384 | Are they Marquesans? |
14384 | Are we afraid of that ugly beast? 14384 Beaten to Death perished by the club? |
14384 | Ben Santos,inquired the judge, with a critical glance at Daughter of the Pigeon,"What return did you make to this woman for keeping your house?" |
14384 | But Beaten to Death--? |
14384 | But Tufetu, the grandfather of my friend Mouth of God? |
14384 | But if that stone broke your head, why did you not die? |
14384 | But there are not many whites here? |
14384 | But why two packs? |
14384 | But with whom can I see that world? |
14384 | Did you not lie in wait for those murderers? |
14384 | Do we go near her home? |
14384 | Do you have trouble over women in your island? 14384 Do you think the eating of men began by the_ ave one_, the famine?" |
14384 | He will play ze bloff? |
14384 | Honi? |
14384 | How do they make that cloth? |
14384 | How many men to a rope? |
14384 | It is beautiful in your islands, is it not? |
14384 | It is n''t bad,_ hein_? |
14384 | It was she who rode the white horse, and bore the armor of Joan in the great parade? |
14384 | Kahuiti, is it not good that the eating of men is stopped? |
14384 | Of what are you thinking? |
14384 | Of what good is that? 14384 Oo can say wot the blooming wind will do?" |
14384 | Paul Gauguin lived here? |
14384 | She some pumkin, eh? 14384 So it was all as you had planned?" |
14384 | So the slaying of Beaten to Death was unavenged? |
14384 | The pig men climb? |
14384 | There were signs at the commemoration? |
14384 | They had guns? |
14384 | This man, whose name was Honi--"Honi? |
14384 | Was Great Night Moth the real son of Male Package? |
14384 | What I do? |
14384 | What caused that war? |
14384 | What do you do here all alone? |
14384 | What does the_ Menike_ seek? |
14384 | What for? |
14384 | What if the good sisters heard me? 14384 What is the manner of their fishing?" |
14384 | Where are you going? |
14384 | Where do you go with the_ mei_? |
14384 | Why, sure I do? 14384 Why? |
14384 | Why? |
14384 | Will you drink_ kava_? |
14384 | Write to me when you are in Tahiti, and tell me if you think I would be happy there? |
14384 | Yes? |
14384 | You came by the_ Fatueki?_. |
14384 | You do not doubt her miraculous intercession? |
14384 | You have never seen a man fight the_ mako_? 14384 You knew Hemeury Francois when he was young?" |
14384 | You know what that signifies? 14384 You mean Jones?" |
14384 | You returned to that ship when the boat picked you up? |
14384 | You_ Menike_ like him? |
14384 | Your name? |
14384 | _ I hea?_ Where do you go? |
14384 | _ I hea?_ Where do you go? |
14384 | _ Kisskisskissa? 14384 _ Namu?_ Have they rum?" |
14384 | _ Namu?_ Have they rum? |
14384 | _ Vraiment?_"_ Absolument_,answered Père Simeon. |
14384 | ''Born in my own state, and painted up like Sitting Bull on the warpath? |
14384 | ''Could there by chance be a woman living there named Manu? |
14384 | Ai n''t that so, Gedge?" |
14384 | Also, would Satan have been able to tempt Eve if God had not made the tree of knowledge_ tapu_? |
14384 | Am I not here over thirty years, and have I met a man like Gauguin? |
14384 | And all his twelve children by that Henriette? |
14384 | And at length he rose and came down to the oven, saying,''What''s up?'' |
14384 | And strike-- where? |
14384 | And the wicked? |
14384 | And what, when the same shark had been killed and eaten by other Marquesans? |
14384 | And would I tell her of the women of my people in the strange islands of the_ Memke?_ They were very far away, were they not, those islands? |
14384 | And would I tell her of the women of my people in the strange islands of the_ Memke?_ They were very far away, were they not, those islands? |
14384 | And you know that Polonaise, with the one eye- glass, that lives in Papeite, that Krajewsky? |
14384 | And''ow about''ell?" |
14384 | Are the girls of your valleys very lovely, and do they all sleep in golden beds?" |
14384 | Are you ready for the ovens of our valley?'' |
14384 | As we followed the steep trail past it, I called,"_ Kaoha!_""_ I hea?_"said a woman,"_ Karavario?_ Where do you go? |
14384 | As we followed the steep trail past it, I called,"_ Kaoha!_""_ I hea?_"said a woman,"_ Karavario?_ Where do you go? |
14384 | As we followed the steep trail past it, I called,"_ Kaoha!_""_ I hea?_"said a woman,"_ Karavario?_ Where do you go? |
14384 | But if, as the priests said was most probable, Adam and Eve had received pardon and were in heaven, why had their guilt stained all mankind? |
14384 | But who knows the human heart, or understands the soul? |
14384 | But why was it forbidden for her son to live with Jeanette, being not married to her? |
14384 | Ca n''t I live here an''be Your Dog again?'' |
14384 | Come and have a drink?" |
14384 | Could he mean Rozinante, the steed to whom T''yonny had entrusted me, and who had so basely deserted his trust over a cliff? |
14384 | Did God do that? |
14384 | Did I bestride a metempsychosized man- eater, a revenant from the bloody days of Nuka- hiva? |
14384 | Did I know this woman? |
14384 | Did n''t I know her before you? |
14384 | Did not Scallamera become a leper and die of it horribly? |
14384 | Did they still fight in Bottle Meyers, and was his friend Tasset on the police force yet? |
14384 | Do n''t you think it wise to segregate them?" |
14384 | Do those grim warriors who survive the new régime ever relapse? |
14384 | Do you know an officer of the_ Zelee_, with hair like a ripe banana? |
14384 | Do you know why it is called rose- wood? |
14384 | Do you not remember your sister?" |
14384 | Do you want the_ mako_ to eat them? |
14384 | Does not Socrates, in the dialogues of Plato, often speak of"going to the world below,"where he hopes to find real wisdom? |
14384 | Does not that word_ hantu_, meaning in Malay an evil spirit, have some obscure connection with our American negro"hant,"a goblin or ghost? |
14384 | Ducat, very pale, an inscrutable look on his face, his black eyes narrowed, said quietly,"Monsieur, do you mean that?" |
14384 | Farther even than Tahiti? |
14384 | Forty? |
14384 | Had I not tasted the_ chicha_ beer of the Andes, and found it good? |
14384 | Had he known matches in his youth? |
14384 | He demanded brusquely,"What are you_ oui- oui_-ing for?" |
14384 | He must go to Huapu with the chief, who was again at the door,"And did the fête help the parish?" |
14384 | He was a regular-- what do you call''em? |
14384 | How compare such names with John Smith or Henry Wilson? |
14384 | How could I know the devil behind her eyes when she came wooing me again? |
14384 | How could one explain his benign, open- souled deportment and his cheery laugh, with such damnable appetites and actions? |
14384 | How deep beneath the sea could their women dive? |
14384 | How do you know what God likes? |
14384 | How is Teddy and Gotali?" |
14384 | How long ago? |
14384 | How many years--? |
14384 | I was sure that, with her wealth, she would have many suitors,--but what of a tender heart? |
14384 | If shocked further it opened its leaflets as if to say,"What''s the use? |
14384 | In one house, under one roof? |
14384 | Is cannibalism in the Marquesas a thing of the past? |
14384 | Is that so?" |
14384 | Is there no more rum? |
14384 | It would be pleasant to be called"Blue Sky"or"Killer of Sharks,"but how about"Drowned in the Sea"or"Noise Inside"? |
14384 | Kivi laughed, and dimly I heard his inquiry:"_ Veavea?_ Is it hot?" |
14384 | Kivi laughed, and dimly I heard his inquiry:"_ Veavea?_ Is it hot?" |
14384 | McHenry said,"Say, how''s your kanaka woman?" |
14384 | Of the people that once were here? |
14384 | Please, will you give me now the note to Ah You?" |
14384 | Said the soldier to the sailor,''Will you give me a chew?'' |
14384 | Shall I tell you the tale of how he escaped death at the hands of his father? |
14384 | She said,''Is there no pig?'' |
14384 | She was made different by her mother, by the prayers of Père Simeon, and by something strange in her_ kuhane_--what do you say? |
14384 | Since when have Marquesan women said no to the command of the_ adminstrateur_?'' |
14384 | Suppose I give them rum? |
14384 | Tari a rutu mai i hea? |
14384 | The New York hotel in which her poor son lived? |
14384 | The same as that of the girls in your own island, is it not?" |
14384 | Then he said,''Where is the pig?'' |
14384 | Then how did it get into heaven? |
14384 | Then, speaking English and very precisely, he asked,"Do you mean my wife?" |
14384 | These dogs that go after things for you? |
14384 | To Calvary?" |
14384 | Was all that tender care of his whiskers to be wasted on scenery? |
14384 | Was it cocoanut land? |
14384 | Was it not good land? |
14384 | Was not knowledge a good thing? |
14384 | Was the Bella Union Theater still there in Frisco? |
14384 | We must all be from the same valley, or at least from the same island, they thought, for were we not all Americans? |
14384 | Were the women of that island, Chile, white? |
14384 | Were these two peoples once one race, living on that long- sunken continent in which Darwin believed? |
14384 | What am I saying? |
14384 | What could a hotel be? |
14384 | What could he mean? |
14384 | What do I need from the great cities?" |
14384 | What do you say?" |
14384 | What does it matter? |
14384 | What have I to do with a man I hate?''" |
14384 | What is money compared to life? |
14384 | What is that?" |
14384 | What made the angels fall? |
14384 | What motive had led the Maker and Knower of all things to do this deed? |
14384 | What of matches before the French came? |
14384 | What shall I do? |
14384 | What was her name? |
14384 | What will become of them, I wonder?" |
14384 | What would God do in cases where sharks had eaten a Marquesan? |
14384 | What would she do? |
14384 | What''s this wife business?" |
14384 | When I was goin''to bed he''d say,''McHenry, Your Dog is goin''now, but ca n''t Your Dog sleep here?'' |
14384 | Where had she gained these fashions and desires of the women of cities, of Europe? |
14384 | Who can come from France and live here without money? |
14384 | Who can say? |
14384 | Who of us but dreads to pass a graveyard at night, though even to ourselves we deny the fear? |
14384 | Why could not this idyllic, fierce, laughter- loving people have stayed savage and strong, wicked and clean? |
14384 | Why does she not die? |
14384 | Why should n''t I mean it? |
14384 | Why would the_ mutoi_ take hold of her son, as he feared? |
14384 | Why?" |
14384 | Would I accompany her thither? |
14384 | Would I not give her matches-- the packets of matches that were under the Golden Bed? |
14384 | Would she be happy in Tahiti? |
14384 | Would you like to meet my wife''s father- in- law, Kahuiti? |
14384 | Wretched as I felt, I returned his glance, and said"_ Tiatohoa?_"which means,"Is that so?" |
14384 | Wretched as I felt, I returned his glance, and said"_ Tiatohoa?_"which means,"Is that so?" |
14384 | Yet why cavil at the vehicle by which one arrives at Nirvana? |
14384 | You have seen there a stone foundation that supports the wild vanilla vines? |
14384 | You know how he suffered? |
14384 | You know how the drums speak?" |
14384 | You know_ le droit du mari_? |
14384 | You will not forget to deign to speak to the governor concerning the matter of the gun?" |
14384 | _ Aoe?_ Then I will tell you." |
14384 | _ E mea tiatohu hoi!_ Do you not know of the Piina of Fiti- nui? |
14384 | _ Je ne sais pas._ Twenty years? |
14384 | of the twelve- foot drums? |
36672 | And did you go to Wellington? |
36672 | And how much are you to get? |
36672 | And what is that? 36672 And why did n''t you?" |
36672 | And you? |
36672 | Are you Molly Brown of Kentucky? |
36672 | Are you aware of the fact, girls, that there is no gas in these rooms? 36672 Are you to be in Charleston long?" |
36672 | Are you, really? 36672 But what will my father say?" |
36672 | But what will your father say? |
36672 | But will they let girls run one? |
36672 | But you-- how do you know all this? |
36672 | But, Dum, what on earth are household novelties? |
36672 | But, papa, what is he to do? 36672 But, papa, what pulpit? |
36672 | Can you smell it, too? 36672 Claire,"said his Eminence of the Tum Tum,"have you extended an invitation to tea in the garden of our home to the Misses Laurens and their guests?" |
36672 | Dee sick? |
36672 | Did it hurt very badly? |
36672 | Did you tell Cousin Park I was in town? |
36672 | Do you feel that way? |
36672 | Do you know you have not stopped once for half- an- hour? |
36672 | Do you think it is a girl''s fault always if a man kisses her? |
36672 | Do you think it would be wise to go without knowing? 36672 Do you think we can ever know the one who sang, well enough to ask her to sing to us?" |
36672 | Do you young ladies know where the Misses Laurens live? |
36672 | Do''white fo''ks wan''we- all sin''li''l''song? |
36672 | Do? 36672 Does n''t it seem ridiculous that we have known her only since this afternoon? |
36672 | Does n''t that sound romantic? 36672 Dressed already, Page?" |
36672 | Foolish of me, was n''t it? 36672 Good? |
36672 | Had n''t I better get a doctor for Dee? |
36672 | Have you collected your money yet? |
36672 | Have you talked business yet with either of the ladies, Professor Green? 36672 How are they going to help it? |
36672 | How are we going to sleep? 36672 How do I know? |
36672 | How do you know it''s from her? |
36672 | How long does your job last? |
36672 | How old do you reckon Mrs. Green is? 36672 I wonder if he wrote his''Reveries of a Bachelor''before or after the ceremony?" |
36672 | I wonder if you would like my old college, Exmoor? 36672 I wonder why it is that no one ever seems to feel very sad or quiet in old, old graveyards?" |
36672 | Is n''t it awful to let a place like this go to pieces so? 36672 Is n''t it funny that we should have peeped into the very garden belonging to the pretty rumpled girl in the bus? |
36672 | Is n''t our young father a wonder? |
36672 | Is n''t she a great girl, though? |
36672 | Is n''t this a jolly place? |
36672 | Is she pretty? |
36672 | Is that all you can say when I chased back from the meeting in Norfolk expecting to find three lone ladies so glad to see me? 36672 Is that where the azaleas are so beautiful?" |
36672 | It was a very risky thing for both of my girls-- they might have got in no end of scrapes-- but what am I to do? 36672 Know it? |
36672 | Molly, do you hear that? 36672 Now do n''t you wish we had a guide book and map? |
36672 | Oh, Edwin, do you hear that? 36672 Oh, Edwin, do you think we will really get into that house? |
36672 | Oh, have you got a baby? 36672 Oh, is your name Gaillard?" |
36672 | Oh, sing us a little song? |
36672 | Oh, you? |
36672 | Red? |
36672 | See them without Zebedee? 36672 That is to say, Tweedles will not be?" |
36672 | This Gaillard is our great, great grandfather, is n''t he, Louis? |
36672 | Was anyone in all the world ever so wonderful as our Zebedee? |
36672 | We have come to you, hoping you will take us to--Mrs. Green, who was spokesman for us, faltered; could she say"board"to those two? |
36672 | Well den, Missy lak nig sing fer heh? |
36672 | Well, girls, are n''t you going to take your poor old father in out of the cold? |
36672 | Well, how about the Magnolia Gardens this afternoon? 36672 Well, is that any reason why you should n''t be glad to see me now?" |
36672 | Well, now, how do you know that? |
36672 | Well, on the other hand, little girl, how about my feelings? 36672 Well, then, Sullivan''s Island, where Poe''s''Gold Bug''was written?" |
36672 | Well, what was my fault, then? |
36672 | Well, why do n''t you go to college now? 36672 What are you going to do with it?" |
36672 | What are you going to write? |
36672 | What difference does that make? 36672 What do you fancy this thing is for?" |
36672 | What do you reckon he wants to say to Zebedee? |
36672 | What is he to do? 36672 What is it?" |
36672 | What made you girls so late? |
36672 | What on earth are you selling? |
36672 | What''s the matter with you, honey? 36672 What''s the matter?" |
36672 | What''s this? |
36672 | What? |
36672 | When may we come? |
36672 | Where are you, Dee? |
36672 | Where does that door go? 36672 Where have you and she just been?" |
36672 | Who is Mabel Binks? |
36672 | Who''s a''fraid cat now? |
36672 | Who''s the old cove over there with the Venus de Milo effect of arms? |
36672 | Why did you only come near doing it? |
36672 | Why do n''t you earn it? |
36672 | Why do n''t you tell them how you got Miss Plympton out of the window in her pink pajamas? |
36672 | Why do n''t you tell your father? |
36672 | Why should he not put on smoked glasses or look the other way? 36672 Will it be Miss Judith?" |
36672 | Wo n''t you have some butter on your rice? 36672 You did n''t really keep it?" |
36672 | You hear that, Page? |
36672 | You mean as a warning to all young authors? |
36672 | You must know Charleston pretty well, Mr. Gaillard, do you not? |
36672 | You suggested it? |
36672 | You will have room, then, for all of us? |
36672 | You would like to go to college, would you not? |
36672 | You would like to stay there, would n''t you, girls? |
36672 | ''Berry well,''yer say? |
36672 | A favor for you?" |
36672 | Ai n''t I see my gal dere waitin''Stannin''by de gate? |
36672 | And now I want you to do us a big favor----""Me? |
36672 | And you, Miss Gaillard? |
36672 | And you-- do you write poetry, too?" |
36672 | Are n''t you sorry for Claire? |
36672 | Are we not Huguenots? |
36672 | Are you counting upon going to college?" |
36672 | But do n''t these palmetto trees have a strange swishy sound? |
36672 | But do n''t you reckon I saw him holding on to it for dear life? |
36672 | But how? |
36672 | But is n''t it fascinating? |
36672 | But must I tell him everything? |
36672 | CHAPTER XV WHO WON THE BET? |
36672 | Ca n''t you ever say I? |
36672 | Ca n''t you hear their hymn of thanksgiving?" |
36672 | Ca n''t you make up some plan? |
36672 | Claire? |
36672 | Could n''t we sneak off and go down there? |
36672 | Did you cut it down?" |
36672 | Did you ever in all your life see anything quite so lovely? |
36672 | Did you notice they had an ugly, new, unpainted, board gate? |
36672 | Do n''t you know that there are only two ways for a Charleston lady to make a living? |
36672 | Do n''t you write, Mrs. Green? |
36672 | Do you have to lump yourself with Dum and Dee about everything?" |
36672 | Do you know she saved up two weeks so as to get her money''s worth? |
36672 | Do you really think that is the truth about them? |
36672 | Do you reckon it means lovers meet here?" |
36672 | Do you suppose those two little old ladies live there all by themselves?" |
36672 | Do you think Professor Green is as old as I am?" |
36672 | Do you usually arise so early?" |
36672 | Does the idiot think I could keep it up all night? |
36672 | Does the maiden still swing in thy giant clasp?" |
36672 | Edwin, you remember Mattie Ball, do you not?" |
36672 | Green?" |
36672 | Green?" |
36672 | Had she caught the young man''s malady and gone a little off her hooks? |
36672 | Has not Louis been brought up in that faith and how could he preach any other? |
36672 | Have I done something? |
36672 | Have you counted up my pledges yet?" |
36672 | He knew that rice and sugar and cream were mixed up in it, but how? |
36672 | Here I had come tearing home from Norfolk expecting to find three charming girls, all of them overjoyed to see me, and what do I find? |
36672 | How about the bedrooms? |
36672 | How account for this young man? |
36672 | How could anybody grow with that-- that ponderous weight on him?" |
36672 | How does a ghost smell? |
36672 | I was nearly scared to death when I saw him there, were n''t you?" |
36672 | If you write that splendid a letter to a mere afterthought, what would you do for a beforethought? |
36672 | Is anybody dead? |
36672 | Is n''t their name romantic? |
36672 | Kindred souls must manage to get together or''What''s a heaven for?''" |
36672 | Me? |
36672 | Now ai n''t I glad?" |
36672 | Now you are high- minded, too; fancy yourself in Louis''place-- what would you do?" |
36672 | Of course you want to go? |
36672 | Oh, my love, doth thou love me?''" |
36672 | Parvenues!_ What business have they to ask a Gaillard to dig in their dirt? |
36672 | She is the one Miss Ball told us about who got in such funny scrapes at college-- you remember, Judy Kean, who dyed her hair black?" |
36672 | Surely you are not going to wear pants?" |
36672 | They call their father Zebedee, because of the old joke about"Who''s the father of Zebedee''s children?" |
36672 | They seem to take for granted that anyone they are on speaking terms with must be well born or how did they get to be on speaking terms? |
36672 | WHO WON THE BET? |
36672 | Was he trying to fit that awful noose around his neck again? |
36672 | Was there ever a moment when we could broach the subject, girls?" |
36672 | We ca n''t let you give us the money, and how will we ever pay it back?" |
36672 | Were they attractive, too?" |
36672 | Were you going to be all twenty right from the first?" |
36672 | What are they going to do now?" |
36672 | What business did he have coming home before he was expected? |
36672 | What business was it of guests to dictate to the hostess what their sleeping arrangements should be? |
36672 | What color are you going to get, Dum?" |
36672 | What could it have been?" |
36672 | What did you make, Dee? |
36672 | What did you want there, please?" |
36672 | What do you mean, Dee, by having on my coat and cap? |
36672 | What do you mean, Dum, by fifteen orders? |
36672 | What do you reckon the lazy thing would be doing while I was doing all that for her? |
36672 | What do you think of these? |
36672 | What father would simply accept a situation as Zebedee did this one? |
36672 | What had our masculine contingent done? |
36672 | What hurts you?" |
36672 | What if I did burst in the effort? |
36672 | What is the matter? |
36672 | What is the matter?" |
36672 | What is the matter?" |
36672 | What next? |
36672 | What on earth was I to say to him? |
36672 | What was Dee driving at? |
36672 | What was Dee to say to her father? |
36672 | Where are those girls? |
36672 | Where do you feel sick? |
36672 | Where is Dee? |
36672 | Where was Dee? |
36672 | Where will we go first?" |
36672 | Where''s Dum? |
36672 | Where''s the morning paper?" |
36672 | Who wants Shrimp ter- day? |
36672 | Who''s here?" |
36672 | Whose appearance is not? |
36672 | Why did n''t they come on in? |
36672 | Why did n''t you ask me to attend to it?" |
36672 | Why did n''t you call me?" |
36672 | Why do it? |
36672 | Why, oh, why did n''t they come on? |
36672 | Would you be afraid?" |
36672 | You do n''t mean that both of them have had the heartlessness to go out at one time and leave you all by yourself? |
36672 | You have heard of persons like that, have n''t you? |
36672 | You hear me, sir?" |
36672 | You mean money terms? |
23137 | And did you cut that down yourself? |
23137 | And you really do n''t know Sally Hackett? |
23137 | Are you Captain M---? |
23137 | Are you cold, miss? |
23137 | Are you drinking champaign? |
23137 | But where''s the sun to ripen the corn? |
23137 | By gazing at us, sirs, pray what do you mean? 23137 Did you think of taking four dollars, miss?" |
23137 | Do you know what the old woman says? |
23137 | Have you ever been at Paris? |
23137 | Have you seen Mr Japhet lately? |
23137 | How was it, then? |
23137 | I do n''t know; what will you take? |
23137 | I guess you''ve heard talk of her? |
23137 | I rather think not, but that''s as may be.--Come, miss, what will you take? |
23137 | I tell you, come in directly, sir-- do you hear? |
23137 | I wonder it did not kill her; did n''t she bleed very much? 23137 Landed am I? |
23137 | Mr Fisher, how much cable is there out? |
23137 | Not know Sally Hackett? 23137 Now, my co- mates and partners in exile, Hath not old custom made this life more sweet Than that of painted pomp? |
23137 | Pray, may I inquire what you are imprisoned for? |
23137 | Shall I do it immediately? |
23137 | Shall I_ fix_ your coat or your breakfast first? |
23137 | Suppose even one state withdrawn from the Union, would not the pecuniary intercourse with Europe be paralysed at once? 23137 Tom, do you want any oysters for lunch to- day?" |
23137 | Well, Abel, what d''ye think of our native genus, Mister Forrest? |
23137 | Well, captain, how do you find yourself by this time? |
23137 | Well, dat is goot; but how much is an ounce? |
23137 | Well, good morning-- and about this farm? |
23137 | What bank is this, miss? |
23137 | What do you say, then? |
23137 | What is in those barrels? |
23137 | What the devil do you mean, sir? |
23137 | What will you give? |
23137 | What''s the matter wid ye, Teddy; what makes ye wriggle about in that way? 23137 When she came to meeting, with her yellow hat and feathers, was n''t she_ in fall blast_?" |
23137 | Where shall I put her? |
23137 | Where? |
23137 | Why I do n''t know,--what will you give? |
23137 | Why did you not put him in? |
23137 | Why_ no- tongued_? |
23137 | Will you oblige me with a pinch of your snuff, sir? 23137 You do n''t mean to say that?" |
23137 | ''Tis time for you to go, thought I, or I am gone: will you never go? |
23137 | --A dinner, or a luncheon? |
23137 | --_Reid and Matheson''s Tour_] who, indeed, unless actuated by a holy zeal, would submit to such a life of degradation? |
23137 | --`How is the shoe business in your city?'' |
23137 | --`How many came to- day in the carry- all?'' |
23137 | --`Is the market for shoes good?'' |
23137 | --`Who has gone to the hospital?'' |
23137 | --`Yes,''replied the captain.--`_Martin_ Scott?'' |
23137 | 2 is nobody, and you must not visit there; and when you enquire why? |
23137 | 6. Who would not choose them before All others that''s to be found, And think of others no more? |
23137 | A Yankee girl, who wished to hire herself out, was asked if the had any followers or sweethearts? |
23137 | A specimen of Yankee dialect and conversation:--"Well now, I''ll tell you-- you know Marble Head?" |
23137 | After a pause and closer survey.--"You would n''t have any objection to part with it, miss?" |
23137 | After a short repose, we went out again into the clearing, when one of my friends asked him how he got on with his axe? |
23137 | After all, why should we eat currant jelly with venison, and not allow the Americans the humble imitation of pork and molasses? |
23137 | Also,"Will you have a_ feed_ or a_ check_?" |
23137 | An American was asked what game they had in his district? |
23137 | And how do you find yourself by this time?" |
23137 | And should another return to England, after his tetchy, absurd remarks upon the English, is there much chance of his receiving a kind welcome? |
23137 | Are not these woods More free from peril than the envious court? |
23137 | Are we the first rascals that ever were seen? |
23137 | Are you not ashamed to set such pitiful ca nt, I will not say such wilful falsehood and slander, before any rational creature? |
23137 | As for the constant query--"How do you like our country?" |
23137 | As he walked by my side, he amused me very much by putting the following questions:--"Pray, captain, has Mr Easy left the King of England''s service?" |
23137 | As she limped a little in walking home, I said,"Did you hurt your leg much?" |
23137 | Besides, do the teeth of the women in the western states decay so fast? |
23137 | Bishop Hopkins says, very truly--`Have we any example in the preaching of Christ and his apostles, of the use of strong individual denunciation? |
23137 | Brown meal and common doings, or white wheat and chicken_ fixings_;"--that is,"Will you have pork and brown bread, or white bread and fried chicken?" |
23137 | But does this independence on the part of the youth of America end here? |
23137 | But is this all that is implied in the boon of freedom? |
23137 | But who can control destiny? |
23137 | Can young females remain pure in their ideas, who read with indifference details of the grossest nature? |
23137 | Consistently with this prejudice, is it to be credited that parity of rank would be allowed to such a race? |
23137 | Could such violence of feeling have been produced had each party retired to commune alone? |
23137 | Could you have more motives? |
23137 | Did you not know that an overcharged gun would knock the musketeer over by its recoil? |
23137 | Does not the South, who is not interested in it, pay most part of the expense, and is not the war expenditure applied to the benefit of the North? |
23137 | Does not this prove that it is contagious, and not dependant on the atmosphere? |
23137 | Give every man his deserts, and who shall escape whipping? |
23137 | Have I not said enough? |
23137 | Having taken her name, the preacher asked,` Are you for God or the devil?'' |
23137 | He loves Sal, the worst kind; and if she gets up there, she''ll think she has got to Palestine( Paradise); ai n''t she a screamer? |
23137 | He reminded me of a little chimney- sweeper at the Tower Hamlets election, asking--"Vot vos my hopinions about primaginitur?" |
23137 | He was fearful of only one thing: his time was just out, and where was he to go? |
23137 | Hence in part we account for the holy and exemplary candour[? an dour] of their attachments to their religion and to each other. |
23137 | How are we to distinguish between right and wrong in this queer world? |
23137 | How can it be otherwise, when people have not professed? |
23137 | How comes it that you have added this crime to your many others?" |
23137 | How does she contrive to eat her corn?" |
23137 | How is it possible for a child to be brought up in the way that it should go, when he is not obedient to the will of his parents? |
23137 | How much has Christianity gained by this foul blot on the escutcheon of Massachusetts?" |
23137 | I once said to a lady,"Why do you drawl out your words in that way?" |
23137 | I recollect a young gentleman who said he was thinking of going to America; on my asking him,"how he intended to go?" |
23137 | I was enquiring if the Hudson was frozen up or not during the winter? |
23137 | If freemen, in a political sense, were subjects of these cruel and degrading oppressions, what must have been the lot of their brethren in bondage? |
23137 | In the West, when you stop at an inn, they say--"What will you have? |
23137 | In the West, where steam- navigation is so abundant, when they ask you to drink they say,"Stranger, will you take in wood?" |
23137 | In the first place, what is education? |
23137 | In what manner, then, is England to avenge any aggression that may be committed by the Americans? |
23137 | In what sense, then, must the convention of 1790 be supposed to have used the term? |
23137 | Is it generous, now that they have achieved the victory, not to forgive the adversary? |
23137 | Is it necessary for me to say more? |
23137 | Is it not better that a little villainy should escape punishment, than that such cruelty should be in daily practice? |
23137 | Is not this extraordinary, in a land which professes universal liberty, equality, and the rights of man? |
23137 | Is teaching a boy to read and write education? |
23137 | It may be fairly inquired, can this be true? |
23137 | It spares the bud-- why not the opened blossom, or the ripened fruit? |
23137 | It sustains the infancy of beauty-- why not its maturity? |
23137 | It''s a bad time to talk about suspension; why do you request this? |
23137 | Liston, what have you to say why judgment, etcetera? |
23137 | Miss Martineau may well inquire,"How does the existing state of religion accord with the promise of its birth? |
23137 | Miss Prigmore, how came this man to strike you? |
23137 | Mr Sanderson is right in saying, that the chief preservative of beauty is health; but may I ask him, upon what does health depend but upon_ exercise_? |
23137 | Not fifty years back, at the time of the Declaration of Independence, was not the American community one of the most virtuous in existence? |
23137 | Now, after this admission what more can be required? |
23137 | Now, why this minute and elaborate detail? |
23137 | Oh, Rachael--"Perhaps it was right to dissemble your love, But why did you kick me down stairs?" |
23137 | On this occasion I called out,"Well, what do you want?" |
23137 | Our negroes are perfect in their teeth-- why not the whites? |
23137 | Question put,"Shall the resolutions pass?" |
23137 | The English_ what_? |
23137 | The question is, then, what can have created such a change in the short period of fifty years? |
23137 | The question then is, have the American race improved or degenerated since the first settlement? |
23137 | Then they say,` How long did it take you to paint it?'' |
23137 | Then, what is education? |
23137 | These were students of Schenectady College: would I like to see it? |
23137 | To such men I appeal, and ask, ought you not resolutely to restore peace, and give the south confidence and repose? |
23137 | Up there, and loose the topsails; stretch along the topsail- sheets.--Upon my soul, half these children will be killed.-- Whose child are you?" |
23137 | Well, the Americans may have great reason to be proud of this day, and of the deeds of their forefathers, but why do they get so confoundedly drunk? |
23137 | What association can there be between roast pig and independence? |
23137 | What did the rich man ask for when in fiery torments? |
23137 | What does the wretch ask for when on the rack? |
23137 | What else can cool your parched tongue like water? |
23137 | What have you now to say why judgment should not be pronounced upon you according to law? |
23137 | What is a sixpenny razor or a nine- shilling sermon? |
23137 | What is it but the mere abuse of language to call him_ free_, who is tyrannically deprived of all the motives to exertion which animate other men? |
23137 | What is the consequence? |
23137 | What is the first thing you call for in sickness but water? |
23137 | What is the inspiration of a penny- a- liner? |
23137 | What mind was ever corrupted by Murray''s Grammar, or Washington Irving''s Columbus? |
23137 | What would have been the amount of the failures of the banks of America in 1836, if they had not suspended cash payments? |
23137 | What, then, do the Canadas require, in order to become prosperous? |
23137 | Where are we to stow these casks, Mr Fisher?" |
23137 | Where is the commercial credit of New York now in 1837?!!! |
23137 | Where is the race of red men who hunted on its banks, or fished and paddled their canoes in its stream? |
23137 | Who can tell what the morrow may bring forth? |
23137 | Whose fault is this? |
23137 | Why are the losses of the American banks less? |
23137 | Why did she kick him down stairs? |
23137 | Why do not the Americans take the Indian names? |
23137 | Why not tell them to feed their cattle with barley and wheat for the same reason? |
23137 | Why, then, does not Toronto vie with Buffalo? |
23137 | With such men what valid compact can be made? |
23137 | Would Eden thus have smil''d Had_ wine_ to Eden come? |
23137 | Would Horeb''s parching wild Have been refreshed with_ rum_ And had Eve''s hair Been dressed in_ gin_ Would she have been Reflected fair? |
23137 | Would any engineer have ventured to propose such a line in England? |
23137 | Would there be less patriotism, because there was more charity? |
23137 | [ What must be the size of a church which costs 500 dollars?]] |
23137 | ` Did you not hear?'' |
23137 | ` I beg your pardon, mister,''said the racoon, very politely;` but may I ask you if your name is Scott?'' |
23137 | ` Then where is he?'' |
23137 | ` Who has got a piece of steel in his eye?'' |
23137 | continued the racoon--`Yes,''replied the captain--`_Captain_ Martin Scott?'' |
23137 | exclaimed the Bostonian,"is it possible that you could be so careless? |
23137 | have you a wife and children?" |
23137 | hold your tongue? |
23137 | how many dollars have you made? |
23137 | implying that you did not hear what was said to you, is changed in America to the word_ how_? |
23137 | under the cow?" |
23137 | what is your profession? |
23137 | when shall we learn to call things by their right names? |
23137 | where are you from? |
23137 | where are you going? |
23137 | why, on this day of independence, should they become so_ dependent_ upon posts and rails for support? |
23137 | will you shut your mouth? |
26232 | A duck? 26232 Am I a farmer like your grandpa? |
26232 | And have Daddy come home to dinner to- night and find us gone? |
26232 | And we wo n''t leave a messy picnic ground, even if it is our own, shall we? |
26232 | And you would n''t want a fish to be unhappy, would you? |
26232 | Are the chickens up? |
26232 | Are there any for me, Mother? |
26232 | Are they? |
26232 | Are you a farmer like Grandpa, Jimmie? |
26232 | Are you going to eat your duck? |
26232 | Are you going to meet Daddy? |
26232 | Are you watching them put up the screens and awnings? |
26232 | Bless the child, what is all this? |
26232 | But Daddy? |
26232 | But one whole night''s an awful long time, is n''t it? |
26232 | But why did n''t you come and tell us? |
26232 | But you did n''t see anything of Grandpa''s bonds-- his nice beautiful, Liberty Bonds, did you, dear? |
26232 | Can I carry him? |
26232 | Can I go fishing? |
26232 | Can you, Mother? 26232 Could I have a duck to play with, Jimmie?" |
26232 | Could I hold the awning? 26232 Could I open it?" |
26232 | Could n''t you drive that mother duck and her ducklings up to the chicken yard? |
26232 | Could you read this now, Mother? |
26232 | Court- plaster? |
26232 | Did Mother tell you? |
26232 | Did it hurt? |
26232 | Did you catch them? |
26232 | Did you ever live on a farm, Harriet? |
26232 | Did you miss us? |
26232 | Did you wait till you gave every one else his mail, precious? 26232 Do n''t you like me to?" |
26232 | Do n''t you want to skate back with me? |
26232 | Do you know Jimmie and Mr. Sites and Araminta and David and Raymond and Juddy and Fred and Sarah and Dorabelle? 26232 Do you know Jimmie?" |
26232 | Do you know,said Daddy slowly,"I think the bag will have to go in the front seat, Sunny? |
26232 | Do you know,said Mrs. Horton, when she had looked at the hole,"I think, Sunny Boy, we can mend this nicely with court- plaster?" |
26232 | Do you learn to mend fence at agri-- agri--"Agricultural college? |
26232 | Do you like living here? |
26232 | Do you think apple pie might help you to feel spryer? |
26232 | Do you want me to keep it? |
26232 | Does it rain in the summer? |
26232 | How do you like farming now? 26232 How do you think you are going to like the country?" |
26232 | How many, Grandma? |
26232 | How''d you fall down? |
26232 | How''d you get down here? |
26232 | How? |
26232 | I can help, ca n''t I, Grandma? |
26232 | I do n''t know-- what are you? |
26232 | I slid through that-- see? |
26232 | I wonder how they work? |
26232 | I wonder if you will need that extra coat? |
26232 | I wonder what can be keeping your father? 26232 If I did catch a fish, could I keep him, Daddy?" |
26232 | If I had some cinnamon I''d be a pie, would n''t I? |
26232 | If you''re going up to our house, could I hang on back of your wheel? |
26232 | Is Araminta your sister? |
26232 | Is Daddy going? |
26232 | Is he going, too? |
26232 | Is it really Daddy? 26232 Is it three o''clock?" |
26232 | Is n''t he up there with you? |
26232 | Is n''t it fun? |
26232 | Is n''t it just wonderful to think that the same little boy who lost the bonds should also find them? |
26232 | Is n''t that nice? |
26232 | Is that my pie? |
26232 | Is that what you are going to have? |
26232 | Is there a mail- box on the train? |
26232 | It''s like mending fingers, is n''t it, Mother? |
26232 | Jimmie, is Sunny Boy down there with you? |
26232 | Jimmie, where''s Grandpa? 26232 Like Mother''s scissors? |
26232 | Look here, Sunny, what are you up to now? |
26232 | Mary, Olive, have either of you seen anything of those two five hundred dollar bonds I had on my desk? |
26232 | Millions and dozens of what? |
26232 | Millions and dozens? |
26232 | Mother''ll like it, wo n''t she? |
26232 | Mother, will I take my sand- box to the seashore? |
26232 | Mr. Horton always says,''How many pies are you going to make, Mother?'' 26232 My dear child, are you hurt? |
26232 | Now what on earth shall I order for dessert? |
26232 | Oh, Mother-- is that the box? |
26232 | Pretty fine boy, all things considered, is n''t he? |
26232 | Ready, Olive? 26232 S''posing we did n''t get this letter? |
26232 | Shall I catch one? |
26232 | Shall I fish? |
26232 | Should n''t I say it? 26232 Something to do with my shoes and stockings off?" |
26232 | Sunny Boy,called his own mother from an upstairs window,"Harriet is going to the store for me-- wouldn''t you like to go with her?" |
26232 | Sunny Boy,she said again,"what do you think? |
26232 | Sunny, Sunny, what will you do next? |
26232 | Sunny, what have you found there? |
26232 | Sunny, what have you got in here? 26232 Sunny, which would you rather have,"Grandpa asked him,"white cake or black cake?" |
26232 | The surprise? |
26232 | Want a bite? |
26232 | Want to ride up with me and help drive? |
26232 | Was n''t it lucky Harriet rubbed the numbers on the front door this morning? |
26232 | We have to tell him our news all in one breath because we see so little of him, do n''t we, Sunny Boy? 26232 We''ve about finished anyway, have n''t we, Bessie? |
26232 | Well, Bruce will tell us in time, wo n''t you, old fellow? |
26232 | Well, Sunny, did you come to help me hunt? |
26232 | Well, then, how would you like to see the surprise now? |
26232 | Well, where were you? |
26232 | What are you eating-- pie? |
26232 | What are you going to do first? |
26232 | What color paper, dear? 26232 What do you think of this?" |
26232 | What happened to you? |
26232 | What happened? 26232 What is it?" |
26232 | What is it? |
26232 | What is it? |
26232 | What made you think I was going to be? |
26232 | What''s a''fernal''chine? |
26232 | What''s an indoor garden? |
26232 | What''s in the bag, Mother? |
26232 | What''s in this little can, Grandma? |
26232 | What''s that? |
26232 | What''s this, Mother? |
26232 | What, ducks? |
26232 | What,demanded Sunny Boy, carrying his drum upstairs-- and you may be sure that he gripped it tightly this time--"What are slip- covers, Mother?" |
26232 | When did you find out, Daddy? 26232 When it rains?" |
26232 | Where do you suppose they''re going? |
26232 | Where in the world did you hear that, Sunny Boy? |
26232 | Where was Daddy then? 26232 Where was he when you saw him last?" |
26232 | Where you goin''? |
26232 | Where''d you pick that up? |
26232 | Where''s Mother? |
26232 | Where''s Sunny Boy? |
26232 | Where''s his sword? |
26232 | Where''s their mamma? |
26232 | Who talks like that? |
26232 | Who''s it to, Mother? |
26232 | Why ca n''t we go this minute? 26232 Why did n''t you run?" |
26232 | Why does Grandpa call you Mother? |
26232 | Why, Son? 26232 Why, how on earth did a duck get in the house?" |
26232 | Will there be a piano in the parlor car? |
26232 | Will there be another call for lunch? |
26232 | Will you bring me an apple, Harriet? |
26232 | Wo n''t she be s''prised, Daddy? |
26232 | Wonder what that is? |
26232 | Yes, Mother? |
26232 | You think I''m rather nice, do n''t you, Sunny? 26232 Am I to give the mail to you, or put it in the box? |
26232 | And Grandpa was wounded-- I''m sure I''ve told you that before-- don''t you remember? |
26232 | And did little boys wear petticoats then, Mother?" |
26232 | And little Sallie Spider will say,''What were they eating, Daddy? |
26232 | And now I wonder if there''s a young man about who would be kind enough to take this skirt down to Harriet and ask her to please press the hem?" |
26232 | And now do you want to ride up to the barn with me, or have you had enough?" |
26232 | And now how about going wading?" |
26232 | And what were you doing to get in the barrel?" |
26232 | Are you hurt?" |
26232 | Are you?" |
26232 | But I must say the others have n''t the pleasure of my acquaintance-- who is Dorabelle, may I ask?" |
26232 | But we''re going out right after dinner and hunt for it, are n''t we, Sunny Boy?" |
26232 | CHAPTER II SPREADING THE NEWS"So you''re going off to the country?" |
26232 | Ca n''t I have one, Grandpa?" |
26232 | Can I help, Auntie?" |
26232 | Could I drive horses?" |
26232 | Could I, Jimmie?" |
26232 | Did his grandma expect him to starve at her house? |
26232 | Did n''t you know how wrong it was to touch a single thing on Grandpa''s desk?" |
26232 | Did you bring me any?''" |
26232 | Do you, Daddy?" |
26232 | Ever seen any one hay?" |
26232 | Feel a nibble?" |
26232 | Funny creatures, are n''t they? |
26232 | Get off that horse-- do you hear me?" |
26232 | Have either of you used my desk?" |
26232 | He looked back-- was it a snake after all? |
26232 | Hear the conductor calling?" |
26232 | Help Jimmie if he''s working, wo n''t you, and do n''t hinder him?" |
26232 | Horton?" |
26232 | Horton?" |
26232 | How could you? |
26232 | How much sugar shall I put in for you, Sunny Boy?" |
26232 | How''d it happen?" |
26232 | If you''re as glad as all this to think that Daddy''s coming, what are you going to do when you really see him?" |
26232 | Is he sick?" |
26232 | Is he sick?" |
26232 | Is n''t it funny they took our train?" |
26232 | Is n''t she waving for you to come in? |
26232 | Is that all? |
26232 | Jimmie, do they sleep in water?" |
26232 | Let me see, how shall I make you understand? |
26232 | Look here, Sunny, ca n''t you keep out of trouble long enough for me to finish this fence?" |
26232 | May I sit on it, Grandpa?" |
26232 | Only it is-- how could you go when you were down in the field with your grandpa?" |
26232 | Say, Sunny, what ails you this morning?" |
26232 | See?" |
26232 | Shall I carry you, Sunny?" |
26232 | Shall we shake hands on it?" |
26232 | Sunny Boy, where are you?" |
26232 | Sunny, you were n''t in the sitting room this morning, were you?" |
26232 | That will be fun, wo n''t it?" |
26232 | Up here?" |
26232 | Wait a minute, though, what about your trunk?" |
26232 | Was Grandpa shot?" |
26232 | Was Jimmie?" |
26232 | We''ll be good sports, sha n''t we?" |
26232 | What are you doing, Mother?" |
26232 | What do you know about such things? |
26232 | What have you been doing to get so sun- burned?" |
26232 | What in the world are you trying to do, anyway?" |
26232 | What is this for, Jimmie?" |
26232 | What was that curved black thing that lay there so quietly at the foot of a tree? |
26232 | What was that?" |
26232 | What will he say?" |
26232 | What''s that noise?" |
26232 | When''s he coming up? |
26232 | Where are you going this hot day?" |
26232 | Where are you going, Sunny Boy?" |
26232 | Where was your garden? |
26232 | Where''s Brookside, Mother?" |
26232 | White?" |
26232 | Why did n''t you sing out?" |
26232 | Why do n''t you copy the nice things I say, Sunny?" |
26232 | Why not, Mother?" |
26232 | Will my drum be like that?" |
26232 | Will you hand me one of those long nails, please?" |
26232 | Would that be all right?" |
26232 | Would you mind going up and getting it for me?" |
26232 | You can dress yourself, ca n''t you? |
26232 | You do n''t want Mother to have to come up and punish you, do you? |
26232 | You know Mother was talking about her Christmas presents last night?" |
26232 | You recall Jimmie, Olive?" |
26232 | You thinking of farming, too?" |
26232 | You''ll be good, wo n''t you, lambie? |
26232 | does n''t he?" |
26232 | he began eagerly,"were you ever at Brookside? |
26232 | it makes as much noise as ever, does n''t it?" |
26232 | was n''t it cold? |
26232 | what are you doing under the bed?" |
6381 | And the little one, her_ yche_? |
6381 | Are they all banana- colored at Grande Anse? |
6381 | Bo ti manmaille pou moin, chè-- ou tanne?... |
6381 | Coument ou kallé, Cyrillia?... |
6381 | Coument ou yé, chè?... |
6381 | Do you know Macouba? |
6381 | Do you not call this the real tropical blue? |
6381 | Does he live there? |
6381 | Is it the spectre of a dead person, Adou? 6381 Not the same who wrote a book about Martinique?" |
6381 | The sister gave one look, and cried out:''Baidaux, oti ou pouend yche- là?''... 6381 Toutt douce, chè!--et Ti Mémé?"... |
6381 | Where is her husband? |
6381 | Where is your babagee? |
6381 | Y bien;--oti Ninotte?... |
6381 | _ A sweet maize cake in the form of a tiny sugar- loaf, wrapped in a piece of banana leaf...._Ça qui lè fromassé"( pharmacie)"lapotécai créole? |
6381 | _ Call her, if you like snails...._Ca qui lè titiri? |
6381 | _ To, to, to!_--Ça qui là?'' 6381 _ To, to, to!_--Ça qui là?'' |
6381 | _ To, to, to!_--Ça qui là?'' 6381 ( But why had the Bon- Dié shaken the wind?) 6381 ( How art thou, dear?) 6381 ( Master, do you want to buy a cocoanut?) 6381 ( Why do they not make a portrait talk,--tell me? 6381 ( You want to have still more bad luck, that you do such a thing?) 6381 --Adou,"I ask,"what is a zombi?" |
6381 | --"And if she pass in the night?" |
6381 | --"And the little_ manmaille_ in Martinique, Cyrillia--_toutt piti, piti_,--don''t they talk creole?" |
6381 | --"And what are the stars fastened to?" |
6381 | --"And what are you talking so much to your own body about, Cyrillia?" |
6381 | --"And what then, Cyrillia?" |
6381 | --"Are they afraid of the people, Cyrillia?" |
6381 | --"But why art thou dressed all in black thus?" |
6381 | --"But, Cyrillia,"I asked one day,"did you ever see any zombis?" |
6381 | --"Cyrillia,_ mafi_,"I asked her one day, after my discovery of the little Virgin,--"would you not like me to buy a_ chapelle_ for you?" |
6381 | --"Di moin oti ou kallé, doudoux?" |
6381 | --"Eh ben?--ess ou''lè vini épi moin?" |
6381 | --"Eh?" |
6381 | --"Ess Aza?" |
6381 | --"Ess Cendrine?" |
6381 | --"Ess Maiyotte?" |
6381 | --"Ess Nini?" |
6381 | --"Ess Sounoune?--ess Loulouze?" |
6381 | --"Ess Vitaline?" |
6381 | --"Ess Yaiya?" |
6381 | --"Ess Youma?" |
6381 | --"Ess ou ainmein moin conm ça?" |
6381 | --"Hell in the sky, Cyrillia?" |
6381 | --"Ho!--on ni guêpe, anh?" |
6381 | --"How big is the fire that the zombi makes?" |
6381 | --"How do you know I have been baptized?" |
6381 | --"How? |
6381 | --"It is so pretty,--eh, mamma? |
6381 | --"Mais conm ça!--chimin tala plis cou''t,--coument?" |
6381 | --"Oti ou ka rêté, che?" |
6381 | --"Oti ou kallé la?" |
6381 | --"Pouki ou''lè save nom moin?--ça ou ké épi y?" |
6381 | --"Tell me where thou art going, sweetheart?" |
6381 | --"What do they look like?" |
6381 | --"What is a Protestant, Cyrillia?" |
6381 | --"What of that?--dost thou want to come with me?"] |
6381 | --"Where does the Good- God stay, if there be no sky? |
6381 | --"Why?" |
6381 | --"Would you like to look at the moon with my telescope, Cyrillia?" |
6381 | --"_Anh, anh, anh!_ No sky!--you say there is no sky?... |
6381 | --"_Aïe ya yaïe!_... No, true!... where art thou going now?" |
6381 | --"_Oti masque- à?_"Where are the maskers? |
6381 | --"_Oti masque- à?_"Where are the maskers? |
6381 | --"_Ou ben malade?_"he asked.... Stéphane did not seem to hear: his eyes remained closed. |
6381 | --"_Ou fèmé lapòte lariviè, chè- anh?_"--"_Ah! |
6381 | --"_Ou lè yon zabricôt?_"( Would you like an apricot?) |
6381 | --"_Ou lè yon zabricôt?_"( Would you like an apricot?) |
6381 | --"_Si lanmè ka vini plis fò, ça nou ké fai?_"( If the sea roughens, what are we to do?) |
6381 | --"_Si lanmè ka vini plis fò, ça nou ké fai?_"( If the sea roughens, what are we to do?) |
6381 | --"_Travaill Bon- Dié joli,--anh?_"( Is not the work of the Good- God pretty?) |
6381 | --"_Travaill Bon- Dié joli,--anh?_"( Is not the work of the Good- God pretty?) |
6381 | ... And where were the others? |
6381 | ... Is the great volcano dead?... |
6381 | ... Lhè y fini di ça, y ouè yon diabe qui ka vini, ka di conm çaa,"Pou moin châgé ou, ça ou ké baill moin?" |
6381 | ..."And why were you so afraid of them, Mimi?" |
6381 | ..."_ Ou c''est bonhomme caton?-ou c''est zimage, non?_"( Am I a pasteboard man, or an image, that I do not eat?) |
6381 | ..."_ Ou c''est bonhomme caton?-ou c''est zimage, non?_"( Am I a pasteboard man, or an image, that I do not eat?) |
6381 | ..."and these, which look something like our mandarins, what do you call them?" |
6381 | ..._"Çe moune- là, ça qui lè bel mango? |
6381 | A tall capresse inquired mischievously:----"_Ou vini pou pouend yon bain?_"( Coming to take a bath?) |
6381 | A tall capresse inquired mischievously:----"_Ou vini pou pouend yon bain?_"( Coming to take a bath?) |
6381 | Adou hesitates a little, and answers:--"_Zombi? |
6381 | After a tremendous English volley, one of the enemy cries out to him in French:"White Father, have they told?" |
6381 | And I saw a commandeur: he asked me what I was doing there, I answered him:''Why, I saw a ball, and I came to look-- what of it?'' |
6381 | And all smile to see Jean- Marie waiting for them, and to hear his deep kind voice calling,"_ Coument ou yé, chè? |
6381 | And now you can not come to me?... |
6381 | And the Moon is stronger than the Sun!--yes, the Sun was obliged to give way to the Moon.... Why do they fight like that?" |
6381 | And the other makes answer,"_ Toutt douce, chè,--et ou?_"( All sweetly, dear,--and thou?) |
6381 | And the other makes answer,"_ Toutt douce, chè,--et ou?_"( All sweetly, dear,--and thou?) |
6381 | And they mostly make answer,_"Toutt douce, chè,--et ou?_"( All sweetly, dear,--and thou?) |
6381 | And they mostly make answer,_"Toutt douce, chè,--et ou?_"( All sweetly, dear,--and thou?) |
6381 | And what am I to do with the chocolate- sticks and the cocoanuts and all the sugar- cane and all the cinnamon- apples?... |
6381 | And what is inside it? |
6381 | And where is heaven?--and where is hell?" |
6381 | And who was Père Labat,--this strange priest whose memory, weirdly disguised by legend, thus lingers in the oral literature of the colored people? |
6381 | But only those without friends or relatives in the city are suffered to go to the lazaretto;--Ti Marie can not have been of St. Pierre? |
6381 | But what art could utilize successfully the form of the centipede? |
6381 | But what is in that little flat bundle? |
6381 | But what slaves were the fathers of this free generation? |
6381 | But whence is she?--of what canton? |
6381 | But why should Missié want to buy me a_ chapelle?_--Missié is a Protestant?" |
6381 | CHORUS.--"_Oti ouè diabe- là passé lariviè?_"D.--"_Oti ouè diabe?_"C,--"_Oti ouè diabe- làp passé lariviè?_"D,-"_Oti ouè diabe?_... etc. |
6381 | CHORUS.--"_Oti ouè diabe- là passé lariviè?_"D.--"_Oti ouè diabe?_"C,--"_Oti ouè diabe- làp passé lariviè?_"D,-"_Oti ouè diabe?_... etc. |
6381 | CHORUS.--"_Oti ouè diabe- là passé lariviè?_"D.--"_Oti ouè diabe?_"C,--"_Oti ouè diabe- làp passé lariviè?_"D,-"_Oti ouè diabe?_... etc. |
6381 | Did you ever see anything like this?" |
6381 | Do n''t you see St. Joseph in it, carrying a bundle of wood?" |
6381 | Dost not remember, when our pillows lay close together, How we told each to the other all that our hearts thought?... |
6381 | Every morning I used to hear her passing cry, just about daybreak:--"_Qui''lè café?--qui''lè sirop?_"( Who wants coffee?--who wants syrup?) |
6381 | Every morning I used to hear her passing cry, just about daybreak:--"_Qui''lè café?--qui''lè sirop?_"( Who wants coffee?--who wants syrup?) |
6381 | How does she live upon it? |
6381 | How much? |
6381 | I asked,--"and all as pretty as these?" |
6381 | I must wear it, she says,--"_Ça ça ye, Manm- Robert?_"--"_Pou empêché ou pouend laverette_,"she answers. |
6381 | I was passing that way just at that time;--I asked them:"What ails you people?" |
6381 | Is it_ one who comes back?_"--"_Non, Missié,--non; çé pa ca._"--"Not that?... |
6381 | Is it_ one who comes back?_"--"_Non, Missié,--non; çé pa ca._"--"Not that?... |
6381 | Manm- Robert is quite dismayed:----"_Fesis- Maïa!_--ou''lè malhè encò pou fai ça, chè?" |
6381 | Maximilien screamed out to him:----"_Ou pa ka pagayé,--anh?--ou ni bousoin dòmi?_"( Thou dost not paddle, eh?--thou wouldst go to sleep?) |
6381 | Maximilien screamed out to him:----"_Ou pa ka pagayé,--anh?--ou ni bousoin dòmi?_"( Thou dost not paddle, eh?--thou wouldst go to sleep?) |
6381 | Moin té ka passé à lhè- à;--moin ka mandé yo:"Ça zautt ni?" |
6381 | No, thou wilt not beat me, little father?--no,_ papoute!_)--"_Ou ka dòmi, Stéphane?_"--queried Maximilien, wondering,--"art asleep?" |
6381 | Non, vouè!--ça ou kallé atouèlement?" |
6381 | One of the fathers, Père Fraise, had had brought to Martinique,"from the kingdom of Juda(?) |
6381 | Out rushes Fafa, with his huge straw hat in his hand:"Oti, Gabou?" |
6381 | She gazed at the picture a little longer in silence;--then turned to me again, and asked earnestly:----"_Pouki yo ja ka fai pòtrai palé-- anh?... |
6381 | She remained silent a moment, then said:----"Missié makes photographs...."--"You want a photograph of yourself, Cyrillia?" |
6381 | Sometimes she meets a laden sister travelling the opposite way...."_ Coument ou yé, chè?_"she cries. |
6381 | The first clear leap of the water is nearly seventy feet.... Did Josephine ever rest upon that shadowed bench near by?... |
6381 | The guilty child touches the plant, and asks,"_ Ess moin amisé moin?_"( Did I amuse myself? |
6381 | The guilty child touches the plant, and asks,"_ Ess moin amisé moin?_"( Did I amuse myself? |
6381 | The moment she said that, she saw a devil coming, who said to her,"If I load you, what will you give me?" |
6381 | The tallest among the devilesses always walks first, chanting the question,"_ Fou ouvè?_"( Is it yet daybreak?) |
6381 | The tallest among the devilesses always walks first, chanting the question,"_ Fou ouvè?_"( Is it yet daybreak?) |
6381 | Then she said:--"Would you not like to have a ladder long enough to let you climb up to those clouds, and see what they are made of?" |
6381 | Then what was it you said the other night when you were afraid to pass the cemetery on an errand,--_ça ou té ka di_, Adou?" |
6381 | Then, what is that up there?" |
6381 | To- day, the situation has not greatly changed; and with such examples on the part of the cultivated race, what could be expected from the other? |
6381 | Was it only an effect of the dying light, or were they actually moving towards the semicircular cliffs of Fond Corré?... |
6381 | Was this marvellous mockery evolved for a protective end? |
6381 | What is that mysterious quality in a voice which has power to make the pulse beat faster, even when the singer is unseen?... |
6381 | What is the secret of that horror inspired by the centipede?... |
6381 | What is the"malifice"? |
6381 | Whence had her mother obtained it? |
6381 | Where does the rain come from, if there is no sky,"...--"Why, Cyrillia,... the clouds"...--"No, you are a Protestant.... How can you say such things? |
6381 | Whither is she now going? |
6381 | Who had related the story to her? |
6381 | Why should I not love her?... |
6381 | Why? |
6381 | Y mandé moin:--''Ça ou ka fai là?'' |
6381 | Yet she seems to doubt him,--repeating her questionn over and over:--"Ess ou ainmein moin?" |
6381 | [ 6]"But did Monsieur Bon ever do anything to deserve the reputation he has left among the people?" |
6381 | [ 9]"And then what happened, Manm- Robert?" |
6381 | [ Footnote 15:--"Where dost stay, dear?" |
6381 | [_ To- to- to_..."Who taps there?" |
6381 | _ February 22d._... Old physicians indeed predicted it; but who believed them?... |
6381 | _ Ouill!_ you never heard of Pè Labatt?"... |
6381 | _ To- to- to_..."Who taps there?" |
6381 | _ To- to- to_..."Who taps there?" |
6381 | _ Ça qui lè doudoux?_ is the cry of the corossole- seller. |
6381 | _ Ça qui pa té connaitt Yé?_... Who is there in all Martinique who never heard of Yé? |
6381 | _ Ça qui pa té connaitt Yé?_... Who is there in all Martinique who never heard of Yé? |
6381 | _"Ça qui lè pain- mi? |
6381 | coument ou kallé?_"...( How art thou, dear?--how goes it with thee?) |
6381 | coument ou kallé?_"...( How art thou, dear?--how goes it with thee?) |
6381 | do only the birds know? |
6381 | so early?... |
6381 | tell me, Adou?" |
6381 | thou hast a Wasp[ lover]--eh?" |
6381 | what am I to do with a little paper dog? |
6381 | what foolishness!--why should I not wash my face with soap?" |
6381 | where did I see all this... long ago?".... |
6381 | why do you let him think? |
6381 | ça qui lé mangé yonne? |
30197 | ''And why not?'' 30197 ''And you?'' |
30197 | ''Are you glad, Johansen, that your enemy is done for?'' 30197 ''But where was Mogstad all this time?'' |
30197 | ''Did you scream, Peter?'' 30197 ''How could he do a thing like that?'' |
30197 | ''What did I think? 30197 ''What did he do that for?'' |
30197 | ''What did you think then, Peter?'' 30197 ''Why?'' |
30197 | But are there no other evidences of a current flowing across the North Pole from Bering Sea on the one side to the Atlantic Ocean on the other? 30197 But how can she know who we are?" |
30197 | But if this Jeannette current does not pass right across the Pole? 30197 But if, after all, we are on the wrong track, what then? |
30197 | But is not the cold in winter in these regions so severe that life will be impossible? 30197 But the question now arises: What route did it take from the New Siberian Islands in order to reach the east coast of Greenland? |
30197 | But why always worry about the future? 30197 By what route did this ice- floe reach the west coast of Greenland? |
30197 | Has good- luck abandoned us? 30197 How long may we suppose such a voyage to occupy? |
30197 | I have not courage to think of the future.... And how will it be at home, when year after year rolls by and no one comes? 30197 One of the others now remarked,''Was n''t it the devil that used a skull for his coffee- cup?'' |
30197 | Then comes the question: What is the best time to start? 30197 Well, who cares? |
30197 | What unforeseen obstacles may confront us? 30197 Why is it that at times I complain of the loneliness? |
30197 | Why will it not snow? 30197 ''And the earth was without form and void;''is this the sea that is to come? 30197 ''And your feet are not cold now?'' 30197 ''Did you aim at the dog and miss? 30197 ''Was it you that fired the shot?'' 30197 ''Well, Mogstad, how many pups have you now?'' 30197 ''Where is it?'' 30197 ''Will you tuck up your sleeves and begin again at the old work?'' 30197 ), and one a poplar( Populus tremula? 30197 A glorious land-- I wonder if another fairway like this is to be found the whole world over? 30197 After all, what does it matter? 30197 Ah, what is the purpose of all these spheres? 30197 Am I a coward? 30197 Am I afraid of death? 30197 Am I afraid of venturing my life? 30197 And I? 30197 And Norway, our fatherland, what has the old year brought to thee, and what is the new year bringing? 30197 And even if we perish, what will it matter in the endless cycles of eternity? 30197 And have not I found that things go exactly as I calculated they would whenever we get a favorable wind? 30197 And how often does a calculation come out correct? 30197 And she that gave most-- does she deserve that her sacrifice should have been made in vain? 30197 And she...? 30197 And we are drifting round and round in a ring, bewildered, attaining nothing, only waiting, always waiting, for what? 30197 And what before me? 30197 And what is there against this happening next year? 30197 And why should we not love her? 30197 And why should we not? 30197 Are we doing nothing in the service of science? 30197 Are we getting through? 30197 Are we not defrauding them? 30197 But have I any other choice? 30197 But how long is it to last? 30197 But how, indeed, should there be any illness? 30197 But in this soft clay-- in the bed of the stream? 30197 But is it not, perhaps, the law of nature that the strong, and not the weak, should be protected? 30197 But shall it be next spring? 30197 But to what purpose? 30197 But were I now free? 30197 But what could it have been? 30197 But what do we care whether there are 90 ° of frost or 120 °? 30197 But what else, then, can be keeping me back? 30197 But what is life? 30197 But what pleasure is there in strength when there is nothing for it to do? 30197 But whence does this timber come? 30197 But where did the proper route lie? 30197 But who expects to meet a walrus on close ice in the middle of a wild sea of a thousand fathoms depth, and that in the heart of winter? 30197 But why so dispirited? 30197 Ca n''t something happen? 30197 Can it be an ill omen, this backward advance towards the interior of the Polar Sea? 30197 Can it be because we have stopped drinking beer and begun lime- juice? 30197 Can it be toothache, or hereditary epilepsy-- or some other infernal thing? |
30197 | Can the river arrest its course and run up hill? |
30197 | Can there be land north of us? |
30197 | Can we at best get beyond the outward show of things? |
30197 | Can we have come into the neighborhood of land again? |
30197 | Can we, after all, be in a current moving northwest? |
30197 | Christmas is near, and what is Christmas without snow, thickly falling snow? |
30197 | Could I do otherwise? |
30197 | Could not a hurricane come and tear up this ice, and set it rolling in high waves like the open sea? |
30197 | Could one wish for more? |
30197 | Could this be Taimur Strait, after all? |
30197 | Did I not know all this before I started? |
30197 | Did they want to overthrow despotism? |
30197 | Do you think he does not love the vessel? |
30197 | Does he find his south? |
30197 | Does it signify something? |
30197 | Does longing stupefy one, or does it wear itself out and turn at last into stolidity? |
30197 | Does the central point of these masses of land lie to the north, midway between our meridian and theirs? |
30197 | For honor and glory then? |
30197 | For what purpose all this to- do? |
30197 | Had we got a southerly current together with the wind now? |
30197 | Have I been married five years to- day? |
30197 | Have I made it recklessly? |
30197 | Have I really grown so old and palsied, or is the whole thing imagination? |
30197 | Have I the right to deprive the ship and those who remain behind of the resources such an expedition entails? |
30197 | Have had a good time reading home letters, dreaming myself at home, dreaming of the home- coming-- in how many years? |
30197 | Have not all hopes and calculations been justified, and are we not drifting away just where I wished and hoped we should be? |
30197 | Have not many before us had to wait for wind? |
30197 | Have not we human beings, perhaps, been trying to turn nature topsy- turvy by protecting and doing our best to keep life in all the weak? |
30197 | Have we got near the land in the northwest which I have so long expected? |
30197 | Have we, perhaps, really found the right road at last? |
30197 | How far south shall we have advanced in this time? |
30197 | How is this phenomenon to be explained? |
30197 | How long is it to go on? |
30197 | How long is this to be allowed to go on under the eyes of the authorities? |
30197 | How long will this last? |
30197 | How long will this last? |
30197 | How many years would pass ere I should see it all again? |
30197 | How unutterably delightful does not this world appear to us on some stifling summer day at home? |
30197 | I attained my aim the first time, bad as things looked; shall I not do so this time too? |
30197 | I wonder what will happen to her and to us before we again see Norway rising up over the sea? |
30197 | If the current runs south here, how is that great open sea we steamed north across to be explained? |
30197 | If there should be land to the north? |
30197 | If, for instance, it passes between the Pole and Franz Josef Land, as above intimated? |
30197 | In short, we made a jovial evening of it, and why should we not? |
30197 | Is it apathy beginning? |
30197 | Is it because of the contrast with this poor, barren, sunless land of mists-- without a tree, without a bush-- nothing but stones and clay? |
30197 | Is it not enough to admire thy beauty and pause there? |
30197 | Is it not these same fleecy clouds far away in the blue expanse that the eye looks for at home on a bright summer day? |
30197 | Is it perhaps because I sat up reading last night? |
30197 | Is it perhaps that a current from more northerly, clear regions produces drier and more transparent air in the upper strata? |
30197 | Is it the coffee I drank after supper? |
30197 | Is it too much to calculate that we may be able to accomplish that distance in 50 days? |
30197 | Is life a vale of tears? |
30197 | Is not all life''s beauty high, and delicate, and pure like this night? |
30197 | Is the soul of man nothing but a succession of moods and feelings, shifting as incalculably as the changing winds? |
30197 | Is there dead- water under the ice, keeping it from going either forward or backward? |
30197 | Is there not a lucky omen in the resemblance between these two dreams? |
30197 | Is this Taimur Strait? |
30197 | Is this not an image of what is to come? |
30197 | It caught sight of me and stopped, astonished, as if it were thinking,''What sort of insect can that be?'' |
30197 | It was in June the Jeannette was crushed and sank; what if the Fram were to meet her fate here? |
30197 | Let me get home again, as conqueror or as beggar; what does that matter? |
30197 | Maybe they have heard it is a glorious enterprise; but why? |
30197 | No doubt many disappointments await us yet; but why not rejoice while fortune smiles? |
30197 | Or is life really nothing else? |
30197 | Or was it, perhaps, only the tide setting that way? |
30197 | Prospects were bright, and we sailed steadily northward, wondering what the morrow would bring-- disappointment or hope? |
30197 | Quietly and slowly, but mercilessly, one hope after the other is being crushed and... have I not a right to be a little despondent? |
30197 | Seven more years of such life-- or say only four-- how will the soul appear then? |
30197 | Shall I feel nothing at all by the time ten years have passed? |
30197 | Shall I try a few pages of Schopenhauer? |
30197 | So it is only polar water here? |
30197 | Successful or unsuccessful, what does that matter? |
30197 | The years are passing here, and what do they bring? |
30197 | There was no harm in that, was there?'' |
30197 | They certainly resembled aurora borealis; but perhaps they might be only light vapors hovering high up in the sky and catching the sunlight? |
30197 | This is absolutely the most comfortable way of undertaking a polar expedition; what possible journey, indeed, could be more comfortable? |
30197 | Till now I have lived under a lucky one; is its light to be darkened? |
30197 | To what end all this shifting pageant of loveliness? |
30197 | To what end, in that case, all this beauty, with not a creature to rejoice in it? |
30197 | To what end? |
30197 | To what end? |
30197 | Truth? |
30197 | Was I so very sure? |
30197 | Was it a mere feeling of duty that impelled me? |
30197 | Was it afraid of our finding the rifle? |
30197 | Was it an epileptic attack? |
30197 | Was it erected to celebrate my defeat? |
30197 | Was it my star? |
30197 | Was it the spirit of home following and smiling to me now? |
30197 | Was it to bring home the dead, as did Hermod when he rode after Baldur? |
30197 | Was this the sort of dinner for men who are to be hardened against the horrors of the Arctic night? |
30197 | We have no more line; what is to be done? |
30197 | We ought to have land to the north of us; can it be that which is keeping back the ice?" |
30197 | Well, if it does not succeed, is that my affair? |
30197 | Well, they are lying under the winter snow now, but in spring they will shoot and grow again-- how often? |
30197 | Were the many prophets of evil-- there is never any scarcity of them-- to prove right even at this early stage of the undertaking? |
30197 | Were they trying their guns? |
30197 | What are all our research and understanding in the midst of this infinity? |
30197 | What can be the reason of it? |
30197 | What can be the reason of this? |
30197 | What can it be? |
30197 | What can it matter whether chance, or whatever name you like to give it, does or does not allow the plan to succeed and make our names immortal? |
30197 | What can it possibly be? |
30197 | What can this mean? |
30197 | What could be the explanation of this? |
30197 | What if I have been mistaken, and am leading them astray? |
30197 | What is it bringing us? |
30197 | What is life thus isolated? |
30197 | What is life without love? |
30197 | What matters it that the world below is different-- the ice no longer single glittering glaciers, but spread out on every hand? |
30197 | What matters the individual''s suffering so long as the struggle goes on? |
30197 | What might we not expect there? |
30197 | What the deuce could it be? |
30197 | What was I to do? |
30197 | What will the expedition do in that case to reach the earth''s axis? |
30197 | Whatever can be the meaning of this? |
30197 | When, my proud ship, will you float free in the open water again? |
30197 | Where are those proud imaginings now that mounted like young eagles towards the brightness of the future? |
30197 | Where is now the serene hopefulness that spread itself in the daylight and the sun? |
30197 | Where shall we be when the sun returns? |
30197 | Wherefore? |
30197 | Who could have guessed that they would be needed here? |
30197 | Who could have guessed that we should find such deep water? |
30197 | Who knows what it is bringing? |
30197 | Why did we continually return to the attack? |
30197 | Why distress yourself as to whether you are drifting forward or backward? |
30197 | Why does home seem so far away? |
30197 | Why dwell on such things just now? |
30197 | Why not carelessly let the days glide by like a peacefully flowing river? |
30197 | Why on earth did they not advance nearer? |
30197 | Why should any human being renounce life to be wiped out here? |
30197 | Why should not a summer day be as lovely here? |
30197 | Why should not this winter carry the Fram west to some place north of Franz Josef Land?... |
30197 | Why should we always make so much of truth? |
30197 | Why? |
30197 | Will it really come to my going off north in spring? |
30197 | Yet why ask? |
30197 | and the bay we ended in farthest north? |
30197 | argentatus? |
30197 | it will help to while away a few more months, and where shall we be then? |
30197 | or the cold tea I drank when I awoke with a burning thirst? |
30197 | what a wondrous contrivance is life-- one eternal hurrying forward, ever forward-- to what end? |
30197 | what art thou, and whence comest thou? |
30197 | why keep revolving in this fruitless circuit of thought? |
23138 | A word to Mr(?) 23138 Am I then to understand, captain, that you consider the American ladies as_ not_ virtuous?" |
23138 | And at London? |
23138 | And is this French Canadian nationality one which, for the good merely of that people, we ought to strive to perpetuate, even if it were possible? 23138 And now you''re going home to spend your money?" |
23138 | And what may that be, Captain? |
23138 | Are you the captain of the boat? |
23138 | Are you the_ man_ who bought the newspaper? |
23138 | Bigger? 23138 Did you ring, ma''am?" |
23138 | Do n''t you like her? |
23138 | Has it been higher the last three or four years than the three or four years previously? 23138 Have they much trade at Liverpool?" |
23138 | I helped Mrs W."And now you are tired of helping others? |
23138 | I mean what did you do? |
23138 | Is n''t it? 23138 Is our great father so poor?" |
23138 | Knew nothing of him? |
23138 | My dear B, how are you? |
23138 | No? 23138 Of course you did, but what as?" |
23138 | The Thames? 23138 The colonel? |
23138 | Then, captain, you mean to say that cursing, swearing, and drinking, is a proof of morality in your country? |
23138 | Well now, Captain, I suppose you''ll allow America is a bit bigger country than England? |
23138 | Well, how can that be? |
23138 | Well,said the Englishman,"when is the chimney to be finished?" |
23138 | What as? 23138 What for?" |
23138 | What is he about? |
23138 | What makes you so melancholy? |
23138 | What''s to become of my business, I should like to know? |
23138 | Where? |
23138 | Who is your father? |
23138 | Why, is n''t the Mississippi a bigger river than you have in England? |
23138 | Will he be pleased at your coming home again? |
23138 | Will the Americans be abused in this way without retaliation? 23138 Would you prefer dining first?" |
23138 | You say you lived with Mr W.? |
23138 | --"Do you know Dr Follett?" |
23138 | --"Is it to_ shave with_, miss?" |
23138 | --"Quite well, and you?" |
23138 | --"Well, I thankey-- what shall we have?" |
23138 | --"Well, what shall it be?" |
23138 | --`Well, what more would you have?'' |
23138 | And how is this to be done in the present condition of the provinces? |
23138 | And now that I have made my statement, what will be the consequence? |
23138 | And should not this be the reply of the public to the publishers? |
23138 | And why should they feel such interest about a pirate like Bill Johnson? |
23138 | Are not, however, municipal institutions valuable in another point of view? |
23138 | Are the interests of thirteen millions of people to be sacrificed? |
23138 | Are the negroes belonging to me to be stolen away publicly in the face of all law and justice? |
23138 | Are there none in America? |
23138 | Are they a part of the fierce Scythians? |
23138 | Are they in any way deserving of it? |
23138 | Are they of the Tartar race? |
23138 | Are we willing to take our place among robber- states? |
23138 | As a people have we no self- respect? |
23138 | At present America is thinly peopled, but let them look forward to the time when the population shall become denser; what will then be the effect? |
23138 | But do the views of the Americans extend no further? |
23138 | But is there no civil law to protect me? |
23138 | But one thing is certain, the price of books in this country is much too high, and what are the consequences? |
23138 | But there is something unpleasant in this arrangement; it is too much like the bar of the tavern in the west, with--"Stranger, will you drink?" |
23138 | But who were the Tultequans and Azeteques, the founders of this empire in America; who built the pyramids of Cholula and city of Palenque? |
23138 | But why are they good- tempered? |
23138 | But why should this conflict between the two races have taken place? |
23138 | But why so? |
23138 | But why so? |
23138 | But, if you hush up suicides, may you not also hush up other offences, to save the feelings of families? |
23138 | But, passing over these, and three or four more_ cordons bleus_, what are reviewers in general? |
23138 | By what means, therefore, does his lordship intend that the province shall become English-- by immigration? |
23138 | Can they be trusted? |
23138 | Can we, for a moment, believe that these sacred well- known Hebrew words found their way by_ accident_ to the wilderness? |
23138 | Could they not? |
23138 | D, how goes it on with you?" |
23138 | Did it turn back these invaders of a land with which we were at peace? |
23138 | Do n''t you perceive that you ask us to give up the advantage?" |
23138 | Do they not prepare the people for legislating? |
23138 | Does not the Edinburgh reviewer at once shew that the work is not light and trifling? |
23138 | Does the Reviewer recollect the fable of the jackass who put on the lion''s skin? |
23138 | Du Pratz, speaking of the traditions of the Natches tribe, relates that in answer to the question,"Whence come you?" |
23138 | Even if you had a right to stay, how could you live where you now are? |
23138 | First, as to grants for local improvements, how were they applied? |
23138 | For what has been the result? |
23138 | From the Egyptians? |
23138 | From whom, then, did our red brethren, the rightful owners of this continent, descend? |
23138 | Has it thrown any wealth into the provinces? |
23138 | Have not the Swiss something similar, and are they shunned? |
23138 | Have they, with universal suffrage, obtained a representation free from bribery and corruption? |
23138 | Have we no feeling of responsibility to other nations, and to Him by whom the fates of nations are disposed?" |
23138 | Have we no reverence for national morality? |
23138 | Have you ever been in that State?" |
23138 | Have, then, the Americans improved upon us in this point? |
23138 | He denies that we have it in England, and would prove that this exists in America: and how? |
23138 | He observes very truly, that no one appears to think any thing about the twelve millions; why so? |
23138 | He went to the house where he had sold the first clock, and said,` Well, now, how does your clock go? |
23138 | Here is the question:--will the majority in America consent to be taxed? |
23138 | How does he know? |
23138 | How is this to be accounted for? |
23138 | How, then, are we to make the Lower Canadas English? |
23138 | I give you your choice; shall it be now, or at some future meeting?" |
23138 | I recollect once an American candidate asked me if I would walk out with him? |
23138 | I trust I shall have the pleasure of drinking-- something with you?" |
23138 | I was surprised at this, as I never heard of his name, so I inquired--"Who is Dr Follett?" |
23138 | I will leave it to the people of the United States to say, whether our nation was properly represented in this treaty? |
23138 | If the English, judged by the_ press_, are a blackguarding nation, what are the Americans, if they are to be judged by the same standard? |
23138 | If the Indians of America are not the descendants of the missing tribes, again I ask, from whom_ are_ they descended? |
23138 | In few words, are the Canadas to be hereafter considered as a French or an English colony? |
23138 | In the first instance you are justified in taking the robber''s life, and why not in the second? |
23138 | In what direction are we to look for the missing tribes according to the prophets? |
23138 | In what situation did you live?" |
23138 | In what way has the timber trade benefited the Canadas? |
23138 | Is it itself free from this imputation? |
23138 | Is it just or honourable for us to send our own agents among them, without their approval, and not hold ourselves responsible for their conduct? |
23138 | Is it possible that the Reviewer should still remain the dupe of such a vulgar error? |
23138 | Is it right that this vow should be made? |
23138 | Is not this an unsound principle to adopt in our intercourse with the Indians? |
23138 | It may be inquired, how it was that Murel escaped Lynch law under such circumstances? |
23138 | It was the question now whether they would go of their own accord, or by force? |
23138 | Logic.--"A Yankee went into the bar of an inn in a country town:` Pray what''s the price of a pint of shrub?'' |
23138 | My readers may inquire how I can so positively make this assertion? |
23138 | Now what will be the effect? |
23138 | Now, Mr Reviewer, do n''t you feel a little ashamed of yourself? |
23138 | Now, then, do you mean to say that you think there is as much conjugal infidelity in New York, in proportion to the population, as there is in London? |
23138 | Now, why have we not an equal right to seize all English property whenever we can find it in this country?" |
23138 | Of what advantage are the Canadas to England? |
23138 | On the contrary, did not its presence give confidence to the revolters? |
23138 | Suppose( what is however impossible) that you could be permitted so remain here a few years longer, what would be your condition? |
23138 | Surely the_ Edinburgh Review_ can put a better head on, when it takes notice of this second portion of my work? |
23138 | Take the reverse of the picture when the fault is on the woman''s side, and the evil is the same; can either party control their affections? |
23138 | Tar they can most assuredly produce; and, with the same climate as Russia, why not hemp? |
23138 | That is very natural on his part; but how can you expect a people to improve who_ never hear the truth_? |
23138 | That she met with affectation and folly in America, is very probable-- where do you not? |
23138 | That there have been many thousands fewer illegitimate children_ born_, it is true; but, has the progress of immorality been checked? |
23138 | The Americans are great boasters; but are we far behind them? |
23138 | The Americans, and with justice, hold up Washington as one of the first of men; if so, why will they not pay attention to his opinions? |
23138 | The English are a more respectable and constant[ unconstant?] |
23138 | The fault lies in ourselves; the books are too dear, and the question now is, can not they be made cheaper? |
23138 | The great question is, what is a majority? |
23138 | The hyperbole is their principal forte, but what is lying but imagination? |
23138 | The next consideration is, to what should the duty be reduced, so as not to affect our revenue? |
23138 | The question is, has the Federal Government adhered to its treaties and promises made with and to those who have been too weak to defend themselves? |
23138 | The question therefore is, can we rationally expect any improvement from their union? |
23138 | The same system is pursued by all those who would arrive at, or remain in place and power: and what must be the consequence? |
23138 | There is a question which has been raised by almost every traveller in America, and that is-- from whom are the American Indians descended? |
23138 | They leave their cards with him; if the cards are not returned in two or three days, they send a letter to know why he has not called upon them? |
23138 | This is plain and clear; but how is it to be effected? |
23138 | To what must we ascribe the great prevalence of this demoralising habit in the United States? |
23138 | What are we coming to in this country? |
23138 | What are, I may ask, the characters of these people? |
23138 | What can be more bragging, or more untrue, than the words of these lines? |
23138 | What colonel?" |
23138 | What is the cause of this unusual sympathy? |
23138 | What is the cause of this? |
23138 | What is the consequence that the Americans are amused, but not instructed or enlightened? |
23138 | What is the consequence? |
23138 | What is the reason of this? |
23138 | What is the reason of this? |
23138 | What is the situation of America at present? |
23138 | What is to support yourselves, your women and children? |
23138 | What obstacles had hitherto impeded their progress, that had broken down their energies, or impaired their constancy and fidelity? |
23138 | What occasioned the breaking up and the downfall of this republic? |
23138 | What was the conduct of M. Papineau and his party as soon as they had gained their point? |
23138 | What was the result? |
23138 | What would this recorder say? |
23138 | Who cares what may be the form of government of a country divided from them by three or four thousand miles of water, and of whom they have only read? |
23138 | Who would remain in a country where there is no freedom of thought or action, and where you can not even spend your money as you please? |
23138 | Why are none of these defaulters to the amount of upwards a million of dollars punished? |
23138 | Why did he not take warning from the fabled folly of his ancestor and_ hold his tongue_? |
23138 | Why has he dedicated twenty- seven pages of ponderous verbosity to so light and trifling a work? |
23138 | Will it ever come? |
23138 | Will you go by water, or by land? |
23138 | Will you have money for your cattle which you leave here on your arrival there, or will you have cattle in return? |
23138 | Will you have your next annuity paid in money or in goods? |
23138 | Would they be satisfied if they obtained the Canadas? |
23138 | Would they stop then? |
23138 | Would you like openly to assert that such is your opinion, and that you will stand by it? |
23138 | Would you really like to give up your name as the author of this bare- faced libel? |
23138 | You ask us to tax ourselves, to check the circulation of cheap literature, so essential to our welfare for the benefit of a few English authors? |
23138 | _ Who are they_? |
23138 | ` Father,''said the boy,` you will save me, wo n''t you? |
23138 | ` I thought,''observed one of them,` that you had received a letter?'' |
23138 | ` Is that your dinner- bell?'' |
23138 | ` Well, I did not have the shrub, did I, you nigger?'' |
23138 | ` Well, now, how does your clock go? |
23138 | ` What kind of man is Captain Marryat?'' |
23138 | ` What may you charge for dinner?'' |
23138 | ` Where are the people?'' |
23138 | and he allows you to go out?" |
23138 | and if the visit is returned, send a letter to know whether the minister called_ in person_, or_ not_? |
23138 | and why do you find that a child of promising talent is so prone to lying? |
23138 | are they not the rudiments of legislation by which a free people learn to tax themselves? |
23138 | carried off and sold to fill the pockets of these land pirates? |
23138 | does he not contradict his own assertions, by the labour and space bestowed upon it? |
23138 | have n''t we got the Thames?" |
23138 | my dear, dear Isaac, what can be done with your leg?" |
23138 | not that time, because Lawrence was drunk, they say; but did n''t we_ whip_ you well at New Orleans?" |
23138 | perpetrated in the United States? |
23138 | replied he,"and pray who the devil was to buy or sell me when I was in Ireland? |
23138 | such a precedent of example shown to the State, by one of its most important members? |
23138 | yes-- you refer to the Shannon and Chesapeake, do n''t you?" |
23138 | you can swim ashore with me, ca n''t you, father?'' |
42449 | Am I going to Russia? |
42449 | And you want me to adopt you? |
42449 | Are you a Bolshevik? |
42449 | Are you a Bolshevik? |
42449 | Are you a Bolshevik? |
42449 | Are you going to Russia? |
42449 | Are you going to get married while you are in Europe? |
42449 | Are you going to make pictures over here? |
42449 | Are you going to make pictures while you are there? |
42449 | Are you open for engagements? |
42449 | Are you visiting in London? |
42449 | Can you sleep? |
42449 | Charlie, do n''t you know me? |
42449 | Charlie, do n''t you remember me? |
42449 | Did you bring your make- up? |
42449 | Did you call on Shaw? |
42449 | Do I know Clara Kimball Young? 42449 Do I speak French?" |
42449 | Do you believe in Bolshevism? |
42449 | Do you ever expect to get married? |
42449 | Do you know where we are going? |
42449 | Do you like drama? |
42449 | Do you mind? |
42449 | Do you want to play''Hamlet''? |
42449 | Do you want to play''Hamlet''? |
42449 | Do-- you-- understand? |
42449 | For God''s sake, Carl, what''s wrong? |
42449 | Glass of beer, Charlot? |
42449 | Has it had a fair opportunity? |
42449 | Has my message been delivered? |
42449 | Have you destroyed Mr. Leno''s negative? |
42449 | Here''s where the great events in the history of the world took place? |
42449 | How about a few days in the country? |
42449 | How do we know but what some of you have n''t? |
42449 | How do you do your funny falls? |
42449 | How do you write your poetry? 42449 How do?" |
42449 | How is it you are up so late? |
42449 | I am not a politician? |
42449 | Is Jim Larkin here? |
42449 | Is he-- dead? |
42449 | Is n''t that lady the opera singer? |
42449 | Is she your little girl? |
42449 | Mr. Chaplin, are you a Bolshevik? |
42449 | Mr. Chaplin, do you ever expect to get married? |
42449 | Mr. Chaplin, have you your cane and shoes with you? |
42449 | Mr. Chaplin, why are you going to Europe? |
42449 | Mr. Chaplin, why are you going to Europe? |
42449 | Mr. Chaplin, why are you going to Europe? |
42449 | Mr. Chaplin, why are you going to Europe? |
42449 | Mr. Chaplin, why did you come to Europe? |
42449 | Mr. Lathom, is Mr. Chaplin on board? |
42449 | Oh, do you think Jewish people are clever? |
42449 | Should n''t we go over and make ourselves known? |
42449 | Then why are you going to Europe? |
42449 | Then you are bourgeoisie? |
42449 | To whom? |
42449 | Well, how are you, Charlie? |
42449 | Well, what are you doing-- Who are you? |
42449 | What can I do for you, sir? |
42449 | What do you do with your old canes? |
42449 | What do you do with your old moustaches? |
42449 | What do you do with your old moustaches? |
42449 | What do you do with your old shoes? |
42449 | What do you think of Lenin? |
42449 | What do you think of it? |
42449 | What do you think of the Irish question? |
42449 | What have you got? |
42449 | What holiday? |
42449 | What is their future? 42449 What of Lenin?" |
42449 | What will you have? |
42449 | What''s her name? |
42449 | What, where-- anything particular that I want to see? |
42449 | When will I be back for work? |
42449 | Where can I buy your book of poems, Carl? |
42449 | Where''s my cousin? |
42449 | Who is this guy, an English diplomat? |
42449 | Why did you come over? |
42449 | Why do you want to visit Russia? |
42449 | Why not? |
42449 | Why? |
42449 | Will you accept engagements? |
42449 | Will you appear on Tuesday? |
42449 | Will you dine here? |
42449 | Will you dine with us? |
42449 | Will you join a revue? |
42449 | Will you visit Ireland? |
42449 | You wait there, or do you want me to pay you off? |
42449 | Am I going to get up for lunch or will I have it in my cabin? |
42449 | And so, if you ca n''t send the little fellow to college, wo n''t you take him in the movies with you like you did Jackie Coogan? |
42449 | And why should he be singled out and imposed upon? |
42449 | And why so much of the mother in the picture, and why the meeting of the mother and the father? |
42449 | And wot would''e be a- doin''''ere?" |
42449 | Are most of the people in pictures immoral?" |
42449 | Are n''t English girls charming? |
42449 | Are they trying to draw me out? |
42449 | Are you likely to come to Harrogate? |
42449 | As glad as I am to see them? |
42449 | At the end of the picture there came a messenger from the Minister:"Would I come to his box and be decorated?" |
42449 | But she shrugs her shoulders in an indifferent and tragic manner and says,"What does it matter about life?" |
42449 | But then, would they have believed or understood if I had told them I wanted an emotional holiday? |
42449 | Ca n''t I ever get away from Hollywood? |
42449 | Ca n''t he escape? |
42449 | Can I do them? |
42449 | Can I say anything? |
42449 | Can it be true? |
42449 | Can not you forego to make showing of yourself with charity sometime for devastated France? |
42449 | Can those who go to Washington make it more than a thought? |
42449 | Can you make yourself write? |
42449 | Chaplin?" |
42449 | Could anyone conceive such a creation, such a land of continuous gaiety? |
42449 | Could n''t you try?" |
42449 | Cynical? |
42449 | DEAR CHARLIE,--Have you ever thought of the money to be made in peanuts? |
42449 | DEAR MR. CHAPLIN,--Won''t you please let me have enough money to send little Oscar to college? |
42449 | Did I anticipate working? |
42449 | Did its passing make much difference to the lonely derelict? |
42449 | Do I deserve even a part of it? |
42449 | Do I know Louise Glaum? |
42449 | Do I know any of the old- timers? |
42449 | Do I know her? |
42449 | Do n''t you like leaving England? |
42449 | Do we know where they can get a drink? |
42449 | Do you prepare?" |
42449 | Do you see me by the brook''s side, Catching grayfish''neath the stone, As you did the day you whispered:"Leave the harmless dears alone?" |
42449 | Do you see me in the meadow, Coming from the woodland spring, With a bamboo on my shoulder And a pail slung from a string? |
42449 | Do you see me, all expectant, Lying in an orange grove, While the swee- swees sing above me, Waiting for my elf- eyed love? |
42449 | Do you want to meet Shaw? |
42449 | Does it mean that War will never stride through the world again? |
42449 | Does she"vamp"in real life? |
42449 | Dorothy, writing from Poplar, asks:"Dear Mr. Charlie Chaplin, if you have a pair of old boots at home will you throw them at me for luck?" |
42449 | Finally, with the aid of about everyone in the hotel he manages to ask:--"Do you like France?" |
42449 | Has anything happened?" |
42449 | Have you got them insured?" |
42449 | He asks,"Why?" |
42449 | He declares that the"heaven"scene was entirely unnecessary, and why did I give it so much attention? |
42449 | How am I going to get out without being recognised? |
42449 | How can I approach them? |
42449 | How can they calmly plan with such exactness? |
42449 | How could he get back? |
42449 | How did reporters know I was coming? |
42449 | How do I think up my funny stunts? |
42449 | How do children see so much more than grown- ups? |
42449 | How has she kept hidden? |
42449 | How is it possible to meet people on the same footing? |
42449 | How shall I be received in England? |
42449 | How would I solve the unemployment problem? |
42449 | I am wondering what''s going to happen in London? |
42449 | I ask and keep asking,"Where''s my cousin?" |
42449 | I do n''t know why, but suddenly I feel self- conscious and silly-- Would I care to see Barrie? |
42449 | I read again: Lovely, dainty Spanish Needle, With your yellow flower and white; Dew- decked and softly sleeping; Do you think of me to- night? |
42449 | I wonder if being photographed together constitutes an introduction? |
42449 | I wonder if he gets comfort there? |
42449 | I wonder if the same old barber is still there? |
42449 | I wonder what Los Angeles and Hollywood would say if I paraded there in this costume? |
42449 | I wonder what he is reading? |
42449 | I wonder what will be the answer? |
42449 | Is it a gleam of intelligence coming into the world? |
42449 | Is it prophetic? |
42449 | Is it true that I am going to be knighted? |
42449 | Is the reticence real or is this some wonderful trick of his, this making his guest feel superior? |
42449 | Is this rest? |
42449 | Is this what I came six thousand miles for? |
42449 | Knoblock on the''phone:"Are you there? |
42449 | Lovely, dainty Spanish Needle; Source to me of sweet delight, In your far- off sunny Southland Do you dream of me to- night? |
42449 | Maybe I am only possible"copy"to him? |
42449 | My cousin, Tom Geraghty, Knoblock-- would I spend two or three days in the country and get a rest? |
42449 | Now that the excitement has died down, what are we going to do? |
42449 | Now the problem is how am I going to get out of this? |
42449 | Oh yes, how does it look to- day for crossing? |
42449 | Oh, why did I leave England? |
42449 | Or does he need comfort? |
42449 | Shadowed by the spreading mango Nodding o''er the rippling stream, Tell me, dear plant of my childhood, Do you of the exile dream? |
42449 | Shall I criticise? |
42449 | Shall I openly suggest going out, so I can get away? |
42449 | Should I say something? |
42449 | The little girl asks:"Are they all actors and in the movies? |
42449 | Then Wells whispers,"Do n''t you think the boy is good?" |
42449 | Then from Frenchmen:"Will I visit France?" |
42449 | Then why is he here? |
42449 | There are calls,"What have you done with your moustache?" |
42449 | They were mottoes:"Never Say Die,""Are We Downhearted?" |
42449 | Was its ending a tragic one, dramatic, or had it just passed out naturally? |
42449 | What ambitions? |
42449 | What can I do? |
42449 | What can I say? |
42449 | What does one ask skippers? |
42449 | What have I done? |
42449 | What have I said? |
42449 | What have I to say to the people of Manchester? |
42449 | What if they do n''t turn up? |
42449 | What is it all for? |
42449 | What is it that happens behind these grey walls that kills so completely? |
42449 | What is she doing with it? |
42449 | What is the force that has made it what it is? |
42449 | What is the thing to do? |
42449 | What is there in common between us? |
42449 | What is to become of them? |
42449 | What must I do? |
42449 | What shall I say to Barrie? |
42449 | What sort of a person is she? |
42449 | What sort of a trip shall I have? |
42449 | What will be the outcome? |
42449 | What would Europe look like after the war? |
42449 | What would I say? |
42449 | Where did you get that?" |
42449 | Where is that personality of mine? |
42449 | Where is that vacation that I pictured so vividly? |
42449 | Where''s Carl? |
42449 | Where''s So- and- so? |
42449 | Where''s Tom? |
42449 | Where''s my cousin? |
42449 | Who am I? |
42449 | Who is that old derelict there against the cart? |
42449 | Who would n''t want to do that? |
42449 | Whom shall I meet on board? |
42449 | Why are attempts made to parade such emotions? |
42449 | Why are n''t we appreciated more? |
42449 | Why are parties like that? |
42449 | Why are prisons and graveyards built in such beautiful places? |
42449 | Why are sinners always loved? |
42449 | Why are you so sad? |
42449 | Why ca n''t I be witty? |
42449 | Why did I come? |
42449 | Why did I take the trip? |
42449 | Why did n''t I do this and that? |
42449 | Why did n''t I go here? |
42449 | Why did n''t I think of it sooner? |
42449 | Why did n''t we do this before? |
42449 | Why do I pick out stunts like that? |
42449 | Why do sinners make such wonderful lovers? |
42449 | Why had n''t I given it some thought? |
42449 | Why is she here? |
42449 | Why was I going? |
42449 | Why? |
42449 | Will I meet Bernard Shaw? |
42449 | Will I meet H. G. Wells? |
42449 | Will I sign this? |
42449 | Will the train never start? |
42449 | Will they be glad to see me? |
42449 | Will you pay for the boat, and half the gold is yours? |
42449 | Will you see somebody? |
42449 | Wo n''t you teach me like you taught him? |
42449 | Wonder if I could play that part? |
42449 | Wonder if I look like Doug when I do this? |
42449 | Wonder why a universal language is n''t practicable? |
42449 | Would I appear for such and such charity? |
42449 | Would I give him the first opportunity? |
42449 | Would I kick off the football season or attend some particular Soccer game? |
42449 | Would I mind signing them for the stewards? |
42449 | Would I visit such and such institutions? |
42449 | Would he accept anything? |
42449 | Would we pose together? |
42449 | Would you mind seeing me to a taxi?" |
42449 | You are not going home so early?" |
37206 | A what? |
37206 | And is Mandas nice? |
37206 | And they understand Italian? |
37206 | And what good would it be to you if she were? |
37206 | Are you husband and wife? |
37206 | Bread alone? |
37206 | But could you live here? |
37206 | Can you understand Sardinian? |
37206 | Did you think we had been going ever since you got in? |
37206 | Did you want something? 37206 Do they make those in Sorgono?" |
37206 | Do you speak English? |
37206 | Do you understand Sardinian? |
37206 | Does it do you good? |
37206 | Eh-- what''s that? |
37206 | Elle a le mal de mer? |
37206 | First and second class alike? |
37206 | How much do you charge for the fleas you carry? |
37206 | How not? 37206 How should n''t she?" |
37206 | How should n''t they? |
37206 | How--_affari_? |
37206 | How? 37206 How? |
37206 | In what way nice? |
37206 | Is it a dialect? 37206 Is n''t the sea a little quieter?" |
37206 | Is there a room, Signora? |
37206 | Is there anything to see? |
37206 | Is this the Nuoro bus? |
37206 | No, Signora-- how should it be? |
37206 | Oh,she cried,"are we going?" |
37206 | Oh-- where can we get some then? |
37206 | One is all right here, eh? |
37206 | Signora,he said,"do you understand me what I say?" |
37206 | The Signora is n''t eating? |
37206 | Then you are very bored here? |
37206 | There is nothing else? |
37206 | Vous avez pris le cafà ©? |
37206 | Vous descendez en terre? |
37206 | Well then, what other hotel? |
37206 | What do you sell? |
37206 | What do you_ sell_? |
37206 | What does one do here? |
37206 | What goods? |
37206 | What language is it then? |
37206 | What will you do on such a boat if you have an awful time out in the Mediterranean here? 37206 Where are they from?" |
37206 | Where do we eat? 37206 Where do you find such white bread?" |
37206 | Where is the Albergo d''Italia? |
37206 | Who is going? |
37206 | Who were those in there? |
37206 | Why do you bother? |
37206 | Why, is this the only place you''ve got to sit in? |
37206 | Why,say I, lapsing into the Italian rhetorical manner,"why do you keep an inn? |
37206 | Why? |
37206 | Why? |
37206 | Why? |
37206 | Wo n''t you leave any tip at all? |
37206 | You are eating the kid? 37206 You are sleeping upstairs?" |
37206 | You think not? 37206 You would like to be in Cagliari?" |
37206 | You''ve seen Cagliari? |
37206 | _ Che genere di affari?_ What sort of business? |
37206 | _ Che genere di affari?_ What sort of business? |
37206 | ***** Where does one go? |
37206 | A fiasco of vino? |
37206 | Africa? |
37206 | After all, what is an hour and a half? |
37206 | Again the young woman called, had we had coffee? |
37206 | Ah Naples-- bella, bella, eh? |
37206 | Am I always to have the exchange flung in my teeth, as if I were a personal thief? |
37206 | And also in Italian:"Partiamo?" |
37206 | And are there many motor- cars in England?--many, many? |
37206 | And are we ready? |
37206 | And as for motor- cars, it is all I can do to own a pair of boots, so how am I to set about employing a_ chauffeur_? |
37206 | And run the gauntlet of that stinking, stinking lane? |
37206 | And was n''t it difficult to put the kid thus on the iron rod? |
37206 | And what does she do? |
37206 | And what nation were we, were we French? |
37206 | And what was it? |
37206 | Are all nations of Europe going to be forbidden? |
37206 | Are they ready? |
37206 | Are you suffering?" |
37206 | As I enter I hear one young man tenderly enquiring of the berth below:"Dost thou feel ill?" |
37206 | Because why? |
37206 | But I said loudly to the urchin:"Is_ that_ the telegraph official?" |
37206 | But in Sardinia, where roads and bridges are absolutely wanting, will they do anything? |
37206 | But is mere historical fact so strong, that what one learns in bits from books can move one so? |
37206 | But must you? |
37206 | But now where is that little hole where one gets the tickets? |
37206 | But seeing I was laughing without malice, he leaned to me and said softly, secretly:"What is your affair then? |
37206 | But there is little to see and therefore the question is, shall we go on? |
37206 | But what do you want? |
37206 | But what should women and girls be doing at the marionette show? |
37206 | But what? |
37206 | But who was he? |
37206 | But why in the name of heaven should my heart stand still as I watch that hill which rises above the sea? |
37206 | But_ can_ I care for the innumerable_ fantasias_ in the drapery line? |
37206 | Could I have milk? |
37206 | Could one go on board at once? |
37206 | Deutsch, eh? |
37206 | Deutschland unter alles now? |
37206 | Did n''t I tell thee I would count three? |
37206 | Did n''t we like it? |
37206 | Did n''t we start before?" |
37206 | Did the delicate and fine complication of lines against her eyes mean thirty- five? |
37206 | Did they do all their meat this way? |
37206 | Do they want men in America? |
37206 | Et vous?" |
37206 | Everything? |
37206 | For why? |
37206 | Girgenti, and the sulphur spirit and the Greek guarding temples, to make one madder? |
37206 | Had the milk come? |
37206 | Had we any more luggage-- were we going to the steamer? |
37206 | Had_ she_ paid for the train-- heh? |
37206 | Has not this song been sung at me once too often, by these people? |
37206 | Have you something to say? |
37206 | Hearing me speak to the q- b, he said in confidence to the priest:"Here are two Germans-- eh? |
37206 | Her ticket? |
37206 | Here, say I, they make it with nothing.--Is there milk? |
37206 | How far? |
37206 | How many men, how many races, has Etna put to flight? |
37206 | How much does it cost? |
37206 | How will she be ruined?" |
37206 | I asked how one went to the steamer-- did one walk? |
37206 | I say what for? |
37206 | I wanted to count their sails-- five square ones which I call the ladder, one above the other-- but how many wing- blades? |
37206 | In America too? |
37206 | In a very short time they were through their portions: and was there nothing else? |
37206 | Is n''t that so? |
37206 | Is our marvellous, mechanical era going to have so short a bloom? |
37206 | Is there another room?" |
37206 | Is there coffee? |
37206 | Is there something that amuses you? |
37206 | It all has an air of"Why not?" |
37206 | Looks down as if to say, What do you mean by it? |
37206 | Methylated spirit, a small aluminium saucepan, a spirit- lamp, two spoons, two forks, a knife, two aluminium plates, salt, sugar, tea-- what else? |
37206 | Naples, Rome, Florence? |
37206 | No milk at all? |
37206 | No more-- what? |
37206 | No passports? |
37206 | Not for long? |
37206 | Nothing else, you sludge queen? |
37206 | Now I ask you, is this to be borne? |
37206 | Oh my, will you go in such a little thing? |
37206 | Oh no-- will you risk it, really? |
37206 | Oh, my girovago was a known figure all over the country.--And where would they sleep? |
37206 | Only then? |
37206 | Or does the very word call an echo out of the dark blood? |
37206 | Or is the tide of enlightenment and world- unity already receding fast enough? |
37206 | Say then-- what does it mean? |
37206 | Shall we go forward? |
37206 | She got up wrathfully and stumbled into the dark passage, exclaiming--"Don''t we eat yet?" |
37206 | She shouts at me as I pass, in her powerful, extraordinary French:"Madame votre femme, elle est au lit?" |
37206 | She was not more than twenty years old I should say: or was she? |
37206 | Should we sit on in our present carriage, and go down in it to the port, along with the schoolmistress, and risk it? |
37206 | Somebody asks_ who_? |
37206 | Strange, is n''t it? |
37206 | The bus has stopped quite close to the door of the inn: Star of Italy, was it? |
37206 | The dark- browed man looked up at the girovago and said:"Are you going to cook the sausages with your fingers?" |
37206 | The lark flew at him and said"Then you''ve changed it, have you?" |
37206 | The q- b said no, why? |
37206 | The three giggling young hussies shrink together as if they would all hide behind one another, after a vain uprearing and a demand why? |
37206 | The workman''s International, or the centripetal movement into national isolation? |
37206 | Then she appeared with a bowl of smoking cabbage soup, in which were bits of macaroni: and would we have wine? |
37206 | Then where is tea? |
37206 | They addressed the sludge- queen curtly and disrespectfully, as if to say:"What''s she up to?" |
37206 | They seize the black- edged one by the arm, and in profound commiseration:"Do you suffer? |
37206 | They thought themselves no less-- and what are they? |
37206 | Thirty two hours in such a little boat? |
37206 | To travel with the stomach uneasy did one harm:_ fa male, fa male-- non è vero?_ Chorus of"yes." |
37206 | Tunis? |
37206 | Was he a Paladin and a splendour? |
37206 | Was there a bedroom? |
37206 | Was there a fire? |
37206 | Was there any cheese? |
37206 | Was there anything to eat? |
37206 | Was there cheese? |
37206 | Was there no room? |
37206 | Was there nowhere where we could sit? |
37206 | We helped ourselves, and the fat carabiniere started the conversation with the usual questions-- and where were we going tomorrow? |
37206 | We see the hill? |
37206 | Well, how nice to see you.--Oh, let the man wait.--What, going on at once to Naples? |
37206 | Well, what were we to do? |
37206 | Were they, said I, a sort of camorra? |
37206 | Were we English? |
37206 | Were we depending on booking berths at the port of Naples? |
37206 | Were we not going to see any more? |
37206 | What affair is it, yours?" |
37206 | What are the allies for? |
37206 | What did one pay for bread in Germany? |
37206 | What did the old woman want to take her trips down the line for? |
37206 | What do you say?" |
37206 | What does he want then? |
37206 | What does it mean, that this is an inn? |
37206 | What does it mean, your Ristorante Risveglio, written so large?" |
37206 | What does one care for precept and mental dictation? |
37206 | What does one care? |
37206 | What else was there to eat? |
37206 | What else was there to eat? |
37206 | What else was there? |
37206 | What good was that? |
37206 | What is the exchange today? |
37206 | What is your dialect?" |
37206 | What makes you say so? |
37206 | What sort of pictures? |
37206 | What was there to eat?--and was it nearly ready? |
37206 | What, say, what does it mean? |
37206 | What? |
37206 | What?" |
37206 | Wheesky-- eh? |
37206 | When are we going to London? |
37206 | When, oh when shall we come to Siniscola, where we are due to eat our midday meal? |
37206 | When? |
37206 | Where are you going?" |
37206 | Where did the bus go? |
37206 | Where had we come from, where were we going, what for? |
37206 | Where is his home? |
37206 | Where then? |
37206 | Where then? |
37206 | Where was the oven? |
37206 | Where were we going and where had we been and where did we live? |
37206 | Where''s the q- b? |
37206 | Whereupon the new fat neighbour asked him was it true that the Catholic Church was now becoming the one Church in the United States? |
37206 | Which motion will conquer? |
37206 | Who would have expected it? |
37206 | Why are you here? |
37206 | Why be angry? |
37206 | Why be angry? |
37206 | Why bother about privacy? |
37206 | Why ca n''t one sit still? |
37206 | Why come to anchor? |
37206 | Why do n''t I come on Friday? |
37206 | Why do n''t we get them? |
37206 | Why do n''t you take it as it comes? |
37206 | Why do they look so intense? |
37206 | Why do you have the impudence to take in travellers? |
37206 | Why look out? |
37206 | Why not stay? |
37206 | Why not? |
37206 | Why should they? |
37206 | Why take it morally? |
37206 | Why were these folk at the town- end making this fire alone? |
37206 | Why, then, must one go? |
37206 | Why? |
37206 | Why? |
37206 | Why? |
37206 | Why? |
37206 | Why? |
37206 | Why? |
37206 | Why? |
37206 | Will the last waves of enlightenment and world- unity break over them and wash away the stocking- caps? |
37206 | Will you drink Wheesky, Mister?" |
37206 | Will you really go? |
37206 | With all the money, and we others with no money? |
37206 | Wo n''t you go from Cività Vecchia?" |
37206 | You are eating at the inn?" |
37206 | You ask why? |
37206 | You mean Ireland?" |
37206 | You must laugh, must you? |
37206 | You see that cape?" |
37206 | You think so? |
37206 | You''re sure you have everything you want? |
37206 | _ Non è vero?_ this to all the men from Siniscola. |
37206 | then you ca n''t go? |
13450 | A flask of water from a spring on the sacred mountain would do, would n''t it? |
13450 | A kind of sympathy in detachments, is it? |
13450 | After the great excitement may I not have the pleasure of offering you a reviving cup of tea at my house? 13450 An acre or so?" |
13450 | And Mr. Campbell is building a railroad, you say? |
13450 | And are n''t you overjoyed for your little daughter to have such an opportunity to see the other side of the world? |
13450 | And are we to have tea now? |
13450 | And have you been writing a letter to thank the Compassionate God Jizu for your recovery? |
13450 | And how''s little daughter''s friend? |
13450 | And is that poor soul going to turn into a horse and pull me? |
13450 | And sleep with your head on a bench and eat with chop sticks? |
13450 | And to make assurance doubly sure, you thought you would just mention the matter to us? |
13450 | And what did you tell her? |
13450 | And will the''Cornet''go, too? |
13450 | And you know many of them, I suppose? |
13450 | And, surely,put in Miss Campbell,"if the machinery broke down, you would n''t compel your wife to repair it?" |
13450 | Are n''t some of the descendants of the old warrior samurai rather fanatical? |
13450 | Are these the ones? |
13450 | Are they not charming little creatures? |
13450 | Are we entertaining a family of sons this evening or have we just decided to celebrate whether we have sons or not? |
13450 | Are you a Samurai? |
13450 | Are you a spy? |
13450 | Are you from Holland? |
13450 | Are you going to Nikko, too, O''Kami San? |
13450 | Are you going to build those little funny openwork bridges over all the streams? |
13450 | Are you in a''riksha? |
13450 | Are you looking for Onoye? |
13450 | Are you one of the engineers on the new railroad they are building? |
13450 | Are you quite well again, Onoye? |
13450 | But how did it happen? |
13450 | But what about? |
13450 | But what did you bring with you? 13450 But what does Nancy know about opening a safe, Papa? |
13450 | But what does she do? |
13450 | But what is it, little girl? |
13450 | But what is it? |
13450 | But what of it? |
13450 | But what were they? |
13450 | But where are we going? |
13450 | But who? |
13450 | But why was it? |
13450 | But why, pray, did n''t you take Nancy''s? |
13450 | But why? |
13450 | But you and Elinor and Mary have n''t any moles on the soles of your feet, have you? |
13450 | Buxton, do n''t you think we''ve had enough? |
13450 | By Jove,he exclaimed,"did you find that among my papers?" |
13450 | Ca n''t we call her back and ask her some more questions? |
13450 | Ca n''t we see her? |
13450 | Ca n''t you tell me what happened? |
13450 | Ca n''t you understand that we are sorry and anxious to help you? |
13450 | Could n''t you get away and go with us? |
13450 | Dearest old great- grandmama,cried Nancy, kneeling beside the aged pug and hiding her face in the tawny coat,"are you really glad to see me, too?" |
13450 | Delightful weather, is n''t it? 13450 Did you forget it?" |
13450 | Did you notice,said Mary,"that the Japanese lady in the''riksha wore her arm in a sling?" |
13450 | Do I look like a wife beater? |
13450 | Do n''t you think it''s very hot, Mary? |
13450 | Do n''t you think that is rather an uncomplimentary question? |
13450 | Do n''t you think we had better get your father, Billie, or one of the boys? |
13450 | Do you love him? |
13450 | Do you remember how she called Miss Campbell''the honorable old maid''? |
13450 | Do you think I have the ghost of a chance? |
13450 | Do you think Miss Campbell would consent to let you make a visit, Nancy? |
13450 | Do you think Papa would look after himself if he thought I was lost on the mountain? 13450 Do you think she could be doing it for some one else?" |
13450 | Do you think the rain will ever let up, Papa? |
13450 | Does anyone in the house know? |
13450 | For whom is the other tray, then? |
13450 | Good heavens, Billie, what am I to do? 13450 Good heavens, Komatsu, what are we to do? |
13450 | Good,exclaimed Billie,"I thought you were a Dutchman and it''s lots nicer to be an American, do n''t you think so?" |
13450 | Goodness gracious me, what is it? |
13450 | Has Nancy got it? |
13450 | Has anything happened to you? |
13450 | Has the doctor seen you? |
13450 | Has the place caught fire, or did n''t we give the right amount of change? |
13450 | Have we brought everything? |
13450 | Have you been getting married? |
13450 | How are you going to find her, Papa? |
13450 | How could you? |
13450 | How did she happen to go alone on a tramp like that? 13450 How do my five beautiful American ladies feel?" |
13450 | How do we dress? |
13450 | How do we give the tip? |
13450 | How do you feel now, Miss Billie? |
13450 | How do you know you shot him? |
13450 | How do you know? |
13450 | How would four young parties and another younger party, who claims to be old and rheumatic, but is n''t, like to take a trip? |
13450 | How? |
13450 | I do n''t like him, Papa,broke in Billie,"and-- you did n''t know that he has been married and divorced?" |
13450 | I hope I did n''t kill him? |
13450 | I thought you promised to call me Nicholas? 13450 If I almost passed away from homesickness in one night, how should I have borne it for-- for longer?" |
13450 | In her room, I suppose? |
13450 | In the name of good health and excellent digestion, tell me what are doormats? |
13450 | Is it possible that this is your house we have broken into so rudely? |
13450 | Is it possible that you are the Motor Maids who have ridden so many thousands of miles in a red car? |
13450 | Is it your head, dear? 13450 Is n''t it cunning?" |
13450 | Is n''t it? |
13450 | Is there any rude person in the length and breadth of Japan? |
13450 | Is there anything the matter with Onoye? |
13450 | Is this a common occurrence with Miss Campbell? |
13450 | Is this any inducement? |
13450 | It''s romantic,observed Billie,"but what will Cousin Helen say? |
13450 | Komatsu, where are they? |
13450 | Mary, what shall I say? |
13450 | May I ask your pardon for intruding on your beautiful gardens? |
13450 | May I not see you again to- morrow, Miss Brown? |
13450 | Meaning for the fifth the beauteous lady who lingers in her room? |
13450 | Meaning, Mr. Ito, that the American floors are not as entirely free from dust as the Japanese floors? |
13450 | Mr. Ito, will you sit on a mat on the floor or in a chair? |
13450 | Much sickness? |
13450 | Nancy has been greatly troubled about something lately, has n''t she, little daughter? |
13450 | Nancy, Nancy, how could you? |
13450 | Not even the austere old lady who chaperones you? |
13450 | Not exactly? 13450 Not know, but honorable young lady not look inside?" |
13450 | O''Kami San, will you not ask her? |
13450 | Of course, you poor dear, but how did you injure yourself? |
13450 | Oh, Nancy, Nancy,she groaned inwardly,"could it have really been you and are you out there in the typhoon?" |
13450 | Oh, Nicholas,she cried,"do you think Papa could still be looking for me? |
13450 | Oh, are these the swords of a samurai warrior? |
13450 | Oh, you little witch,cried Miss Campbell, pinching Nancy''s cheek,"what shall I do with you, making eyes at these Orientals who do n''t understand?" |
13450 | One never wears shoes in the house, Cousin, do n''t you remember? 13450 Papa did n''t come?" |
13450 | Papa, do you think she could have gone to that widow? 13450 Papa, is there any trouble brewing in this house?" |
13450 | Papa,she began,"ca n''t we take the''Comet''and go sight- seeing? |
13450 | People? |
13450 | Rested with humble refreshment in poor modest little house? |
13450 | Scold her? 13450 Shall it be a love song?" |
13450 | Shall we put on our kimonos and lie on the floor in the library? |
13450 | Silk robe? |
13450 | So you decided to come back to us, Nancy? |
13450 | The guitar and the tea basket and the luncheon hamper--"And the mackintoshes? |
13450 | The what? |
13450 | Then what are you driving at? |
13450 | Then you do know something? |
13450 | There were only three Graces, were there not? |
13450 | There''s nothing to knock on, so why knock? |
13450 | They are foolish children, are n''t they, Komatsu? |
13450 | They look as if they were going to play a joke on us,observed Billie,"Did you ever see anything so guileless and simple- hearted as they are?" |
13450 | Think garden pretty, O''Kami San? |
13450 | Was it an enemy of yours or some one who wanted to exterminate us because we are foreigners? |
13450 | Was it in the library that night? |
13450 | Well, Miss Nancy,''is''what? |
13450 | Well, if you had one, what would you do with her? 13450 Were you the first person on the scene? |
13450 | What are you going to do? |
13450 | What are you talking about, Mary? |
13450 | What did I tell you? |
13450 | What did she mean about Papa''s work? |
13450 | What did you say to him, Papa? |
13450 | What do you do all day, O''Kami San? |
13450 | What do you mean, Onoye? |
13450 | What do you think, Cousin? |
13450 | What in the name of all the powers are you driving at? 13450 What in the world are they doing?" |
13450 | What in the world is the matter? |
13450 | What is his name? |
13450 | What is it all about, Papa? |
13450 | What is it, Onoye? |
13450 | What is it? |
13450 | What is the matter with our little maid? 13450 What is the matter with this household?" |
13450 | What kind of business, O''Haru? |
13450 | What makes you think so, sweetheart? |
13450 | What number do you want? |
13450 | What on earth do you want? |
13450 | What on earth? |
13450 | What was the honorable wish of the young lady? |
13450 | What''s the matter, Papa? |
13450 | What''s the reason, then, Cousin Helen? |
13450 | Where are the others? |
13450 | Where are your friends? 13450 Where did you come from?" |
13450 | Where did you find her, Buxton? |
13450 | Where do you keep the real papers, Papa? |
13450 | Where is Onoye, O''Haru? |
13450 | Where is Onoye? 13450 Where is it to be this time, Nancy- Bell?" |
13450 | Where was she yesterday? |
13450 | Where''s your guitar? |
13450 | Who am I to be scolding anybody? |
13450 | Why are you so unhappy, Onoye? 13450 Why ca n''t we give him a real Japanese surprise party, Cousin Helen, and invite those nice men to come? |
13450 | Why ca n''t we go to the Arakawa Ridge? |
13450 | Why did n''t you borrow Nancy''s, Billie? |
13450 | Why do you think she ran away? |
13450 | Why does n''t that good- for- nothing brother teach her something? 13450 Why not let Komatsu go along?" |
13450 | Why not? |
13450 | Why on earth did n''t you tell me about it immediately? |
13450 | Why, have you forgotten, boy, that this is your birthday? 13450 Why, what on earth is the matter with them?" |
13450 | Why, you poor dear, what have I to forgive? |
13450 | Will a hundred do? |
13450 | Will honorable ladies be pleased to employ humble refreshment? |
13450 | Will you ask your mother, Mr. Ito, if-- she suffers from rheumatism from sitting on the floor so much? |
13450 | Will you lend me your raincoat, Miss Nancy? |
13450 | Wo n''t some little maid keep a lonely man company? |
13450 | Wo n''t you come with me first to get my handkerchief? |
13450 | Would you be interested in seeing the garden? |
13450 | Would you have us dress like men? |
13450 | Yes, gracious lady"What is the matter with you? |
13450 | You are not thinking of marrying, surely? 13450 You do n''t know who his first wife was, do you, Nicholas?" |
13450 | You like all same American food? 13450 You mean four days ago?" |
13450 | You mean that a young lady chauffeur would make an excellent wife? |
13450 | You mean your husband is not young? |
13450 | You wo n''t think me silly if I tell you this? 13450 ''But why hast thou done this deed?'' 13450 After all was she so sure about that other person crouching somewhere-- anywhere? 13450 After all, was it really necessary to warn Nancy not to talk too much and tell all she knew? 13450 After all, was it the act of true friendship to pick out all the defects and flaws in a friend''s nature? 13450 All the way, she kept thinking:What is Nancy- Bell up to? |
13450 | Am I not right, Yoritomo?" |
13450 | And besides what would she want with plans for government improvements or whatever they are?" |
13450 | And do you call it lady- like and honorable? |
13450 | Any girl who is cool- headed enough to run a motor car and-- and keep machinery in order and--""Well-- and what?" |
13450 | Are you all right?" |
13450 | Are you alone?" |
13450 | Are you glad to see me, Billie, dearest?" |
13450 | Are you sure nothing else is involved? |
13450 | At last Billie said softly:"What are we going to do, Mary, dear?" |
13450 | Beat her?" |
13450 | Besides, what earthly use could she have with those papers?" |
13450 | Billie knew perfectly well that Nancy was going to say:"Is Yoritomo going?" |
13450 | But who could be in a bad humor on such a glorious morning? |
13450 | But who is this caller, I wonder?" |
13450 | Buxton?" |
13450 | Ca n''t you tell them that?" |
13450 | Campbell?" |
13450 | Campbell?" |
13450 | Can you deny it? |
13450 | Can you imagine, Billie, spending two hours arranging three lilies in a bowl to make them look as if they had grown there?" |
13450 | Could n''t you just tell Miss Nancy to be careful without explaining why? |
13450 | Do n''t girls ever do that? |
13450 | Do n''t you remember what the missionary on the steamer told us? |
13450 | Do you live here, too?" |
13450 | Do you suppose Nancy has anything on her mind?" |
13450 | Do you think we could slip into the garden? |
13450 | Does she know you were out walking?" |
13450 | Drink it down?" |
13450 | Everything is picturesque in this country from beggars to railroad bridges, and, speaking of bridges, have you explored the garden yet? |
13450 | Fontaine? |
13450 | Fontaine?" |
13450 | Fontaine?" |
13450 | His most esthetic Very magnetic Fancy took this turn: If I can wheedle A knife or a needle, Why not a Silver Churn? |
13450 | How about it, old man? |
13450 | How are you, little daughter?" |
13450 | How can we go on like this when we are drifting farther and farther away?" |
13450 | How could Nancy have thought of such things? |
13450 | How did you know I was here? |
13450 | How had she done it, this mysterious foreigner who could handle the English language even better than English people? |
13450 | I do n''t suppose I could tempt either of you two hot- house plants to come with me, could I?" |
13450 | I suppose we could n''t get to all the famous cherry blossom places in one afternoon?" |
13450 | Is n''t that delightful, Captain Brown?" |
13450 | Is she unhappy? |
13450 | Is there anything we can do for you?" |
13450 | It is true that Onoye was on the pay roll of the household servants, but then, did not her mother do work for two when Onoye was not actively engaged? |
13450 | Ito, Nancy?" |
13450 | Ito?" |
13450 | Ito?" |
13450 | Ito?" |
13450 | Ito?" |
13450 | Ito?" |
13450 | Must I continue to smile and bob and bow forever? |
13450 | No indigestion or pains at the neck or burning at the pit of the stomach?" |
13450 | Oh, heavens, why did we count those old broken statues?" |
13450 | Only Yoritomo''s face remained impassive, but who could tell what angry thoughts were hidden behind that mask- like face? |
13450 | Perhaps you would like to explore the garden if you have had enough honorable refreshment?" |
13450 | Promise?" |
13450 | See?" |
13450 | She began to sing softly to herself Elinor''s favorite song:"''Know''st thou the land of the citron bloom?''" |
13450 | She was thrown to the floor; a shot; a cry-- was it her own or another person''s voice? |
13450 | That skirt I caught-- that-- that something-- where is it?" |
13450 | Then Nicholas cleared his throat and began in an embarrassed and hesitating way:"Miss Billie, can you keep a secret?" |
13450 | Then she remarked:"Mr. Ito, is your aunt married?" |
13450 | Then you do know something?" |
13450 | There had been no chairs in the way before,--was it an hour ago or only a minute? |
13450 | They spread their ideas and customs-- they get a foot- hold-- then-- all of a sudden, what is it? |
13450 | Was I right in my method of dismissing your suitor, Miss Nancy?" |
13450 | Was it an English cry for help? |
13450 | Was it possible that time had slipped by so fast? |
13450 | Was she not bound by a secret tie to this fascinating person because of their chance meeting in the garden in the rain? |
13450 | Were they all going to be cut to pieces or was only the"Comet"to be sacrificed in revenge for the accident? |
13450 | Were you able to find out?" |
13450 | What am I to do with it? |
13450 | What am I to do? |
13450 | What could it mean? |
13450 | What country had given her those strangely incongruous locks? |
13450 | What is the matter? |
13450 | When are you going to take us to the mountains? |
13450 | Where is your daughter?" |
13450 | Where is your raincoat? |
13450 | Where was Nancy? |
13450 | While this little colloquy was going on, Yoritomo was whispering into Nancy''s ear:"You think they are pretty? |
13450 | Who could expect an assassin to wait and be caught? |
13450 | Who knows? |
13450 | Who wants to see it?" |
13450 | Why had she been so angry? |
13450 | Why had she ever written it at all? |
13450 | Why had she not burned it in a charcoal brazier? |
13450 | Why had she not torn it into smaller bits? |
13450 | Why should Nancy Brown have unexpectedly grown up like this and become so independent and secretive? |
13450 | Why should her father need a pistol? |
13450 | Why should she write letters that way? |
13450 | Why was she so frightened? |
13450 | Why was she so panic- stricken? |
13450 | Why-- why--? |
13450 | Will gracious lady make eyes to look?" |
13450 | Will you call my''riksha now, Mr. Campbell? |
13450 | Will you come?" |
13450 | Would Elinor Butler''s father and mother consent to her taking this long journey? |
13450 | Would Mrs. Price be willing to part with Mary for many, many months while that young person journeyed to the other side of the world? |
13450 | Would it not be a good precaution to go to the library and get her father''s pistol? |
13450 | Would it, now, honor bright?" |
13450 | Would she?" |
13450 | You do n''t think she could be a bit daffy, do you?" |
13450 | You wo n''t tell your Mr. Campbell that I trespassed on his garden, will you? |
13450 | asked Billie proudly,"and is n''t Onoye clever to have carried out the scheme so perfectly?" |
13450 | but had changed her mind, when she asked instead:"Is Nikko a town?" |
2385 | A GIMLET? |
2385 | ALL? |
2385 | And how many did you catch, pray? |
2385 | And suppose it should work you out of any carriage at all? |
2385 | And whose proverb is it, my Lady Superior? |
2385 | Are YOU going to wear them boots up the mountain? |
2385 | Are these fishes for sale? |
2385 | Asleep, I fancy? |
2385 | Bite? |
2385 | Bite? |
2385 | Bite? |
2385 | Bite? |
2385 | But could n''t you, somehow, glue on a pair of soles? 2385 But suppose I am burned up in my adventure?" |
2385 | Did n''t you tell the clerk you would not take his carriage? |
2385 | Did n''t you tell the other man you would take his? |
2385 | Did you catch any? |
2385 | Do you mean,I asked,"that the name of those flowers is wax- flowers?" |
2385 | Do you speak by the book, Omphale? |
2385 | Do you suppose he keeps any kind of boots? 2385 Do you wish me to give you a bit of advice?" |
2385 | Does my spoon taste as badly as yours? |
2385 | Duckings? 2385 Ever notice the difference between Vermont and New Hampshire sheep?" |
2385 | Fishes? |
2385 | Frenchmen I know, and Indians I know, but who are ye? |
2385 | Got''em here? |
2385 | Halicarnassus, one step further except over my lifeless body you do not go, until you tell me whether those are or are not wax- flowers? |
2385 | Have you cameo- pins? |
2385 | Have you ox- bows? |
2385 | Have you seen a brown veil lying about anywhere? |
2385 | Have you young apple trees? |
2385 | Here is a remarkably plump seed, my dear, wo n''t you have it? |
2385 | How can you turn a horse in this knitting- needle of a lane? |
2385 | How did you do it? |
2385 | How do they taste? |
2385 | How long will it be profitable to remain here? |
2385 | How many fishes? |
2385 | How many soldiers in a regiment are allowed to have wives? |
2385 | Indeed I can, ca n''t I, Halicarnassus? |
2385 | My spoon? |
2385 | No; wo n''t you? |
2385 | Now, then? |
2385 | Now, will you mend my shoes? |
2385 | O, do you? |
2385 | Oh that''s better still; would you make me a pair? |
2385 | Shall I? 2385 Trade off your ducks against my sheep, and call it even?" |
2385 | WE should n''t, should WE? 2385 Well,"I said, after he had swallowed a wassail- bowl of coffee, and showed no disposition to go on,"what did you do then?" |
2385 | Well? |
2385 | What DID you do? |
2385 | What about the fruit- knife? |
2385 | What do you mean? |
2385 | What do you suppose it meant? |
2385 | What do you suppose they did that for? |
2385 | What do you suppose this pump was put here for? |
2385 | What is the good of bathing, if you can not spoil anything? |
2385 | What is the news? |
2385 | What patois? |
2385 | When will he be back, if you please? |
2385 | When will your tools come? |
2385 | Where do you walk? |
2385 | Where have you been? |
2385 | Where? |
2385 | Which is the best? |
2385 | Who said it was? |
2385 | Why not? 2385 Why not?" |
2385 | Why should you kill them? |
2385 | Why? |
2385 | Why? |
2385 | Wo n''t you tell? |
2385 | Yes, but--"Other a''n''t so bad, I suppose? |
2385 | You can, can you? |
2385 | You sent for me? |
2385 | A fiddle, is it? |
2385 | A gentle, fragile, soft- eyed woman, what could such a delicate flower do against the"thunder- storm of battle"? |
2385 | A good bird? |
2385 | A man called from a neighboring turnip- field,"Arter Jake?" |
2385 | A man? |
2385 | ARE there snakes? |
2385 | And do Nancie, Harriette, and Herr Driesbach like it any less? |
2385 | And how could I take proper care of so many? |
2385 | And how could they all bathe? |
2385 | And if you can not get your good things in the lump, are you going to refuse them altogether? |
2385 | And is the discussion of this thing a violation of the rites of hospitality? |
2385 | And shall one detect the false or recognize the true by the minute- hand? |
2385 | And what daring of man is this to scorn his smiling valleys and adventure up into these realms of storm? |
2385 | And what, let me ask just here, is the meaning of the small waists that girls are cramming their lives into? |
2385 | Another voice, as audible, asks,"Which''ll you bet on?" |
2385 | Are nuns expected to be any more dead to the world than priests? |
2385 | Are the people in the moon staring through an eclipse of the Sun? |
2385 | Are there clouded lives that will find a little sunshine; pent- up souls that will catch a breath of blooms in my rambling record? |
2385 | Are there lips that will relax their tightness; eyes that will lose for a moment the shadow of remembered pain? |
2385 | Are you toying with the tangles of her hair in the bright sea- foam? |
2385 | Are you wooing her with honeyed words on the bloody soil of Virginia? |
2385 | Because their narrowness can not take in the contingencies that threaten peace, are they blessed above all others? |
2385 | But could anything be more characteristic of a certain phase of the manners of our great and glorious country? |
2385 | But how many such women do you suppose there are in your village? |
2385 | But if it is so disheartening to me, who am only a passive listener, what must be the agonies of the dramatis personae? |
2385 | But is it really any worse? |
2385 | But since no one accused or even suspected you, why could you not have been less aggressive and more sympathetic in your assertions? |
2385 | But what do you know of what was in Beethoven''s soul? |
2385 | But what have you done with these women? |
2385 | But what is the good of saying all this, if a woman can not help herself? |
2385 | But what is well? |
2385 | But why set down a weight at one end of the lever because there is a power at the other? |
2385 | But you have no sooner turned a corner than-- where are they? |
2385 | Ca n''t you see with your own eyes?" |
2385 | Can I tell for the eyes that made"a sunshine in the shady place"? |
2385 | Can it be anything but painful to see young girls exhibiting the hardihood of the"professional"without the extenuating necessity? |
2385 | Can no hand lead her gently another way? |
2385 | Can no voice warn her of the black shadow that lies in ambuscade? |
2385 | Chancel and window, altar, and arches and aisles and treasures,--is there anything else? |
2385 | Children are naturally healthy and simple; why should they be spoiled? |
2385 | Could he tell me where I might find one? |
2385 | Could n''t you borrow a gimlet or something from the neighbors?" |
2385 | Could n''t you borrow an awl?" |
2385 | Did I say that it was amusing? |
2385 | Did any one ever read them before? |
2385 | Did he, a second Ulysses, tie up all opposing winds in that cambric pocket- handkerchief? |
2385 | Did n''t I catch eight cod- fishes in the Atlantic Ocean, last summer? |
2385 | Did we spring up startled pygmies, or girded giants? |
2385 | Did you never see it? |
2385 | Do I LOOK like a rough- hewn, unseasoned backwoodsman? |
2385 | Do I not know too well their strength, and their virtue which is their strength? |
2385 | Do boys take so naturally to the amenities of life, that they can safely dispense with the conditions of amenity? |
2385 | Do n''t you know Kossuth says,''Nothing is difficult to him who wills''?" |
2385 | Do n''t you think they will do?" |
2385 | Do not these wise men know that the thinkers and doers of the earth, in overwhelming majority, have been creed men? |
2385 | Do you know of any shoemakers anywhere about?" |
2385 | Do you not believe my story? |
2385 | Do you remember a little girl who, a few years ago, became famous for her wonderful performance on the violin? |
2385 | Do you take shelter from the fervid noon under the cypresses of Monte Mario? |
2385 | Do you think snakes could bite through them?" |
2385 | Does he look at his little feet and hands with a sigh for the joys that once loitered there but are now forever gone? |
2385 | Does he not feel that it trenches somewhat on his dignity? |
2385 | Does he not rather feel a little ashamed, when you remind him of those days? |
2385 | Does not the same narrowness cut them off from the bright certainty that underlies all doubts and fears? |
2385 | Does she fear to breast our bristling bayonets? |
2385 | Does the College belong to a Senior Class, or to the State? |
2385 | English gold, English steel, English pluck, stand today as always; but English integrity, English staunchness, English love, where are they? |
2385 | For how long? |
2385 | From what dungeons of gloom emerging shall they renew their elemental strife? |
2385 | From what? |
2385 | Girls, I find a great deal of fault with you, do I not? |
2385 | Got a job?" |
2385 | Had society charms for her, and in the social circle and the festive throng were her chief delights? |
2385 | Harvard is beloved of her sons: would she be any less beloved if she were also beautiful to outside barbarians? |
2385 | Has he not rather made a great gain? |
2385 | Has he suffered a loss? |
2385 | Has it any right to privacy? |
2385 | Has she drunk Nepenthe in the orange- groves? |
2385 | Has she lost her way among the narrow, interminable defiles of your crooked old city streets? |
2385 | Have I the air of never having read a newspaper? |
2385 | Have the many donations been given, and the appropriations been made, for the pleasure or even profit of any one class, or for the whole Commonwealth? |
2385 | Have the students self- poise enough to refrain from these festive expenses without suffering mortification? |
2385 | Have they virtue enough to refrain from them with the certainty of incurring such suffering? |
2385 | Have you fallen in love with her-- on the Potomac, O soldiers? |
2385 | He tints it with gay lines of green and pink and rose, and puts it in the confectioner''s glass windows, where you buy-- what? |
2385 | Hills on hills and Alps on Alps arise, and who shall mount the ultimate peak till all the world shall say,"Here reigns the Excellence"? |
2385 | How can I compare notes with him as to the sunshine and the trees and the curtain and views of life? |
2385 | How can I respond to his enthusiasms? |
2385 | How can his feeble eye detect the quiver of a world? |
2385 | How can his slender strength weigh the mountains in scales, and the bills in a balance? |
2385 | How can you, Papa and Messrs. Cardinals, be expected to understand what is good for a girl? |
2385 | How dare a man stand up solemnly before God and his fellows with a lie in his right hand? |
2385 | How dare men so presume on womanly sufferance? |
2385 | How did I go to my concert? |
2385 | How did his toilette stand the ascent? |
2385 | How many are there?" |
2385 | How will she escape the sunken rocks, the treacherous quicksands, the ravening whirlpools, the black and dark night? |
2385 | I am bewildered, and I say, helplessly,"What shall I admire and be a la mode?" |
2385 | I can supply seed and water and conch- shells, but what do I know of finchy loves and hopes? |
2385 | I do n''t mean, would have committed such discourtesy to a woman? |
2385 | I had given him a new and shining cage, a green curtain, a sunny window; but of what avail are these to a desolate heart? |
2385 | I have a veil, a beautiful-- HAVE, did I say? |
2385 | I look at her sometimes, when we have been sitting together a while, and say, with steadfast gaze,"Cat- soul, what are you? |
2385 | I look out upon the gray degraded fields left naked of the snow, and inwardly ask, Can these dry bones live again? |
2385 | I reciprocated his frankness with an engaging smile, and asked, in a confidential tone,"Do you suppose he would mend a shoe for me?" |
2385 | I was not thinking of the cent, but I had promised myself a feast; and what is a feast, susceptible of enumeration? |
2385 | I wonder how long before she will reappear? |
2385 | I wonder when circus- people sleep, or do they not sleep at all, but keep up a perpetual ground and lofty tumbling? |
2385 | If I had said,"Halicarnassus, will you fetch my trunk down?" |
2385 | If I had wanted breakfast- caps, should n''t I have asked for breakfast- caps? |
2385 | If a cigar would enfoul the purity of a woman, does it not of a man? |
2385 | If he is rich, they say, Why does he not make a career? |
2385 | If the latter, shall we not lay aside every weight, and this besetting sin of despondency, and run with patience the race set before us? |
2385 | If the woman''s head must be shorn and shaven, why not the man''s? |
2385 | If they are poor, their neighbors say, Why does he not learn a trade? |
2385 | In what secret place, in what dungeon of darkness and despair, in what chains of torpidity and oblivion, have you hidden away their souls? |
2385 | In? |
2385 | Instead of this pleasant conjugal chit- chat, what has he? |
2385 | Is a subject that is brought before Congress improper to be brought before the public in a magazine? |
2385 | Is it Love that watches at the masthead? |
2385 | Is it Wisdom that stands at the helm? |
2385 | Is it a strictly private affair? |
2385 | Is it because we are in high latitudes that the river and the country look so high? |
2385 | Is it begun? |
2385 | Is it begun? |
2385 | Is it begun? |
2385 | Is it indeed so? |
2385 | Is it less extravagant for a man to tickle his nose, than for a woman to tickle her palate? |
2385 | Is it not fitter that associations should adorn, than that they should conceal? |
2385 | Is it the rage of Tasso''s madness that burns in your uplifted eyes? |
2385 | Is not the grandeur of the sacrifice its offset? |
2385 | Is she chasing golden apples under the magnolias? |
2385 | Is she crouching down Caribbean shores, terror- stricken and pallid? |
2385 | Is she floating on a lotus- leaf in Florida lagoons? |
2385 | Is she stifled by the smoke of powder? |
2385 | Is she tranced by your glittering sword- shine in ransomed Tennessee? |
2385 | Is that man successful who trades on his country''s necessities? |
2385 | Is that private? |
2385 | Is the sculpture thus significant? |
2385 | Is the world grown so old and stricken in years, that, like King David, it gets no heat? |
2385 | Is there a patent innocence of eye- teeth in my demeanor? |
2385 | Is there no help? |
2385 | Is this manhood? |
2385 | Is this manliness? |
2385 | Is this success? |
2385 | Is this the advantage which the nineteenth century claims over its predecessors? |
2385 | Is this the best production which we have a right to expect? |
2385 | Is this the flower of all the ages,--earth''s last, best gift to heaven? |
2385 | Is this the race that our institutions engender? |
2385 | Is this the result which Christianity and civilization combine to offer? |
2385 | Is this? |
2385 | Is this?" |
2385 | It is true, that all this may be for their good, but what of that? |
2385 | Knowing you, and from you, all, do I not know what girls can be? |
2385 | Leaving the pigs and papooses, we will go to-- which of the nunneries? |
2385 | Little old croaker, what are you Yang- ing for? |
2385 | Low as I sank with the rest, though, I do believe I held out the longest: but what can one frail pebble do against a river? |
2385 | May I not say that I consider feasting a possible danger, and the dancing a certain evil, and assign my reasons for these opinions? |
2385 | Men and women of America, will you fail? |
2385 | Mothers, would you keep your sons? |
2385 | Music is one of the eternities: why should not its accessories be? |
2385 | My cue is to turn into the Irishman''s echo, which always returned for his"How d''ye do?" |
2385 | No voice, Madame Morlot? |
2385 | Now do you mean to tell me that any man would have been guilty of such a thing? |
2385 | Now, then, how shall your theory and practice be harmonized? |
2385 | O happy Walden wood and woodland lake, did you thrill through all your luminous aisles and all your listening shores for the man that wandered there? |
2385 | Of course not; but would a man ever do it to a man? |
2385 | Only that? |
2385 | Or do the Boston people take their breakfast at one o''clock in the morning? |
2385 | Or do they yield to selfishness, and gratify their own vanity, weakness, self- indulgence, and love of pleasure, at whatever cost to their parents? |
2385 | Or is she frightened by the thunders of the cannonade sounding from shore to shore, and wakening the wild echoes? |
2385 | Or is there such a state of public opinion and usage in College, that this custom is equally honored in the breach and in the observance? |
2385 | Poison? |
2385 | Regard? |
2385 | See our brave soldiers returning from the wars-- Heaven''s blessing rest upon them!--grand, but are they not gruff? |
2385 | Shall the cause go by default? |
2385 | Shall we fail? |
2385 | So everything is for the good of grown- up people; but does that make us contented? |
2385 | Sweet summer sky, bending above us soft and saintly, beyond your blue depths is there not Heaven? |
2385 | Talkers are everywhere, but where are the men that say things? |
2385 | Taxes, representation, what things are these to come between two hearts? |
2385 | The Gray? |
2385 | The baggage- master, in anguish of soul, trots out his subordinates, one after another,--"Is this the man that wheeled the trunk away? |
2385 | The present happiness is clouded for them by no shadowy possibility; but for this small indemnity shall we offset the glory of our manly years? |
2385 | The rapids are bad for traffic, but charming for travellers; and what is a little revenue more or less, to a sensation? |
2385 | Then I should like to know why they must make such frights of themselves, while priests go about like Christians? |
2385 | They will have to plunge into the world full soon enough; why should the world be plunged into them? |
2385 | This is a new car, do n''t you see? |
2385 | To be sure, I suppose the cat might be educationally mauled into letting him alone; but why should I beat the beast for simply acting after her kind? |
2385 | To be sure, he had not promised to mend them; but I had faith in him, and how did it turn out? |
2385 | To what end? |
2385 | Up among the northern hills, yonder towards the sunset, sits the owner, sorrowful, weeping, wailing"? |
2385 | Was I not veiled with the beautiful hair, and blinded with the lily''s white splendor? |
2385 | Was a carriage procurable? |
2385 | Was it a female bird? |
2385 | Was it a puerile anger, or a manly indignation? |
2385 | Was she devoted to literary pursuits? |
2385 | Was that a childish outburst of excitement, or the glow of an aroused principle? |
2385 | Were these lives failures? |
2385 | What DID she do? |
2385 | What I wish to know is, how did he get along? |
2385 | What are these sleety fogs about? |
2385 | What are they, Halicarnassus? |
2385 | What can atone for a lost childhood? |
2385 | What can be given in recompense for the ethereal, spontaneous, sharply defined, new, delicious sensations of a sheltered, untainted, opening life? |
2385 | What can mothers be thinking of to abuse their children so? |
2385 | What can she do about it? |
2385 | What connection was there between my question and his answer? |
2385 | What does this piece say to you? |
2385 | What fear can master that overpowering hope? |
2385 | What field was there for any further inquiry? |
2385 | What good do dinner- party Sundays and travelling Sundays and novel- reading Sundays do? |
2385 | What had I to do with breakfast- caps? |
2385 | What if it did rain? |
2385 | What if the astronomers made a mistake in their calculations, and the almanacs are wrong, and the eclipse shall not come off? |
2385 | What is a pen- scratch to a ravine? |
2385 | What is it that I see, with tearful tenderness and a nameless pain at the heart? |
2385 | What is it? |
2385 | What is the result? |
2385 | What is the use of having a Sabbath- day, a rest- day, if Mondays and Tuesdays are to be making continual raids upon it? |
2385 | What kind of a Faithful Forever is this? |
2385 | What new presence quivered in every listening harebell and every fearful windflower? |
2385 | What of it? |
2385 | What remains of my journey, for me, for you? |
2385 | What satisfaction is there in proving that she is far below where she ought to be, if inexorable circumstance prevent her from climbing higher? |
2385 | What shall avenge them for their spretae injuria formae? |
2385 | What shall be the sign of their awaking to darken the earth with their missiles and deafen the skies with their thunder? |
2385 | What sympathy have I to offer in his joyous or sorrowful moods? |
2385 | What was to be done? |
2385 | What were they? |
2385 | When he passed from his toes to his toys, did he do it mournfully? |
2385 | When shall greatness of soul stand forth, if not in evil times? |
2385 | Whence come you? |
2385 | Where are the Trollopes? |
2385 | Where are the electric people who thrill a whole circle with sudden vitality? |
2385 | Where are the flinty people whose contact strikes fire? |
2385 | Where are the people that can be listened to and quoted? |
2385 | Where are the seers, the prophets, the Magi, who shall unfold for us the secrets of the sky and the seas, and the mystery of human hearts? |
2385 | Where are we? |
2385 | Where are you? |
2385 | Where is Basil Hall? |
2385 | Where is Dickens? |
2385 | Where is the June? |
2385 | Where is the pertinence of that, if you do not wish to go? |
2385 | Where is there a city, or a town, or a village, in which are no bickerings, no jealousies, no angers, no petty or swollen spites? |
2385 | Where was I? |
2385 | Which is worse? |
2385 | Which now is the higher art, the sculptor''s or the mantua- maker''s? |
2385 | Whither go you?" |
2385 | Who caught them? |
2385 | Who does not know that the private history of families with the ordinary allowance of brains is a record of recurring internecine warfare? |
2385 | Who does not know that the soul may starve in splendor? |
2385 | Who ever heard of the mother of a young and increasing family living in an atmosphere of peace, not to say pleasure, above conflicts and storms? |
2385 | Who faithfully renders, who even thoroughly knows his idea? |
2385 | Who grasps his conception? |
2385 | Who shall lack faith in man''s redemption, when every year the earth is redeemed by unseen hands, and death is lost in resurrection? |
2385 | Why are the women to be set up as targets, while the men may pass unnoticed and unknown? |
2385 | Why do I linger among the mountains? |
2385 | Why is it less impure for a man to saturate his hair, his breath and clothing, with vile, stale odors, than for a woman? |
2385 | Why is it more noble for a man to be the slave of an appetite or a habit, than for a woman? |
2385 | Why loiters, where lingers, the beautiful, calm- breathing June? |
2385 | Why not wait until, in the natural course of things, lever comes to an obstacle, and then let power bear down with all its might to remove it? |
2385 | Why not? |
2385 | Why should a discord disturb the eye, when only concords delight the ear? |
2385 | Why, I pray to know, as the first inquiry suggested by Class- Day, why is it that a boys''school should be placed beyond the pale of civilization? |
2385 | Why? |
2385 | Why? |
2385 | Will any live over again a pleasant past and look more cheerily into a lowering future for these wayward words of mine? |
2385 | Will our vigilance to detect treachery and our perseverance to punish it hold out? |
2385 | Will you fail the world in this fateful hour by your faint- heartedness? |
2385 | Will you fail yourself; and put the knife to your own throat? |
2385 | Will you meet queenly Marguerite with myrtle wreath and myrtle fragrance, as she wanders through the chestnut vales? |
2385 | Will you sleep tonight between the colonnades under the golden moon of Napoli? |
2385 | Wives, would you hold back your husbands? |
2385 | Would dry wood be able to hold its own against a raging fire for half an hour? |
2385 | Would it be strange? |
2385 | Would it not be stranger if it were not so? |
2385 | Would you loiter to your inheritance? |
2385 | Yet, if it is true, how account for the tight- lacing among women who are in a position to be just as intelligent as the doctor and the sculptor are? |
2385 | Yet, on the other hand, what does he not gain? |
2385 | You do n''t go to a show; but if the church and the people and the minister are all a show, what can you do about it? |
2385 | You object to this? |
2385 | You see I have worn mine out, and what am I to do?" |
2385 | and if he does do it, how dare a poet or a novelist step up and glorify him in it? |
2385 | and pray when is this famous affair to come off?" |
2385 | and what did I want of it? |
2385 | and would not the other one be better? |
2385 | eh?" |
2385 | ejaculates Halicarnassus, with the voice of a giant;"how many fishes have you caught?" |
2385 | for what? |
2385 | have you seen them,--a princely pair, sore weary in your mountain- land, but regal still, through all their travel- stain? |
2385 | he would have asked me what trunk? |
2385 | how many?" |
2385 | is that all?" |
2385 | or did Auster and Eurus and Notus and Africus vex his fastidious soul? |
2385 | or, Why does he not stick to his trade? |
2385 | to look on with friendly interest, without cynicism or concealed malice, at the preparations in which they do not join? |
2385 | to those fierce wild men, what is love, or loveliness? |
2385 | was it not the glorious moment of that dishonored life? |
2385 | yawning;"who does?" |
43997 | ''Against his will?'' 43997 ''An ayah?'' |
43997 | ''And do you know this, Sahib?'' 43997 ''And her hair?'' |
43997 | ''And this? 43997 ''And this?'' |
43997 | ''And this?'' 43997 ''Any relation of yours?'' |
43997 | ''But are you not satisfied with my word? 43997 ''But is the Sahib certain that this boy is the child of certain parents?'' |
43997 | ''But suppose that I could prove to you that he is the child of a sergeant of the Queen''s 13th Regiment of Foot, and of his wife? 43997 ''Did Usuf say where he got him from?'' |
43997 | ''Did you know that little child, sir?'' 43997 ''Do you believe this boy to be of European birth?'' |
43997 | ''Do you think you know who were his parents?'' 43997 ''From whom did you buy him?'' |
43997 | ''His name?'' 43997 ''How can I be quiet?'' |
43997 | ''How so?'' 43997 ''I have answered all the Sahib''s questions; will the Sahib answer a few of mine?'' |
43997 | ''If you saw her likeness, in miniature, do you think you could recognise it?'' 43997 ''Is she living?'' |
43997 | ''Of pure blood?'' 43997 ''Of what value?'' |
43997 | ''On suspicion that he is born of European parents of distinction?'' 43997 ''The boy was cheap, then?'' |
43997 | ''The colour of her eyes?'' 43997 ''Then will the Sahib take him?'' |
43997 | ''Was she his mother?'' 43997 ''Were they people of a distinguished family?'' |
43997 | ''What did you give for him?'' 43997 ''What do you ask?'' |
43997 | ''What kind of person was she? 43997 ''What more do you want?'' |
43997 | ''What woman?'' 43997 ''When did she die?'' |
43997 | ''When?'' 43997 ''Where?'' |
43997 | ''Where?'' 43997 ''Yes; where are the kittens?'' |
43997 | ''You bought him?'' 43997 ''You would?'' |
43997 | ''Your slave?'' 43997 ''Your son?'' |
43997 | A what? |
43997 | About three or four years ago you stayed for several days with a friend in a tent near Deobund? 43997 Ah, but that was the emanation of----""What the deuce is that?" |
43997 | All in India? |
43997 | Am I a lord? 43997 And another here-- on your hip-- and another here, on your ribs?" |
43997 | And be absent from my husband, my Lord? 43997 And do they have any applications?" |
43997 | And do you know the judge of Jampore? |
43997 | And drunk? |
43997 | And had he money? |
43997 | And have you given him any champagne? |
43997 | And he did so, I hope? |
43997 | And how do you usually settle these disputes? |
43997 | And how long do they stay? |
43997 | And how was he received? |
43997 | And of what class of people are your converts? |
43997 | And tax the British government with a breach of faith? |
43997 | And what became of the minar? |
43997 | And what did the Horse Guards say in reply to your statements? |
43997 | And what do you suppose will be the upshot? |
43997 | And what will be the result, do you suppose? |
43997 | And who are_ you_? |
43997 | And who was Pertab Singh? |
43997 | And will my losses be made good? |
43997 | And you heard the evidence? |
43997 | And you will not play me false? |
43997 | And your mother? 43997 And your mother?" |
43997 | Are you going to Agra? |
43997 | Bij- what? |
43997 | But all zemindarees( lands) are not so profitable in Bengal? |
43997 | But can you lock up any one''s eyes in the way that you locked up mine? |
43997 | But could you not have given the horses to some friend-- a Christian or a Mussulman? |
43997 | But did not your parents ever tell you? |
43997 | But had we better not take the opinion of the Court on the subject? |
43997 | But have you no idea? 43997 But he must be labouring under some delusion with respect to being appointed to the command- in- chief of an Indian presidency?" |
43997 | But how can it be helped? |
43997 | But how comes it in ruins? |
43997 | But how is that? |
43997 | But is it not forbidden in the Shasters? |
43997 | But look here, my dear fellow,said one of the prisoners to that functionary, who was the prosecutor on the occasion;"what''s the use of denying it? |
43997 | But surely there is some one to watch the yard? |
43997 | But the crime? |
43997 | But this place must be infested with snakes? |
43997 | But what do you think? 43997 But what is that Greek epigram from the Anthology of Bland and Merivale? |
43997 | But who are these men-- these zemindars with whom you are required to keep an implicit faith? 43997 But why are you preparing covers for two, when I am dining alone?" |
43997 | But why was he worth more alive than dead? |
43997 | But would you be good enough to tell me where I am? |
43997 | Ca n''t you guess? |
43997 | Cashiered him? |
43997 | Charley, why did you come to me in this state, with your neck unwashed? |
43997 | Could you not ask him to allow my child to visit you? 43997 Could you not remain up here with them through the winter?" |
43997 | Did he appeal to the Horse Guards? |
43997 | Do n''t you know what that is? |
43997 | Do you believe that? 43997 Do you expect to see him soon?" |
43997 | Do you know any other native who has the same power that you possess? |
43997 | Do you know him? |
43997 | Do you know the assistant- magistrate of Agra? |
43997 | Do you not fear the lightning and the hail? |
43997 | Do you not know that they believe nothing can hurt their pure souls after death; and hence their comparative recklessness in this world? 43997 Do you not remember the spot?" |
43997 | Do you think,the doctor inquired,"that your mother would see me, if I went down to her home?" |
43997 | Does he know anything of his mother? |
43997 | Does this often happen? |
43997 | For what? |
43997 | Going to be married, I suppose? |
43997 | Had she great power over Runjeet Singh? |
43997 | Have you a nightmare in this broad daylight? |
43997 | Have you another mark like that on your right arm-- just here? |
43997 | Have you any idea of the hour? |
43997 | Have you ever witnessed a military court martial? |
43997 | Have you nothing to give her? |
43997 | He was a great man? |
43997 | How did you come by that mark? |
43997 | How do you mean funny? |
43997 | How do you mean? |
43997 | How many do you suppose? |
43997 | How so? |
43997 | How so? |
43997 | How so? |
43997 | How so? |
43997 | How the deuce is that? |
43997 | How the horrors? |
43997 | How was this? |
43997 | How? 43997 How?" |
43997 | I always thought that the cow was a sacred animal with Hindoos? |
43997 | I say, Blade,said the Senior Captain,"what did you mean by wishing me to speak up? |
43997 | I suppose that in those cases you give the prisoner the benefit of the doubt? |
43997 | I trembled whenever it came near; but now, what does it signify? 43997 In his palkee?" |
43997 | In that coffin? |
43997 | Indeed? 43997 Is everything ready?" |
43997 | Is he a cousin of yours? |
43997 | Is he a great favourite? |
43997 | Is he not very like his father? |
43997 | Is he old? |
43997 | Is it not very odd,said I, on my return to the buggy,"that most of the diabolical crimes committed in this country are committed by Brahmins?" |
43997 | Is it possible? |
43997 | Is it possible? |
43997 | Is not my husband a Lieutenant- Colonel and a C.B.? 43997 Is that a reason?" |
43997 | Is the child dead? |
43997 | Is there anything else you require? |
43997 | Mais, monsieur,said the Frenchman to me,"who, in wonder''s name, are all these Damzè gentlemen? |
43997 | Make my most respectful salaam to your intended, will you? |
43997 | Maun Singh Sipahee is very ill."What ails him? |
43997 | May I accompany you? |
43997 | May I make a note of this? |
43997 | Mean, my dear fellow? 43997 No more?" |
43997 | O yes-- why not? 43997 O, had you? |
43997 | Or a small slab with an iron railing round it? |
43997 | Perhaps,said Mr. West,"you had taken more wine than usual?" |
43997 | Questions? 43997 Rather a strange fancy of yours, to live upon such amicable terms with the great enemy of the human race?" |
43997 | Safe? 43997 Sahib, when you become Governor- General, you will be a friend to the poor?" |
43997 | She is a very handsome woman? |
43997 | Sixty what? |
43997 | Surely you are jesting? |
43997 | Surely,said I,"you would preserve rather than deface or destroy these magnificent works of art-- these wonders of the world?" |
43997 | That you may drink, little finger, when you are dry? |
43997 | The Affghan, having examined the crest, again smiled, and said:--''What else?'' |
43997 | The Major did this, and handed it to the Affghan, who looked at the writing, smiled, and said:''What else? |
43997 | The Sahib has eaten well? |
43997 | The Sahib will smoke hookah? |
43997 | The Sahib''s father is living? |
43997 | The tea? |
43997 | Then this is not the station- house? |
43997 | Then who keeps the tomb in repair? |
43997 | Then you know better than I do? |
43997 | Then, how far am I from Meerut? |
43997 | There is nothing about drunkenness in the charges,said the President;"where are the charges?" |
43997 | To whom are you alluding? |
43997 | To- morrow, at three P.M."And how do you stand affected for liquors and weeds? 43997 Two Sahibs?" |
43997 | Was she a beautiful woman? |
43997 | Was that good? |
43997 | Well, Mrs. Apsley, whither art thou going? 43997 Well, did he appeal to the Directors? |
43997 | Well, in that case, you would have to do away with the Mahommedan festivals? |
43997 | Well, is not that enough to warrant your being transported for life, or hanged? 43997 Well, old man, what is the matter?" |
43997 | Well, sir,said the Deputy- Judge- Advocate- General to the President, when he had finished his writing,"what shall we do? |
43997 | Well, what will you sell your title for? |
43997 | Well, what you offer? |
43997 | Well-- and then? |
43997 | Well? |
43997 | Well? |
43997 | Were your victims men or women? |
43997 | What are you making such a noise about, Blade? |
43997 | What became of this native editor? |
43997 | What do you mean by locking up his eyes? |
43997 | What does that signify? 43997 What have you got?" |
43997 | What is it, Captain Wall? |
43997 | What is the matter, Baron? |
43997 | What is the matter, governor? |
43997 | What is the matter? |
43997 | What is the matter? |
43997 | What is the mem''s name? |
43997 | What is this? |
43997 | What is_ your_ name? |
43997 | What on earth became of that black earl? |
43997 | What operation? |
43997 | What remark? |
43997 | What think you of that? |
43997 | What time? |
43997 | What was it? |
43997 | What would it cost to punkah the whole regiment during the hot season? |
43997 | What would you say? 43997 What''s taking you down the country?" |
43997 | What? 43997 What?" |
43997 | When did he die? |
43997 | When do you expect to reach Cawnpore? |
43997 | When do you intend to go? |
43997 | Where did he die? |
43997 | Where did it come from originally? |
43997 | Where is he? |
43997 | Where is he? |
43997 | Where is the boy? |
43997 | Where is your father? |
43997 | Where, Black and Blue? |
43997 | Where? |
43997 | Who are they? |
43997 | Who could have been the chairman of the Court of Directors? |
43997 | Who is he? 43997 Who on earth can they be?" |
43997 | Who pays you? |
43997 | Who was she? |
43997 | Who was the man? |
43997 | Whom have you got inside? |
43997 | Whose child is that? |
43997 | Whose tombs are those? |
43997 | Why are they not lined with cast iron or zinc? |
43997 | Why do_ you_ not go home? |
43997 | Why is that? |
43997 | Why not make it expedient to do away with the perpetual settlement of Lord Cornwallis, and resettle the whole of Bengal? 43997 Why so?" |
43997 | Why so? |
43997 | Why, Thummy, Thummy? 43997 Will he be as clever?" |
43997 | Will you admit that you were drunk? |
43997 | Wo n''t you go and see the Sahib? |
43997 | Would the treasure be safe with them? |
43997 | Yes,replied the old boy, very good- humouredly,"what do you want?" |
43997 | Yes; what''s the use of wasting time? |
43997 | Yes; why not? 43997 You addressed the Throne, or Prince Albert?" |
43997 | You desire your palkee? |
43997 | You had a little dog with you, and you lost it at Deobund? |
43997 | You intend, perhaps, to be more severe? |
43997 | You say the Government owes you fifty- seven lacs? |
43997 | You understood the proceedings to- day? |
43997 | You? |
43997 | ''And you are, then, Lieutenant Statterleigh?'' |
43997 | ''At whose expense?'' |
43997 | ''Can you write in the Persian character, Sahib?'' |
43997 | ''Kathleen Mavourneen?'' |
43997 | ''Know it?'' |
43997 | ''Was the Court raving mad? |
43997 | ( What is the matter?) |
43997 | A female voice from within inquired,"Who is there?" |
43997 | A very pretty idea, was it not? |
43997 | About what?" |
43997 | Amongst other questions which his honour put to the boys of the first class was this--"How does the world go round?" |
43997 | And for many days all the gentlemens laughed, and asked of one another,''Who shot the tiger?'' |
43997 | And my lord, who was very much confused-- not being a sportsman-- said,''Have I?'' |
43997 | And suppose some gentleman come-- not likely here, but suppose? |
43997 | And this? |
43997 | And this? |
43997 | And this?'' |
43997 | And what would I take for dinner? |
43997 | And when there is no evidence to weigh, how are you to act?" |
43997 | And where and how do you suppose he was apprehended? |
43997 | And, to- morrow, if your rule were at stake, and dependent on their assistance, think you they would render it? |
43997 | Approaching a very interesting- looking woman, of about two- and- twenty years of age, I said to her,"What do you think of this?" |
43997 | Are pickaxes, shovels, spades, saws, and gunpowder to blast rocks, so expensive that a government can not procure them? |
43997 | Are the figures in the official returns, touching the convictions, to be taken as any criterion of the crime perpetrated in our respective districts?" |
43997 | Are they your friends? |
43997 | Are we the conquerors of the country, or are we not? |
43997 | Because you told him to go to bed?" |
43997 | Brandy, beer, soda- water? |
43997 | But how do you know all this?" |
43997 | But is there a scarcity of labour in India? |
43997 | But tell me, who keeps this grave in order?'' |
43997 | But what is to be done? |
43997 | But what must it be for the men, the privates and their wives and children? |
43997 | But what need the government care for that cry, especially when its act is not only expedient, but would be just withal? |
43997 | But what of that? |
43997 | But where have you come from?" |
43997 | But where is it about being drunk? |
43997 | But who could ever have dreamed that their entry into the city of the Great Moghul would be in company with British soldiers? |
43997 | But who ever did touch the champagne, and who ever did drink any more than two glasses of brandy and water? |
43997 | But why not by native officers?" |
43997 | But why should I hurt him? |
43997 | By JOHN LANG, AUTHOR OF"EX- WIFE,""WILL HE MARRY HER?" |
43997 | Ca n''t you give a guess?" |
43997 | Can the most acute understanding explain, or even comprehend, its own growth; or even the growth and colouring of a mere flower? |
43997 | Did a single zemindar, when, after the battle of Ferozeshah, the empire was shaking in the balance, lift a finger to help the government of India? |
43997 | Did the Governor- General shoot a tiger?" |
43997 | Did you ever see a likeness of Runjeet Singh?" |
43997 | Did you know the child''s mother?'' |
43997 | Did you tender them a copy?" |
43997 | Dinner ready?" |
43997 | Do n''t you see?" |
43997 | Do we not eat swine''s flesh? |
43997 | Do you know your part, Dooneea?" |
43997 | Do you really mean to say that our Madeira is not good-- excellent?" |
43997 | Do you suppose that the Mahommedans, when in power, suffered the Hindoos to block up the streets continually with their processions, as they do now? |
43997 | Do you want anything, old boy? |
43997 | Does not British India contain enough of Europeans to make a market? |
43997 | Glass of beer?" |
43997 | Hanging what? |
43997 | Have these young men, it may be asked, nothing to do? |
43997 | Have they no occupation? |
43997 | Have you ever been out shooting?" |
43997 | Have you got down the word freely?" |
43997 | He demanded, with his last breath-- why the East India Company did not give him his pay, as in Lord Lake''s time, in_ sicca_ rupees? |
43997 | He was selfish; but what native is not? |
43997 | How are they to meet these debts of honour? |
43997 | How can you possibly say at this moment whether, during the next six months, the amount of crime shall be greater or less?" |
43997 | How do you know what happens in the establishment of a wealthy native? |
43997 | How far distant do you suppose we are from that building?" |
43997 | How many years had passed since that horrible sentence had been put into execution? |
43997 | How much? |
43997 | How were we to decide it? |
43997 | How you know that, Sahib?" |
43997 | How you know that, Sahib?" |
43997 | I asked him where this helpless woman had fled to, after her miraculous escape from Benares, in the garb of a man? |
43997 | I dare say, when you saw my name in the papers, as having arrived in India, you little thought that I was not a man of pleasure and excursion?" |
43997 | I said to her, in Hindoostanee,"You are not a native; what do you do here in a native dress?" |
43997 | I took her hand in mine, and said,"Where did you get this?" |
43997 | I was asleep, but awoke, and inquired,"Kia hua?" |
43997 | I went to the window, and observing a great crowd, inquired of one of my servants who was standing in the verandah:--"What is the matter?" |
43997 | If enemies, what for send to buy Black and Blue''s property? |
43997 | If not, how came it that the boy( now a man of two or three and twenty) should be a miserable pedler, living in the Bazaar at Delhi? |
43997 | If so, why do they never come forward to assist you in your difficulties? |
43997 | Is he guilty or not?" |
43997 | Is it always so, I wonder?" |
43997 | Is it possible?" |
43997 | Is it true?" |
43997 | Is not Nature herself a perfect mystery unto the minds of thinking men?" |
43997 | Is not your husband in the Company''s service?" |
43997 | Is that your Madeira, or ours?" |
43997 | Is the bond a genuine document or not?" |
43997 | It was thus that the dialogue was commenced and continued:--"What is the number of inhabitants in this district?" |
43997 | Many have not come in fancy costume, but in their respective uniforms; and where do you see such a variety of uniforms as in an Indian ball- room? |
43997 | Must justice be obstructed? |
43997 | Not Captain Stansfield, who put us under arrest? |
43997 | Of course, you are aware that to do a thing of that kind-- to touch the corpse of an unbeliever-- involves a loss of caste?" |
43997 | On hearing the sentence he exclaimed:''In the name of the devil, is this the reward of renouncing my religion? |
43997 | Perhaps she deserved it,--perhaps she was plotting against his life; perhaps she was innocent: who can say? |
43997 | Pomatum, did you say? |
43997 | Send out a lot of fellows to give assistance, will you?" |
43997 | Shall we adjourn the Court until a copy of yesterday''s proceedings is made, and given to the prisoners?" |
43997 | She lives?" |
43997 | Sherry?" |
43997 | Sir, do you want any violent( violet) powder, or one small patent corkiscrew( corkscrew)? |
43997 | Surely you heard my answer?" |
43997 | The assistant magistrate then called out to him in Hindostanee,"Have you anything to say?" |
43997 | The boy asked her how her husband came to beat her? |
43997 | The cow, or the pig? |
43997 | The little finger replied:"Who told you so, Thummy, Thummy? |
43997 | The old man forthwith began to detail a string of grievances, which the Lieutenant faithfully(?) |
43997 | The reader may ask,"Who was your friend?" |
43997 | The second question was:--"Were the prisoners present on that occasion?" |
43997 | The wine is with you; will you fill, and pass it on?" |
43997 | Then, darting off at a tangent, he asks me if I remember when we were lying off Mount Edgecombe, just before sailing for South America? |
43997 | Then, turning to the old man, he inquired,"Would Lord Clive or Lord Lake have sanctioned your carrying about that beastly trunk on a march at all?" |
43997 | Think you that they entertained the same consideration for the bulls and the monkeys at Benares as the British now entertain? |
43997 | Think you they would furnish men to protect your stations denuded of troops? |
43997 | Think you they would furnish money if your treasury was exhausted? |
43997 | This at length accomplished, he looked at the President and said,"Yes, sir?" |
43997 | This was done; and how shall I describe the awful spectacle then presented? |
43997 | To my question,"Do you know her?" |
43997 | To pay visits?" |
43997 | To which Mrs. Revenue Board replied:--"And you, pray? |
43997 | Turkey? |
43997 | Turn him out of his title and estates-- eh? |
43997 | Was he amusing? |
43997 | Was she handsome?'' |
43997 | Was she there? |
43997 | Was the lady at the rock? |
43997 | Well, the boy began to cry--""Why did he cry? |
43997 | What about the cloak? |
43997 | What do I care for what YOU say? |
43997 | What do you mean?" |
43997 | What have I done to deserve this?'' |
43997 | What is it?" |
43997 | What is the use of whitening a few sepulchres amidst this mass of black ruin?'' |
43997 | What is this which Ford puts into my hand? |
43997 | What place was that we were at?" |
43997 | What song would you like next? |
43997 | What the finance minister wished to ask me was this-- Would I consent to leave my shoes at the door when I entered the Ranee''s apartment? |
43997 | What then? |
43997 | What then? |
43997 | What was the Sahib''s nishan( crest)?'' |
43997 | What was the child to me then? |
43997 | What''s his name?" |
43997 | What''s the matter?" |
43997 | What, sir, I repeat, is the use of throwing away money in building tombs, if they are not kept in repair? |
43997 | Where am I?" |
43997 | Where have we met?" |
43997 | Where shall we go now, for it wants an hour to tiffin time? |
43997 | Where shall we go? |
43997 | Where will you meet with so great a number of distinguished men? |
43997 | Where will you see handsomer women than you frequently meet in a ball- room at Mussoorie or Simlah? |
43997 | While Dooneea was brushing the child''s hair, she said,"_ Toomara mama kahan hai?_--Where is your mother?" |
43997 | Who can explain that terrible symbol which pervades so many of our dreams? |
43997 | Who can fathom the secret inclinations of the human heart? |
43997 | Who can fully comprehend that link which unites the corporeal with the spiritual world? |
43997 | Who can lift the veil of sympathy? |
43997 | Who can say what animal supplies the skin which is used for our chacos and accoutrements? |
43997 | Who can unravel the web of magnetic natures? |
43997 | Who said that? |
43997 | Who told you so?" |
43997 | Who_ are_ all these Damzès?" |
43997 | Why are there so very many people on the mall this evening? |
43997 | Why do n''t you go home and upset your uncle? |
43997 | Why do you talk of Europe? |
43997 | Why hast thou taken that flower which a faithful lover threw upon my last resting- place on earth?'' |
43997 | Why should he not be? |
43997 | Why, Thummy, Thummy--_Why_?" |
43997 | Why, Thummy, Thummy? |
43997 | Why? |
43997 | Will the Sahib favour me with her address?" |
43997 | With motionless eyes and outstretched hand she approached my couch, and in plaintive voice asked me:''Why hast thou robbed the Dead? |
43997 | Would the poorest and most unprincipled officers-- civil and military-- in the whole of India? |
43997 | Would you have any objection to allow the boy to spend a day with me?" |
43997 | Would you like to see the old gentleman, sir? |
43997 | Would you take the boy?'' |
43997 | You do n''t suppose that I was born the son of a judge of the Queen''s Bench for nothing, do you? |
43997 | You know the master of the school?" |
43997 | You see that very tall monkey there, with two smaller ones on either side of him?" |
43997 | You want blacking? |
43997 | You were on your way to these mountains?" |
43997 | You will manage that for me, old boy, wo n''t you?" |
43997 | about the thirty- three and a- half per cent?" |
43997 | and do not English ladies dance( the natives call it''jumping about''), and with men who are not their husbands? |
43997 | are you not ashamed of yourself?" |
43997 | beefsteak? |
43997 | cried the Lieutenant,"how do you feel now?" |
43997 | duck? |
43997 | exclaimed the Governor- General,"what has he to do with it?" |
43997 | fowl? |
43997 | goes for nothing?" |
43997 | good- looking, and accomplished? |
43997 | goose? |
43997 | ham and eggs? |
43997 | have we woke you out of your sleep, old boy?" |
43997 | he exclaimed,''will you then leave me in the hands and at the mercy of these unbelievers? |
43997 | mutton- chop? |
43997 | said one of the Sepoys, saluting his officer very respectfully,"or you may wake the Soubahdar, and_ then_ what will happen?" |
43997 | said the Deputy- Judge- Advocate- General to the witness--"they were not-- not what?" |
43997 | what is this? |
43997 | what was the colour of her hair and eyes? |
43997 | whether she was tall, short, or of the middle height? |
32977 | ''But_ is_ it you, Ben?'' 32977 ''Save anythin''?" |
32977 | A fool also is full of words: a man can not tell what shall be; and what shall be after him who can tell? |
32977 | A good deal of your life on the Mississippi is autobiographical, is n''t it? |
32977 | All right,I said,"I''ve never heard a real American say''I guess''; but what about the balance of your extraordinary tongue? |
32977 | Am I travelling round the world to discover_ these_ people? |
32977 | And did I drop her from the list of my friends? 32977 And did they let him remain left- handed after he had painted that thing?" |
32977 | And have you noticed, wherever we go there''s always some man who knows how to carry my kit? 32977 And he knows all this by night as well as by day?" |
32977 | And how are the stables managed? 32977 And how did the latest persecution affect you?" |
32977 | And how do things go? |
32977 | And is this all you do? |
32977 | And the Irish vote included? |
32977 | And then what do you expect? |
32977 | And then? |
32977 | And what did you think of Indiana when you came through? |
32977 | And what do you make in Udaipur? |
32977 | And what does the fat Briton know or care about Boh Hla- Oo? |
32977 | And what happened? |
32977 | And when did you leave England? |
32977 | And where did you shoot it, Maharaja Sahib? |
32977 | And who should know better than an American? |
32977 | And why did you''list? |
32977 | And you? 32977 And your partner?" |
32977 | And-- ah--_did_ you? |
32977 | Are n''t these things well managed? |
32977 | Are these-- um-- persons here any sort of persons in their own places? |
32977 | Are we going to hold these dismal levees all through the night? |
32977 | Are you describing Japan or America? 32977 Are you going to inflict all that nonsense on them at home?" |
32977 | Are you going to see my faver and the horses? |
32977 | As how? |
32977 | But about the fortifications, General? 32977 But have you a Constitution in India?" |
32977 | But how can the prevalent offence be house- breaking in a place like this? |
32977 | But suppose they engaged in the open? |
32977 | But what man knows his mind? |
32977 | But what will your God say? |
32977 | But who am I that I should strike the corners of such as you name? 32977 But who made it?" |
32977 | But why? 32977 But why? |
32977 | But,I ventured,"is n''t it the theory that any organised expedition ought to be stopped by our fleet before it got here? |
32977 | But,said I,"what is there so awful in a naked Indian-- or two hundred naked Indians for that matter?" |
32977 | Ca n''t you raise one within your own borders? |
32977 | Captain''s name? |
32977 | Cholera? |
32977 | Did it hurt his feelings very much to wear our clothes? 32977 Did the people grow more crops thereby?" |
32977 | Do you believe that, then? |
32977 | Do you ever intend to write an autobiography? |
32977 | Do you expect then that the societies will collapse by proclamation? |
32977 | Do you know, it seems to me you have a very queer sense of proportion? |
32977 | Do you mean to say that you can from this absurd pigeon- loft locate the wards in the night- time? |
32977 | Do you see where that trolly is standing, behind the big P. and O. berth? 32977 Do you think of carrying one?" |
32977 | Do you want any? 32977 Does he go away and start newspapers to prove that?" |
32977 | Does the noise of traffic go on all through the hot weather? |
32977 | Does this always happen? |
32977 | Has he any people here? |
32977 | Has the Sahib never seen a tonga- iron break before? 32977 Have got how?" |
32977 | Have got one piecee soul-- allee same spilit? 32977 Have they come to book passages for home?" |
32977 | Have you got any folks at home? 32977 Have you got reporters anything like our reporters on Indian news papers?" |
32977 | Have you seen any horses hereabouts? |
32977 | Have you seen_ my_ horses? |
32977 | Have you,said he,"seen the Constitution of Japan? |
32977 | He said:''Suppose a man has written a book that will live for ever?'' 32977 Horses? |
32977 | How can you Police have faith in humanity? |
32977 | How do the heavy four- horse coaches take it, Tom? |
32977 | How long does it take to know it then? |
32977 | How long does that take? |
32977 | How many people do you suppose the land supports to the square mile? |
32977 | How many? |
32977 | How much do you think the Government takes in revenue from vegetable gardens of that kind? |
32977 | How much has the head of a ward to know? |
32977 | How much more crops? |
32977 | How much? |
32977 | How would you like to be hot- potted there? |
32977 | I say, Doctor, did you ever know Cora Pearl? |
32977 | I say, Doctor, what are the symptoms of cholera? 32977 I walked in the lonesome even, And who so sad as I, As I saw the young men and maidens Merrily passing by?" |
32977 | If we''ave our own institutions, that ai n''t no reason why people should come''ere and stare at us, his it? |
32977 | Is it_ very_ bad? |
32977 | Is n''t it Théophile Gautier who says that the only differences between country and country lie in the slang and the uniform of the police? |
32977 | Is n''t it good enough? 32977 Is n''t this a sweet place? |
32977 | Is nobody going to do or bring anything? |
32977 | Is she going to roll any more? |
32977 | Is that all? |
32977 | It''s a new world to you; is n''t it? |
32977 | May I sit up here with you, great chief and man with a golden tongue? 32977 Nice sort of place, is n''t it?" |
32977 | Now it''s the what? |
32977 | Now where did you go and what did you see? |
32977 | Now, do you believe? |
32977 | Once and again the priest he prays here-- for those who are dead, you understand? |
32977 | Poor? |
32977 | Robert? |
32977 | Say, Johnny Bull, does n''t all this make you feel lonesome? |
32977 | Shall I mark out the bull- board? |
32977 | Then how the---- can any---- like you---- say what it---- well was? |
32977 | Then you like the State? |
32977 | This evening we shall do the grand cañon of the Yellowstone? |
32977 | Those men? 32977 Till you die?" |
32977 | Together? |
32977 | Trust''em? 32977 Wanchee buy?" |
32977 | Well, and after? |
32977 | Well, what do you expect? |
32977 | Well, what''s the matter? |
32977 | Were things like this,demanded Diana,"in the big world outside, whence I had come?" |
32977 | What are these? |
32977 | What are they sitting on? |
32977 | What are we going to see? |
32977 | What can I do? |
32977 | What did you drink our President''s health for? 32977 What do you think?" |
32977 | What does it matter? |
32977 | What does it matter? |
32977 | What happens then? |
32977 | What happens when these pigsties catch fire? |
32977 | What happens? |
32977 | What have you done? 32977 What in hell are you doing here, then? |
32977 | What is it? |
32977 | What means this eager, anxious throng? |
32977 | What must the heat be in May? |
32977 | What row? 32977 What sort of Queen''s Birthday do you call this?" |
32977 | What sort of mental impression do you carry away? |
32977 | What was your last ship? |
32977 | What will it be in America itself? |
32977 | What would be the good of a look- out if the man could n''t tell where the fire was? |
32977 | What would happen if you threw an engine off the line? |
32977 | What''s going to be done? |
32977 | What''s her name? |
32977 | What''s on? |
32977 | What''s the matter with you? |
32977 | What''s the matter? |
32977 | What''s your last ship? |
32977 | What,said he, scornfully,"are tables and chairs to this Raj? |
32977 | When did she sail? |
32977 | Where are the_ old_ dead? |
32977 | Where are we now? |
32977 | Where did he come from? |
32977 | Where did you pick up your Constitution, then? |
32977 | Where else would you have it? |
32977 | Where have you come from? |
32977 | Who has to make the last cut that breaks a leg through? |
32977 | Who is the best artist in Japan now? |
32977 | Who knew how many gardens, such as the Rang Bilas, were to be found in the Palace? |
32977 | Who knows? 32977 Who knows? |
32977 | Who wants to? 32977 Who''s complaining? |
32977 | Who''s that? |
32977 | Who''s us? |
32977 | Who''s your financial friend with the figures at his fingers''ends? |
32977 | Who''s_ that_? |
32977 | Whose son is that student? |
32977 | Why are n''t you at the Mikado''s garden party? |
32977 | Why are they so quiet? 32977 Why on earth ca n''t you look at the lions and enjoy yourself, and leave politics to the men who pretend to understand''em?" |
32977 | Why should they, poor devils? |
32977 | Why? 32977 Why?" |
32977 | Why? |
32977 | Will the Government give me_ pensin_? 32977 Ye- es-- unless--""Unless what? |
32977 | You are not making fun? 32977 You can trust your native buyers then?" |
32977 | You come to see? |
32977 | You must give security, you mean? |
32977 | You see that cat? |
32977 | You take_ afim_? |
32977 | You think so? 32977 You wanchee buy? |
32977 | You want go Park Street? 32977 You want to go to the Palace Hotel?" |
32977 | _ Daniel, how many socks master got?_The unfinished peg fell from my fist. |
32977 | _ Fairy Queen._"When did you leave her? |
32977 | _ Ferdinand._"No, after that? |
32977 | _ Haidée._"You deserted from her? |
32977 | _ Is n''t_ a pilot a man who always wears a pea- jacket and shouts through a speaking- trumpet? |
32977 | _ Why_ have n''t you? |
32977 | ***** Is there really such a place as Hong- Kong? |
32977 | --_The Palace of Art._"And where next? |
32977 | A dry, red- haired man gives her exact position in the river--(How in the world can he know?) |
32977 | A sweet view, is n''t it? |
32977 | After some days, the latter turned and said:"_ Why_ are you so keen, Sahib, upon getting my old bones up to the Fort?" |
32977 | All India knows of the Calcutta Municipality; but has any one thoroughly investigated the Big Calcutta Stink? |
32977 | All he wanted to know was:"Will somebody have the goodness to tell a respectable old gentleman what in the world, or out of it, has occurred?" |
32977 | An intelligent and responsible financier, discussing the Empire, said:"But why do we want so large an army in India? |
32977 | And do you know what these children of nature did? |
32977 | And how shall I finish the tale? |
32977 | And if the miracle does n''t work?" |
32977 | And in another man''s house-- anyhow, what had I come to do or say? |
32977 | And now that the train has reached Ajmir, the Crewe of Rajputana, whither shall a tramp turn his feet? |
32977 | And the others, who wait and swear and spit and exchange anecdotes-- what are they? |
32977 | And what more remains to tell? |
32977 | And what shall be said of Amber, Queen of the Pass-- the city that Jey Singh bade his people slough as snakes cast their skins? |
32977 | And who will find security for me? |
32977 | And you would know where the gain comes in? |
32977 | And, after all, what is the use of Royalty in these days if a man may not take delight in the pride of the eye? |
32977 | And, indeed, why should they? |
32977 | Are n''t you one of''em?" |
32977 | Are you going? |
32977 | Are you quite well? |
32977 | Are you the Station- master?" |
32977 | At any rate, it was an Irishman who said to the Barrack- master Sahib:"Fwhat about that loafer?" |
32977 | At first, when a stranger enters this life, he is inclined to scoff and ask, in his ignorance,"_ What_ is this Company that you talk so much about?" |
32977 | Borrer money? |
32977 | But I suppose you''ve seen much better things in India, have n''t you? |
32977 | But what had he who sat in judgment upon him gained? |
32977 | But what skipper will take some of these battered, shattered wrecks whose hands shake and whose eyes are red? |
32977 | But what will you actually do with it? |
32977 | But what would you have done if you had seen what I saw when I went round the temple verandah to what we must call a vestry at the back? |
32977 | But what''s the good of writing impressions? |
32977 | But wherein lies the beauty of this form of mental suppleness? |
32977 | But you was talking about your horse guards now?" |
32977 | But you were saying--?" |
32977 | By the way, how is it that a Highland regiment-- the Argyll and Southerlandshire for instance-- get such good recruits? |
32977 | By the way, under what-- h''m, arrangements with the Government is a Japanese paper published? |
32977 | Ca n''t you feel the air getting brisker? |
32977 | Can I have leave from two o''clock to go and look for that man and hit him again?" |
32977 | Can I? |
32977 | Can any Constitution make up for the wearing of Europe clothes? |
32977 | Can the people help laughing? |
32977 | Can you believe it?" |
32977 | Can you imagine a more pleasant life than his wanderings over the earth, with untold special knowledge to back each signature of his cheque- book? |
32977 | Can you pay me five rupees?'' |
32977 | Can you wonder that he talks? |
32977 | Can you wonder, then, that a guide of long- standing should in time grow to be an accomplished liar? |
32977 | Could a man desire three more inauspicious signs for a night''s travel? |
32977 | Curious, is n''t it?" |
32977 | D''you know our steamer goes at four? |
32977 | D''you think I''ve stolen them?" |
32977 | D----?" |
32977 | Did I ever dream of a place like this?" |
32977 | Did I know Jandiala? |
32977 | Did I not? |
32977 | Did he know anything about drapery or colour or the shape of a woman? |
32977 | Did n''t he rebel when he put on a pair of trousers for the first time? |
32977 | Did they ever leave me without a hundred or a hundred and fifty rupees put by-- and never touched? |
32977 | Did you ever hear an English minister lecture for half an hour on the freight- traffic receipts and general working of, let us say, the Midland? |
32977 | Did you ever hear how the people of Carmel lynched Edward M. Petree for preaching the gospel without making a collection at the end of the service? |
32977 | Did you ever hear of anything so absurd?" |
32977 | Did you ever see my shoulder-- these two marks on it? |
32977 | Did you never hear of a boiler bursting? |
32977 | Do n''t you ever play whist occasionally?" |
32977 | Do the kilt and sporran bring in brawny youngsters of five- foot nine, and thirty- nine inch round the chest? |
32977 | Do you ever know a native that did n''t say_ Garib admi_( I''m a poor man)? |
32977 | Do you expect people will give you money without you ask''em? |
32977 | Do you know anything about cholera?" |
32977 | Do you know it''s a solemn fact that if you drop a Davy lamp or snatch it quickly you can blow a whole English pit inside out with all the miners? |
32977 | Do you know the Bohemian Club of San Francisco? |
32977 | Do you know the Strid near Bolton-- that spot where the full force of the river is pent up in two yards''breadth? |
32977 | Do you know those horrible sponges full of worms that grow in warm seas? |
32977 | Do you mean to say that it has anything in common with ours except the auxiliary verbs, the name of the Creator, and Damn? |
32977 | Do you mind my giving you a little advice? |
32977 | Do you recollect Besant''s description of Palmiste Island in_ My Little Girl_ and_ So They Were Married_? |
32977 | Do you recollect Mrs. Molesworth''s_ Cuckoo Clock_, and the big cabinet that Griselda entered with the cuckoo? |
32977 | Do you remember the story of the Bad People of Iquique? |
32977 | Do you see?" |
32977 | Do you seriously believe all that?" |
32977 | Do you understand anything about revolvers?" |
32977 | Do you understand?" |
32977 | Do you wonder that in the old days the Indians were careful to avoid the Yellowstone? |
32977 | Doctor, what are the symptoms of cholera?" |
32977 | Does any black man who had been in Guv''ment service go away without hundreds an''hundreds put by, and never touched? |
32977 | Edward M. Petree was--""_ Are_ you going to see Japan or are you not?" |
32977 | Even_ you_ have heard of Hokusai, have n''t you?" |
32977 | Followest thou? |
32977 | For pleasure? |
32977 | French- looking sort of thing, is n''t she? |
32977 | From a bush by the roadside sprang up a fat man who cried aloud in English:"How does Your Honour do? |
32977 | Gentlemen, the officers, have you ever seriously considered the existence on earth of a cavalry who by preference would fight in timber? |
32977 | Has not Monghyr a haunted house in which tradition says sceptics have seen much more than they could account for? |
32977 | Have I managed to convey the impression that April is fine in Japan? |
32977 | Have I told you that he is an Engineer General, specially sent out to attend to the fortifications? |
32977 | Have got soul, you?" |
32977 | Have you ever come across one of K----''s crows? |
32977 | Have you ever seen a crowd at our famine relief distributions? |
32977 | Have you ever seen an untouched land-- the face of virgin Nature? |
32977 | Have you ever studied Pathetic Politics? |
32977 | Have you ever"extracted"lacquer from wood? |
32977 | Have you ever, encumbered with great- coat and valise, tried to dodge diversely- minded locomotives when the sun was shining in your eyes? |
32977 | Have you seen our cracker- factories and the new offices of the_ Examiner_?" |
32977 | Have you seen the later Japanese art-- the pictures on the fans and in the shop windows? |
32977 | He demanded that I should admire; and the utmost that I could say was:"Are these things so? |
32977 | He did:--"Sherry and sandwiches? |
32977 | He snapped his joints more excruciatingly than ever:"For pleasure? |
32977 | He was an old man and..."Who put the present Raja on the throne?" |
32977 | Hereon the gentleman with the white cloth:"Then the complaint is that influential voters will not take the trouble to vote? |
32977 | Hev you seen the plates?" |
32977 | His first flush of professional enthusiasm abated, he took stock of the Englishman and said calmly:"What do_ you_ want with a sword?" |
32977 | Horrible idea, is it not, to go down and down with each tide into the foul Hugli mud? |
32977 | Horses? |
32977 | How can I sit down and write to you of the mere joy of being alive? |
32977 | How can a big, strong steamer have her three masts razed to deck level? |
32977 | How can a heavy, country boat be pitched on to the poop of a high- walled liner? |
32977 | How can a man full of Pilsener beer reach that keen- set state of quiescence needful for ordering his dinner liquor? |
32977 | How did that conversation begin-- why did it end, and what is the use of meeting eccentricities who never explained themselves? |
32977 | How do I know you do n''t belong to the_ Jackson''s_ crew? |
32977 | How do I know? |
32977 | How do these things happen? |
32977 | How do they do it?" |
32977 | How do they invest their savings? |
32977 | How do we manage to keep the horses so quiet? |
32977 | How do you intend to describe it?" |
32977 | How does the iron taste?" |
32977 | How does this strange thing come about? |
32977 | How in the world can a white man, a Sahib of Our blood, stand up and plaster praise on his own country? |
32977 | How in the world could the owner of such a place as Jodhpur Palace be in any way like an English country- gentleman? |
32977 | How in the world do they get a living?" |
32977 | How in the world was it possible to take in even one- thousandth of this huge, roaring, many- sided continent? |
32977 | How is it that Our infantry regiments fare so badly? |
32977 | How is it that every one smells of money; whence come your municipal improvements; and why are the White Men so restless?" |
32977 | How is that for feeling?" |
32977 | How many men follow this double, deleterious sort of life? |
32977 | How many sections of the complex society of the place do the carts carry? |
32977 | How many times have I had to record such an opinion as the foregoing? |
32977 | How many votes does three hundred rupees''worth of landed property carry? |
32977 | How much the more could a cultivated observer from, let us say, an English constituency, blunder and pervert and mangle? |
32977 | How on earth did this man drag Western education into this discussion? |
32977 | How shall I tell the glories of that day so that you may be interested? |
32977 | How was it done? |
32977 | How would you and your friends get to work? |
32977 | How you think now the American Revision Treaty?" |
32977 | How''d you like us act?" |
32977 | I asked,"What regiment?" |
32977 | I ca n''t get it, can I? |
32977 | I found him dancing on the fore- deck shouting,"Is n''t she a daisy? |
32977 | I gave them both my blessing, because"When shall I see you again?" |
32977 | I mean, must you pay anything before starting a press?" |
32977 | I wonder what would have happened if a Gatling had been used when the West End riots were in full swing?" |
32977 | I''m wearing a made tie and a breastpin under my blouse? |
32977 | If he''s caught visiting any of the others-- do you see that cool and restful brown stone building way over there against the hillside? |
32977 | If they treat each other like dogs, why should we regard''em as human beings? |
32977 | In jewellery? |
32977 | In the meantime, what have the rest of the dead man''s gang been doing? |
32977 | In''Frisco-- Lone Mountain''Frisco-- you hear, Doctor?" |
32977 | Is he then like the rest? |
32977 | Is he trying to run a motion through under cover of a cloud of words, essaying the well- known"cuttle- fish trick"of the West? |
32977 | Is it better to kiss a post or throw it in the fire? |
32977 | Is it true that etc., etc.?" |
32977 | Is n''t he a devil? |
32977 | Is n''t it a desolate place?" |
32977 | Is n''t it beautiful? |
32977 | Is n''t it degrading? |
32977 | Is n''t it touching? |
32977 | Is n''t it what you call Kismet?" |
32977 | Is n''t she a darling?" |
32977 | Is n''t that a European woman at that door?" |
32977 | Is section 10 to be omitted, and is one man to be allowed one vote and no more? |
32977 | Is that administration? |
32977 | Is that all it can do?" |
32977 | Is the pest ever out of it? |
32977 | Is there a more than usually revolting lynching? |
32977 | Is there a shooting- scrape between prominent citizens? |
32977 | Is there any one who could teach him more if he were alive to- day?" |
32977 | Is there not at Pir Bahar a lonely house on a bluff, the grave of a young lady, who, thirty years ago, rode her horse down the cliff and perished? |
32977 | Is there one of those that you would n''t be glad to take for a hack, and look well after too? |
32977 | Is this a little matter to you who can count upon him daily? |
32977 | Is this budget of news sufficiently exciting, or must I in strict confidence tell you the story of the Professor and the compass? |
32977 | Is this sedition? |
32977 | Is_ A_ to be allowed to give two votes in one ward and one in another? |
32977 | It must be interesting-- more interesting than the colourless Anglo- Indian article; but who has treated of it? |
32977 | It never attacks people twice, does it? |
32977 | Jack in the sailors''coffee- shop is singing joyously:"Shall we gather at the River-- the beautiful, the beautiful, the River?" |
32977 | Joss houses? |
32977 | Like the native of India you say? |
32977 | Lucid, is it not? |
32977 | Makes a man jump rather, does n''t it? |
32977 | Money? |
32977 | More interesting is the question, For how long can the vitality of a people whose life was arms be suspended? |
32977 | Moreover, where is the criminal, and what is all this talk about abstractions? |
32977 | Need I say that he was an Irishman? |
32977 | No savvy? |
32977 | No? |
32977 | Not good for me? |
32977 | Now do you see? |
32977 | Now if they do this in the capital, what damage must they not do to the crops in the district? |
32977 | Now this was rude, because the ordinary form of salutation on the Road is usually"And what are you for?" |
32977 | Of all the disgusting, inaccessible dens-- Holy Cupid, what''s this?" |
32977 | Once more, can anything be done to a people without nerves as without digestion, and, if reports speak truly, without morals? |
32977 | Or did she, with the others of the batch, give a spinsters''ball as a last trial-- following the custom of the country? |
32977 | Or if you claim from him overtime service as a right, will he work zealously? |
32977 | Other men have told you that, have they? |
32977 | Our punishments? |
32977 | Politics in America? |
32977 | S''pose I write fifteen hundred?" |
32977 | Savvy these things? |
32977 | Sha n''t I, Blake?" |
32977 | Shameful extravagance? |
32977 | Somebody opened a door with a crash, and a man cried out:"Who is there?" |
32977 | Sounds funny, does n''t it? |
32977 | Suppose I give an itinerary of what we saw?" |
32977 | Suppose the drawing- room should be full of people,--suppose a baby were sick, how was I to explain that I only wanted to shake hands with him? |
32977 | That goes well, even after all these years, does it not? |
32977 | The first question that a Japanese on the railway asks an Englishman is:"Have you got the English translation of our Constitution?" |
32977 | Their hands are full of work; so full that, when the incult wanderer said:"What do you find to do?" |
32977 | Then I am compelled to believe that the public educate the paper? |
32977 | Then said he:"Are you going to get out your letters,--your letters of naturalisation?" |
32977 | Then the burly Superintendent brings his hand down on his thigh with a crack like a pistol- shot and shouts:"How do, John?" |
32977 | Then turning upon the Englishman, he said fiercely:"What have you come here for?" |
32977 | There is a certain amount of personal violence in and about the State, or else where would be the good of the weapons? |
32977 | This morning she advanced to me and said, as though it were the most natural thing in the world:"Shall I take away your tea- cup, sir?" |
32977 | This sounds mad, does n''t it? |
32977 | This, by the way, demoralises the Globe- trotter, whose first cry is,"Where can we get horses? |
32977 | Under what new god, thought I, are we irrepressible English sitting now? |
32977 | Was I a fool? |
32977 | Was it not De Quincey that had a horror of the Chinese-- of their inhumaneness and their inscrutability? |
32977 | Was n''t that the place where I got the good cigars?" |
32977 | Was the city grateful? |
32977 | We could turn out more? |
32977 | We stumbled upon a young couple saying good- by in the twilight, and"When shall I see you again?" |
32977 | Were canals made only to wash in?" |
32977 | Were their forest officers trained at Nancy, or are they local products? |
32977 | What am I now? |
32977 | What am I to do with a people like this?" |
32977 | What are their pleasures and diversions? |
32977 | What can be extracted from a people who call four miles variously_ do kosh_,_ do kush_,_ dhi hkas_,_ doo- a koth_, and_ diakast_ all one word? |
32977 | What can one do? |
32977 | What can we do?" |
32977 | What comes to them in the end? |
32977 | What could the Englishman do? |
32977 | What country is such a fool? |
32977 | What d''you think of that?" |
32977 | What did tables and chairs and eggs and fowls and very bright lamps matter to the Raj? |
32977 | What do you choose to do with my gift?" |
32977 | What do you make it by Indian standards? |
32977 | What do you think of him?" |
32977 | What do_ you_ think? |
32977 | What does it matter to the Down- Easter who Wrap- up- his- Tail was?" |
32977 | What happens, I wonder, when the pick strikes the liquid, and the miner has to run or be parboiled? |
32977 | What have you seen?" |
32977 | What is a wheel?" |
32977 | What is it?" |
32977 | What made this yellow image of a shopman here take delight in a dwarf orange tree in a turquoise blue pot?" |
32977 | What man do you think would dare to use a pistol at even thirty yards, if his life depended oh it? |
32977 | What may these things mean? |
32977 | What shall we say to such a_ bunnia_? |
32977 | What should we do without the cowboy?" |
32977 | What the Devil have I to do with your horses? |
32977 | What then?'' |
32977 | What was that now?" |
32977 | What was the use? |
32977 | What were they going to do with the Chinese decoration all over Penang? |
32977 | What will the American do with the negro? |
32977 | What would happen if one spoke to this Bobby? |
32977 | What would happen if the train went off the line? |
32977 | What would you have? |
32977 | What''s here?" |
32977 | What''s that you say about polygamy? |
32977 | What''s the President to you on this day of all others? |
32977 | What''s the best with you?" |
32977 | What''s the use of talking?" |
32977 | What''s the use?" |
32977 | Where are the men who used''em? |
32977 | Where can a man get food? |
32977 | Where can we get elephants? |
32977 | Where is his_ pensin_? |
32977 | Where is the fowl- man from whom you got the eggs?" |
32977 | Where would_ you_ be?" |
32977 | Where''s that Emporium? |
32977 | Where, oh where, in all this wilderness of life shall a man go? |
32977 | Where_ is_ the Park Street Cemetery? |
32977 | Whereunto all this lecture? |
32977 | Who are you, and what are you in for?" |
32977 | Who is the man to write to for all these things?" |
32977 | Who knows her?" |
32977 | Who knows? |
32977 | Who takes count of the prejudices which we absorb through the skin by way of our surroundings? |
32977 | Why did n''t they call her Mechlin lace Falls at fifty dollars a yard while they were at it?" |
32977 | Why do n''t they make a row and sing and shout, and so on?" |
32977 | Why does the Westerner spit? |
32977 | Why is it that when one views for the first time any of the wonders of the earth a bystander always strikes in with,"You should see it, etc."? |
32977 | Why not, the trams aiding, go to the Old Park Street Cemetery? |
32977 | Why should he trouble to climb up the bank and bring down the eave of the cave? |
32977 | Why should n''t he?" |
32977 | Why should not a baby enjoy himself if he liked? |
32977 | Why would n''t the scheme work? |
32977 | Why, asks a savage, let them vote at all? |
32977 | Why- for are you such a horrible contradiction?" |
32977 | Why? |
32977 | Will a North countryman give you anything but warm hospitality for nothing? |
32977 | Will any one take the contract? |
32977 | Wo n''t he grow sensible some day and drop foreign habits?" |
32977 | Would I play? |
32977 | Would he be offended? |
32977 | Would they try to wisely obliterate that? |
32977 | Would we be pleased to inspect the manufactory? |
32977 | Would you not rather take a cheroot and loaf about the streets seeing what was to be seen? |
32977 | Would you taste one of the real pleasures of Life? |
32977 | Would_ you_ have bothered your head about politics or temples? |
32977 | You are very much in earnest about yours, are you not?" |
32977 | You do n''t carry a pistol, Doctor? |
32977 | You do n''t say so? |
32977 | You have a Parliament, have you not?" |
32977 | You have heaps of''em in India, have n''t you?" |
32977 | You know how in Bengal to this day the child- wife is taught to curse her possible co- wife, ere yet she has gone to her husband''s house? |
32977 | You never saw it in India?" |
32977 | You onderstandt? |
32977 | You see all those men turning brass and looking after the machinery? |
32977 | You see? |
32977 | You see?" |
32977 | You trafel for pleasure? |
32977 | You understand how very unpleasant it must have been, do you not?" |
32977 | You understand that? |
32977 | You would eat thatch, would you? |
32977 | You''re looking at all those chopped rails? |
32977 | You''ve never heard of the rice- Christians, have you? |
32977 | You''ve read the_ Vicar of Wakefield_?" |
32977 | Young man, whurr are those beavers? |
32977 | Your Honour remembers me? |
32977 | Your command here is for five years, is n''t it?" |
32977 | _ Bus!_[17] Will the Sirdar take the tale of clay? |
32977 | _ Does_ Calcutta smell so pestiferously after all? |
32977 | _ Why_ is he like the Jap?" |
32977 | and how can the side be bodily torn out of a ship? |
32977 | at thirty- second intervals, and at the end of five minutes call one to another:"Sa- ay, do n''t you think it''s vurry much the same all along?" |
32977 | how do you make room for the fresh stock?" |
32977 | indeed that''s very sad; but look here, where do you say my rooms are?" |
32977 | last? |
32977 | meaning"what house do you represent?" |
32977 | said I,"is it possible that you-- you-- speak that disgusting pidgin- talk to your_ nauker_? |
32977 | what air you doing?''" |
32977 | what sort of a row?" |
30970 | Can we work in a room alone this morning, Miss Cayley? |
30970 | Provisions, effendi? |
30970 | Provisions, is it? |
30970 | ''"Is it pay in advance ye want?" |
30970 | ''A carpentah?'' |
30970 | ''A different machine? |
30970 | ''A friend?'' |
30970 | ''A middle- aged man?'' |
30970 | ''A_ what_?'' |
30970 | ''Afford it?'' |
30970 | ''Ah, Raphael?'' |
30970 | ''Ah, high- toned again?'' |
30970 | ''Ah-- what did he paint?'' |
30970 | ''Ai n''t you come here to ride it?'' |
30970 | ''And I have come to ride it?'' |
30970 | ''And Lady Georgina is on Mr. Tillington''s side, I fancy? |
30970 | ''And Mr. Tillington is-- his nephew?'' |
30970 | ''And after we are married?'' |
30970 | ''And he nearly succeeded then in stealing Lady Georgina Fawley''s jewel- case?'' |
30970 | ''And he talks of sub- conscious selves?'' |
30970 | ''And how have you been all this time, dear Lady Georgina?'' |
30970 | ''And now you are stopping on?'' |
30970 | ''And she denies that it is her handwriting?'' |
30970 | ''And this Count?'' |
30970 | ''And this is the man,''he exclaimed, with a triumphant air,''whose sister you pretended you had got to sign this precious document of yours?'' |
30970 | ''And this person did make errors?'' |
30970 | ''And what do you think you will call the machine in Europe?'' |
30970 | ''And what particular painter does your soul most feed upon?'' |
30970 | ''And where is Higginson?'' |
30970 | ''And why were you not?'' |
30970 | ''And why? |
30970 | ''And you have been here ever since?'' |
30970 | ''And you have heard that she swears it is not her signature at all?'' |
30970 | ''And you promptly offered to go with her as her lady''s maid to Schlangenbad in Germany?'' |
30970 | ''And you stick to it? |
30970 | ''And you think no bones are broken?'' |
30970 | ''And you will marry Harold?'' |
30970 | ''And you wo n''t stop with me?'' |
30970 | ''And you?'' |
30970 | ''And your terms?'' |
30970 | ''Anny chance of a rescue, is it?'' |
30970 | ''Are you mediæval or modern?'' |
30970 | ''Are you quite sure our Scotch domicile is good enough in law?'' |
30970 | ''Are you strong enough, Lois?'' |
30970 | ''Are you terribly hurt?'' |
30970 | ''As a milliner''s girl; why not? |
30970 | ''As a milliner''s girl?'' |
30970 | ''Bless the child, yes; have you never read your British Bible, the peerage? |
30970 | ''Brownie, I dare n''t? |
30970 | ''Brownie, how on earth did you guess it? |
30970 | ''Business?'' |
30970 | ''But Mr. Tillington did not resent your visit to this gallant Maharajah?'' |
30970 | ''But did you never try to run away to the Nile?'' |
30970 | ''But how about yer luggage? |
30970 | ''But if I were poor?'' |
30970 | ''But if you do n''t teach,''Elsie went on, gazing at me with those wondering big blue eyes of hers,''whatever will you do, Brownie?'' |
30970 | ''But my children?'' |
30970 | ''But now-- to- day? |
30970 | ''But so soon?'' |
30970 | ''But the india- rubber water- bottle?'' |
30970 | ''But then-- the lady?'' |
30970 | ''But what could I do, my dear? |
30970 | ''But what shall we eat?'' |
30970 | ''But what will Miss Latimer say? |
30970 | ''But what?'' |
30970 | ''But you will come to the hotel at once, Harold?'' |
30970 | ''But you will let me know when you have decided?'' |
30970 | ''But you will see Harold again?'' |
30970 | ''But, Brownie, can we afford it?'' |
30970 | ''But, how?'' |
30970 | ''But, my child, my child, what shall I do without you?'' |
30970 | ''But, my dear Miss Cayley----''''The difference in station?'' |
30970 | ''Ca n''t you guess?'' |
30970 | ''Can I do anything for you?'' |
30970 | ''Can we get a trap?'' |
30970 | ''Can you climb by these nooses with my help?'' |
30970 | ''Can you come to us outside the gate at sunset?'' |
30970 | ''Can you cycle?'' |
30970 | ''Certainly?'' |
30970 | ''Could you let me see them?'' |
30970 | ''Could you look things up in Herodotus?'' |
30970 | ''Could you spare me an hour this morning?'' |
30970 | ''Did you draw up this document?'' |
30970 | ''Did you say_ teach_? |
30970 | ''Do I look like a woman who cares about a reference? |
30970 | ''Do n''t you see? |
30970 | ''Do n''t you think so? |
30970 | ''Do n''t you think,''Elsie suggested,''we had better hurry down on our cycles to Lungern and call some men from the village to help us? |
30970 | ''Do you confess you put it there or do you not-- reptile?'' |
30970 | ''Do you give yourself in charge on a confession of forgery?'' |
30970 | ''Do you know why I do not rise and go down to my cabin at once?'' |
30970 | ''Do you recognise that signature as Mr. Marmaduke Ashurst''s?'' |
30970 | ''Do you take me,''he inquired,''for one of Her Majesty''s horse- marines?'' |
30970 | ''Do you think you could forge a will if you tried?'' |
30970 | ''Does he come often?'' |
30970 | ''Does he know about the hot- water- bottle?'' |
30970 | ''England? |
30970 | ''Ex- cuse_ me_, but why did you want to speed her?'' |
30970 | ''Five pounds for every machine I sell?'' |
30970 | ''Fourteen yeahs?'' |
30970 | ''From the man you call a nigger?'' |
30970 | ''Go down?'' |
30970 | ''Goes nicely, does n''t she?'' |
30970 | ''Harold Tillington?'' |
30970 | ''Harold, you viper, what do you mean by trying to avoid me?'' |
30970 | ''Harold,''I cried in despair,''do you think we could manage to hide ourselves safely anywhere in Scotland for twenty- one days?'' |
30970 | ''Harold? |
30970 | ''Harold?'' |
30970 | ''Have you, indeed?'' |
30970 | ''He talked about your sub- conscious self?'' |
30970 | ''He''s so kind and polite, Brownie, is n''t he?'' |
30970 | ''Her?'' |
30970 | ''Higginson?'' |
30970 | ''High- toned, eh? |
30970 | ''His courier? |
30970 | ''How are we ever to get him back again, Brownie?'' |
30970 | ''How can I come to see you if you do n''t tell me where you are? |
30970 | ''How can we pay for them, Brownie?'' |
30970 | ''How could I escape notice? |
30970 | ''How could you ever think of it?'' |
30970 | ''How did this happen?'' |
30970 | ''How do you know there''s a secret drawer?'' |
30970 | ''How do you know, Brownie?'' |
30970 | ''How do you know?'' |
30970 | ''How do you know?'' |
30970 | ''How do you like Fra Diavolo?'' |
30970 | ''How far ahead the first man?''. |
30970 | ''How far ahead the last man?'' |
30970 | ''How far ahead the last man?'' |
30970 | ''How far ahead the last man?'' |
30970 | ''How far from here?'' |
30970 | ''How if''a will not stand?'' |
30970 | ''How is it possible?'' |
30970 | ''How long has he been in Switzerland?'' |
30970 | ''How on earth did you find that out, Brownie?'' |
30970 | ''How on earth did you guess? |
30970 | ''How steep?'' |
30970 | ''How? |
30970 | ''How?'' |
30970 | ''I may go with you?'' |
30970 | ''I say-- why do n''t you hedge? |
30970 | ''I should love to,''she answered;''but Dr. Fortescue- Langley----''''Who is he?'' |
30970 | ''I suppose you will get forward for lunch to Meiringen?'' |
30970 | ''In the original?'' |
30970 | ''In what?'' |
30970 | ''Indeed?'' |
30970 | ''Indeed?'' |
30970 | ''Is a typewritten form legal?'' |
30970 | ''Is he here?'' |
30970 | ''Is it Meredith? |
30970 | ''Is it childern she has?'' |
30970 | ''Is it his, or is it not?'' |
30970 | ''Is it meself? |
30970 | ''Is it the one I saw advertised in the_ Times_ this morning, I wonder?'' |
30970 | ''Is that matter relevant?'' |
30970 | ''Is_ that_ plain enough? |
30970 | ''It was really_ you_?'' |
30970 | ''It''ud run up a tree ef it wanted, would n''t it?'' |
30970 | ''Let me see, how many of these horrid pfennigs make an English penny? |
30970 | ''Lois,''he cried, stretching out his arms, with an appealing air,''I_ may_ stay, may n''t I?'' |
30970 | ''Look heah, Georgey,_ are_ you going quietly, or must I ask these coppahs to evict you?'' |
30970 | ''Look here, Miss Cayley,''he said, with a very earnest face;''is this really true? |
30970 | ''Look here, Mr. Sheikh,''he said, calmly, yet with a fine touch of bravado;''do ye see this revolver? |
30970 | ''Lord Kynaston''s?'' |
30970 | ''Marmy?'' |
30970 | ''May I venture to inquire in return how you came to know I was arriving by this steamer?'' |
30970 | ''Might I essay it?'' |
30970 | ''Miss Cayley, I gathah? |
30970 | ''Miss Cayley, you will come with us?'' |
30970 | ''Monsieur is attached to the Embassy in London?'' |
30970 | ''My dear, how could he? |
30970 | ''My ideal?'' |
30970 | ''No, really? |
30970 | ''No; will you? |
30970 | ''Not high- toned enough? |
30970 | ''Not know which hotel? |
30970 | ''Now? |
30970 | ''Oh, Harold, I trust you; but why did you disappear and make all the world believe you admitted yourself guilty?'' |
30970 | ''Oh, I say; how''s that for preaching? |
30970 | ''Oh, Miss Petheridge once more-- you hunt in couples?'' |
30970 | ''Oh, he took you aside? |
30970 | ''Oh, indeed;_ not_ because you had put it there?'' |
30970 | ''Oh, sir, how should_ I_ know, sir? |
30970 | ''Oh, the wheel?'' |
30970 | ''Oh, the wheel?'' |
30970 | ''Oh, you''ll come then?'' |
30970 | ''Oh, you''re only going to stop a week, then, Miss Cayley?'' |
30970 | ''Or a fellow- guest?'' |
30970 | ''Our reception, Maharajah? |
30970 | ''Oxford?'' |
30970 | ''Parliament? |
30970 | ''Political reasons?'' |
30970 | ''Rice, ghee, and chupatties?'' |
30970 | ''Run away? |
30970 | ''Run for what?'' |
30970 | ''Scotland?'' |
30970 | ''Shorthand?'' |
30970 | ''So you are not angry with me, Lois? |
30970 | ''So you have really tracked him? |
30970 | ''So you''ve managed to get away?'' |
30970 | ''Still, you go to Schlangenbad on Monday?'' |
30970 | ''Stout, diplomatic- looking, with wrinkles round his eyes, and a distinguished grey moustache, twirled up oddly at the corners?'' |
30970 | ''Suppose they were to attack us, Brownie?'' |
30970 | ''That succeeds?'' |
30970 | ''The 25 per cent, you mean?'' |
30970 | ''The Jubilee?'' |
30970 | ''The commission?'' |
30970 | ''The police?'' |
30970 | ''Then at least you will tell him where you are going?'' |
30970 | ''Then that''s business?'' |
30970 | ''Then there is Fra Diavolo?'' |
30970 | ''Then they risked his turning up?'' |
30970 | ''Then what can we do?'' |
30970 | ''Then what_ do_ you contemplate?'' |
30970 | ''Then where are you going?'' |
30970 | ''Then why introduce them?'' |
30970 | ''Then you are a Scotchman?'' |
30970 | ''Then you confess you put the forged will there?'' |
30970 | ''Then you have taken him?'' |
30970 | ''Then you knew me at once?'' |
30970 | ''Then you know where each tiger lives?'' |
30970 | ''Then you mean to try a Scotch marriage?'' |
30970 | ''Then you think me a fool, like Georgey?'' |
30970 | ''Then, why do n''t you disobey him?'' |
30970 | ''Think so? |
30970 | ''To drive the Sultan out of Syria,''I suggested tentatively,''and to annex Palestine to our practical province of Egypt?'' |
30970 | ''To turn you out?'' |
30970 | ''To what?'' |
30970 | ''To- morrow?'' |
30970 | ''Two minutes, Fräulein,''''A civilian?'' |
30970 | ''Warum nicht? |
30970 | ''Well, we borrow from the Jews, yah know,''he said pleasantly,''so why the jooce should n''t we borrow from the heathen also? |
30970 | ''Well, what do_ you_ think of the_ Lois Cayley_?'' |
30970 | ''Well, will you take me?'' |
30970 | ''Well,_ my_ ideal-- do you happen to have such a thing as a pocket- mirror about you?'' |
30970 | ''Well?'' |
30970 | ''What about the bicycle?'' |
30970 | ''What are girls coming to, I wonder? |
30970 | ''What are they for?'' |
30970 | ''What are you doing here?'' |
30970 | ''What can he want here?'' |
30970 | ''What college?'' |
30970 | ''What do you call it?'' |
30970 | ''What do you mean by this eavesdropping?'' |
30970 | ''What does he mean?'' |
30970 | ''What does the woman mean? |
30970 | ''What enquiry?'' |
30970 | ''What for? |
30970 | ''What has brought you to England?'' |
30970 | ''What have I got to get ready?'' |
30970 | ''What have you got inside?'' |
30970 | ''What is that thing there, moving?'' |
30970 | ''What is the good of a friend if she will not allow you to do her little favours?'' |
30970 | ''What is your forte?'' |
30970 | ''What next, Brownie?'' |
30970 | ''What next?'' |
30970 | ''What shall we live upon?'' |
30970 | ''What sort of rooms shall we have?'' |
30970 | ''What will you do with the_ chalet_ while you''re away?'' |
30970 | ''What''s this? |
30970 | ''What, leave England for evah? |
30970 | ''What? |
30970 | ''What? |
30970 | ''What? |
30970 | ''What?'' |
30970 | ''What?'' |
30970 | ''Where are the whiskers?'' |
30970 | ''Where are you taking me?'' |
30970 | ''Where did you type- write this thing, do you say?'' |
30970 | ''Where have I seen you before?'' |
30970 | ''Where is he, my dear? |
30970 | ''Where on earth did you pick up such acquaintances?'' |
30970 | ''Where''s Harold?'' |
30970 | ''Where? |
30970 | ''Who are the witnesses to the will?'' |
30970 | ''Who is Harold?'' |
30970 | ''Who is it?'' |
30970 | ''Who?'' |
30970 | ''Why did n''t he come to meet me?'' |
30970 | ''Why do they want the whiskers?'' |
30970 | ''Why do you start your bicycles in Germany, though?'' |
30970 | ''Why else should you and Higginson have bothered to come here?'' |
30970 | ''Why not?'' |
30970 | ''Why should he?'' |
30970 | ''Why so?'' |
30970 | ''Why so?'' |
30970 | ''Why the jooce introduce them? |
30970 | ''Will you really go? |
30970 | ''Will you send for the police?'' |
30970 | ''Will you swear his lordship did n''t say"_ the_ rogue suited his book"--which is quite another thing?'' |
30970 | ''Wo n''t a franc do as well?'' |
30970 | ''Would you like some lunch, Lady Georgina?'' |
30970 | ''Yes; but the Maharajah, I understand, is in London?'' |
30970 | ''You accept?'' |
30970 | ''You ca n''t go far wrong in mentioning Raphael, can you? |
30970 | ''You call this town_ old_, do you?'' |
30970 | ''You dare to brazen it out? |
30970 | ''You dare?'' |
30970 | ''You do n''t mean it, child; you do n''t mean it?'' |
30970 | ''You do n''t mean to say he offered to lend you money?'' |
30970 | ''You do n''t mean to tell me,''I cried,''you actually propose to accept the Maharajah''s hospitality?'' |
30970 | ''You do not share it yourself, then?'' |
30970 | ''You doubt my honour? |
30970 | ''You had never seen her before?'' |
30970 | ''You have heard about Dr. Fortescue- Langley too, I suppose?'' |
30970 | ''You have heard of the Ashurst will case?'' |
30970 | ''You have no doubts about it?'' |
30970 | ''You mistrust me?'' |
30970 | ''You permit, Fräulein?'' |
30970 | ''You remember what you promised me?'' |
30970 | ''You think it better so?'' |
30970 | ''You think me too cantankerous?'' |
30970 | ''You want to know jest where the reciprocity comes in, anyhow?'' |
30970 | ''You will come, Lois?'' |
30970 | ''You will not betray me?'' |
30970 | ''You wished to see me, sir?'' |
30970 | ''Younger of Gledcliffe?'' |
30970 | ''Your friend, then?'' |
30970 | ''_ And_ your name and address?'' |
30970 | ''_ Old_ town?'' |
30970 | ''_ Que voulez- vous_, madame? |
30970 | ''_ You_ can? |
30970 | ''_ You_ did not put this will in the drawer where Mr. Tillington found it, did you?'' |
30970 | ''from dictation''at Florence, by whom? |
30970 | 118 I may stay, may n''t I? |
30970 | 216 Take my word for it, you''re staking your money on the wrong fellah 220 I am the Maharajah of Moozuffernuggar 227 Who''s your black friend? |
30970 | 316 You wished to see me, sir? |
30970 | A carpentah?'' |
30970 | A gleam of intuition flashed across me,''You do n''t mean to say,''I exclaimed,''that you''re called Georgina?'' |
30970 | A good- natured male passenger, however, volunteered to ask us,''Will I get ye a rug, ladies?'' |
30970 | A lady of your intelligence must gather at once that it is----?'' |
30970 | After what I told you last week on the steamer?'' |
30970 | Am I to have it for nothing, Brownie?'' |
30970 | An''would he write like that if there was n''t a dhrop of the blood of the Celt in him?'' |
30970 | And I give and bequeath the like sum of Five Hundred Pounds-- did I say, free of legacy duty? |
30970 | And did anybody but yourself see or hear any part whatsoever of this precious document?'' |
30970 | And if he saw and copied it, why might he not also have destroyed it?'' |
30970 | And the_ bulletin_ for the_ coupé_? |
30970 | And then the witnesses? |
30970 | And what was the consequence? |
30970 | And what will you do, my dear, when you get there?'' |
30970 | And, suppose he did, what then? |
30970 | Anglo- Israel? |
30970 | Are you going to- morrow?'' |
30970 | Are you or are you not conditionally engaged to Mr. Harold Tillington?'' |
30970 | Ashurst?'' |
30970 | Besides which, what''s the use of_ trying_ to be ladylike? |
30970 | Bimetallism? |
30970 | But after him?'' |
30970 | But are the points of a sort that you could make clear in court to the satisfaction of a jury?'' |
30970 | But do n''t you think it just as likely that it was a plot between you two, and that owing to some mistake the plot came off unsuccessful?'' |
30970 | But if a common man or a low caste man were to kill a tiger-- who can say what might happen?'' |
30970 | But perhaps she was at Schlangenbad with Lady Georgina, and you were there also?'' |
30970 | But what could I do? |
30970 | But what is_ your_ ideal, then, as opposed to the German one?'' |
30970 | But what on earth were we to do with ourselves through three long days and nights at Geergeh? |
30970 | But what would you have me do? |
30970 | But who, now, were these witnesses? |
30970 | But why did n''t you come to see me?'' |
30970 | But, my dear, after this, how can I ever believe in him?'' |
30970 | But, there, my dear; the people who manufacture them are a set of born fools, and what can you expect from an imbecile?'' |
30970 | But----''a doubt flitted across his brain,''was n''t his name Fra Angelico?'' |
30970 | But----''growing suspicious apace,''was n''t Fra Diavolo also a composah?'' |
30970 | But_ if_ I wanted to go round the world, how could I do better than set out by the Rhine country? |
30970 | By the way, who''s your black friend? |
30970 | Can you produce the lady?'' |
30970 | Can you tell me who in this place is most likely to sympathise-- most likely to marry us?'' |
30970 | Closed a little more? |
30970 | Confidential? |
30970 | Could I wish him to be poor? |
30970 | Could I wish him to be rich? |
30970 | Could a British jury doubt when a Lord declared it? |
30970 | Could this be the Count? |
30970 | Could this mean that he was going to draw up a will, disinheriting Harold Tillington? |
30970 | Dare I ask your name, monsieur?'' |
30970 | Davos? |
30970 | Did I ever suggest we should pay for them? |
30970 | Did Mr. Ashurst take it away from the office in person?'' |
30970 | Did madame desire to have the window open? |
30970 | Did that mean she was running through? |
30970 | Did the baggages pretend they considered themselves ladies? |
30970 | Did your Miss Petheridge hear Mr. Ashurst dictate the terms of his last will and testament?'' |
30970 | Do I recall him,_ ce cher_ Sir Evelyn? |
30970 | Do n''t they seem to be circling and behaving most oddly?'' |
30970 | Do you consent to go with me?'' |
30970 | Do you live there?'' |
30970 | Do you mean to confess, and give evidence on our behalf, or will you force me to send for a policeman to arrest you?'' |
30970 | Do you see now that I really mean it?'' |
30970 | Does he look like a forger? |
30970 | Does he take heed for the morrow? |
30970 | Eh? |
30970 | Elsie a conspirator? |
30970 | Elsie in league with Nihilists? |
30970 | Elsie, I think you have nothing to do before one, that can not be put off? |
30970 | Evelegh?'' |
30970 | Excuse my asking it, but how many words can you do a minute?'' |
30970 | For if once I nursed him through this trouble, how could I or any woman in my place any longer refuse him? |
30970 | Got somebody to stick up for her at last, has she? |
30970 | Had any of the Senoosis noticed our presence? |
30970 | Had we missed one another? |
30970 | Hang it all, what does it mattah who a fellah is if he can give yah good shooting? |
30970 | Harold Tillington picked up with a fellah like that at Oxford-- doosid good cricketer too; wondah if this is the same one?'' |
30970 | Has he the right to compel me to answer that question?'' |
30970 | Has she got no gumption? |
30970 | Have some of my champagne? |
30970 | Have ye ever been in County Clare? |
30970 | Have you anything against her?'' |
30970 | Have you ever tried your hand at writing?'' |
30970 | Have you no immortal soul, porter, that you crush other people''s property as if it was blackbeetles? |
30970 | Have your researches into English literature ever chanced to lead you into reading Horace Walpole, I wonder? |
30970 | Hayes?'' |
30970 | He first appears upon the scene, so far as you are concerned, on the day when you travelled from London to Schlangenbad?'' |
30970 | He thought then I would marry him, and that he would so secure my connivance in his plans; but who would marry such a piece of moist clay? |
30970 | He turned up at Lucerne, as a faith- healer, did n''t he?'' |
30970 | He was a charming man; you read his masterly paper on the Central Problem of the Dual Empire?'' |
30970 | Here was another noble chance; must I not strive to rise to it? |
30970 | How can I exist without you?'' |
30970 | How can you ask? |
30970 | How could I? |
30970 | How could he run away and hide himself at such a time? |
30970 | How could he, poor dear idiot? |
30970 | How could one dream of trusting the judgment of a flunkey about a lady? |
30970 | How did he know where to look for it? |
30970 | How does Clown regulate his life? |
30970 | How many are there?'' |
30970 | How on earth did you recognise me?'' |
30970 | Hungarians were only to be dealt in if they hardened-- hardened sinners I know, but what are hardened Hungarians? |
30970 | I did not even know which way the river lay; and was it possible for me to cross the desert on foot, or find the chance of a camel? |
30970 | I dreaded the interview; for one''s own heart is a hard enemy to fight so long: but how could I let him go without one word of farewell to him? |
30970 | I have come to ask you now, in this moment of despair, will you keep your promise?'' |
30970 | I may call you_ Lois_?'' |
30970 | I meant, what is your ideal of a man''s right relation to his_ mädchen_?'' |
30970 | I said;''the difference, still greater, in this world''s goods? |
30970 | Is it worth while,_ pour si peu de chose_? |
30970 | Is n''t it just like him? |
30970 | Is that, or is it not, the truth of the matter?'' |
30970 | Is there any chance of a rescue?'' |
30970 | It had borne my weight; was it strong enough to bear the precious weight of Harold? |
30970 | It was endlessly wearisome; who could say what might be happening meanwhile in England? |
30970 | Lady Guinevere Tillington''s son, is it not? |
30970 | Leave it open till Marmy''s gone, and then marry the winnah?'' |
30970 | Leave the world to ask,"How fast?" |
30970 | Lois Cayley, you say; any relation of a madcap Captain Cayley whom I used once to know, in the Forty- second Highlanders?'' |
30970 | Madame would prefer the corner? |
30970 | Magnanimous, is n''t it? |
30970 | Money? |
30970 | My hat? |
30970 | My lud, will you allow me later to recall Lord Southminster to testify on this point?'' |
30970 | My next trouble was-- would the train draw up at Dunbar? |
30970 | No? |
30970 | No? |
30970 | Not so dusty, was it? |
30970 | Now, I ask you,_ where_ is Higginson? |
30970 | Now, child, do you grasp it?'' |
30970 | Now, do n''t you think it was rather an odd thing for an officer''s daughter to do-- to run about Germany as maid to a lady of title?'' |
30970 | Now, what do you know of him?'' |
30970 | Now, who are these people who really witnessed it?'' |
30970 | Now, why should n''t I do this-- try to sell your machines, or, rather, take orders for them, from anybody that admires them? |
30970 | Oh, that placid old gentleman in the episcopal gaiters was their father, was he? |
30970 | Oh, those silly little nickel things are ten pfennigs each, are they? |
30970 | One woman more or less-- who would notice her at Moozuffernuggar?'' |
30970 | Only going to stop a week? |
30970 | Or should I say your assistant? |
30970 | Perhaps you read Greek, then?'' |
30970 | Put my foot in it again?'' |
30970 | Ridiculous, is n''t it? |
30970 | Rum start, is n''t it?'' |
30970 | Screamingly funny, was n''t it? |
30970 | So distressing, is n''t it? |
30970 | So the only other person who knows anything at first hand about the existence of the alleged will is this person Higginson?'' |
30970 | So you''re poor Tom Cayley''s daughter, are you? |
30970 | Some small peculiarity in the shape of the letters?'' |
30970 | Still, what were we to do with him? |
30970 | Still, you''d run all the same, would n''t you?'' |
30970 | Thanks, Count; will you kindly take charge of my umbrellas? |
30970 | That does n''t sound like an Indian name, does it? |
30970 | That''s jest why I trailed you, see? |
30970 | That''s where the idea of the_ Excelsior_ comes in; see? |
30970 | The Frankfort Town Council?'' |
30970 | The Presidency? |
30970 | The ancient mountains are clearly the Rockies; can the everlasting hills be anything but the Himalayas? |
30970 | The fads, it was true, were known fads of Mr. Ashurst''s: but what sort of fads? |
30970 | The man Higginson?'' |
30970 | Then he went on:''Well, what do you say to it?'' |
30970 | Then one of them asked,''And where can man of this new so remarkable machine nearest by purchase himself make possessor?'' |
30970 | Then perhaps she would like this valise for a footstool? |
30970 | Therefore, what is the use of my stopping on here after October? |
30970 | Tillington?'' |
30970 | Tillington?'' |
30970 | Tillington?'' |
30970 | Was it his? |
30970 | Was it you, or some other person?'' |
30970 | Was n''t it real jam? |
30970 | We are all vertebrate animals; why seek to conceal the fact? |
30970 | Well, my good woman, what do you want to suggest to me?'' |
30970 | Well, what do you want now? |
30970 | Were we slowing to pass the station only? |
30970 | What can we do to aid him?'' |
30970 | What could I use as a pulley? |
30970 | What do you suppose he has done? |
30970 | What does that mean? |
30970 | What is your programme?'' |
30970 | What on earth could I answer? |
30970 | What on earth could we do? |
30970 | What on earth do you take me for? |
30970 | What on earth does it mean? |
30970 | What proof have I got of it? |
30970 | What the dickens shall I do without you at Schlangenbad?'' |
30970 | What then is our obvious destiny? |
30970 | What was I to do? |
30970 | What will you do to find one?'' |
30970 | What''s she like? |
30970 | What''s the matter with the_ Excelsior_?'' |
30970 | What''s this that''s coming?'' |
30970 | What''s your name, young woman?'' |
30970 | What,_ we_ use their beastly decimal system? |
30970 | What? |
30970 | When we found words again I drew a deep breath, and said, simply,''How did you manage to do it?'' |
30970 | When we rose to go in, Lady Georgina remarked, with emphasis,''Of course, Harold, you''ll come and take up your diggings at our hotel?'' |
30970 | When? |
30970 | Where do you hail from, girl, that you should refuse my nephew? |
30970 | Where on earth have you seen him?'' |
30970 | Which elephant would he attack? |
30970 | Which sand? |
30970 | Which will you take, a cigar or a cocoa- nut?'' |
30970 | While I am there? |
30970 | Who are you, I''d like to know, miss, that you dare to reject him?'' |
30970 | Who do you think? |
30970 | Who on earth could have suspected such a polished gentleman? |
30970 | Who, then, at Schlangenbad could wish to avoid my notice? |
30970 | Why am I not with him? |
30970 | Why could n''t he have allowed us to go quietly through India, two simple unofficial journalistic pilgrims, in our native obscurity? |
30970 | Why could n''t she leave us alone, to feed in peace on dak- bungalow chicken, instead of sending this regal- mannered heathen to bother us? |
30970 | Why not start for Schlangenbad with the Cantankerous Old Lady? |
30970 | Why on earth has n''t he been round to see me?'' |
30970 | Why, when did you arrive? |
30970 | Why, you do n''t mean to tell me you''re not a pro- fessional?'' |
30970 | Why? |
30970 | Will you charge me with having taken-- in error-- a small tin sandwich- case-- value, elevenpence? |
30970 | With what do I connect them in the recesses of my memory? |
30970 | Would anything more happen? |
30970 | Would our own sheikh betray us? |
30970 | Would our sheikh play us false? |
30970 | Would she manage to escape them? |
30970 | Would they miss the chief''s wife before long, and follow us under arms? |
30970 | Would they suspect her motives? |
30970 | Would we walk a little way with him? |
30970 | XII THE ADVENTURE OF THE UNPROFESSIONAL DETECTIVE''Is Lady Georgina at home?'' |
30970 | Yaas, yaas, I know, she''s a doosid clevah person-- for a woman,--now is n''t she?'' |
30970 | Yet that_ k_? |
30970 | Yet what place could he fill in my life and Elsie''s? |
30970 | You are a lady, I believe; an officer''s daughter, you told us; educated at Girton?'' |
30970 | You can follow on the machine?'' |
30970 | You decline it? |
30970 | You doubt my word when I say that miladi has sent me?'' |
30970 | You go up and say to them,"Why not investigate? |
30970 | You have been to Girton, have n''t you? |
30970 | You have the tickets, I trust? |
30970 | You introduced yourself to Lady Georgina Fawley, I believe, quite casually, on a seat in Kensington Gardens?'' |
30970 | You know the number, ma''am?'' |
30970 | You promised to marry him conditionally upon the result of Mr. Ashurst''s testamentary dispositions?'' |
30970 | You speak Greek, of course; but how about German?'' |
30970 | You will not desert me?'' |
30970 | You wo n''t go away and leave me? |
30970 | You write shorthand, do n''t you?'' |
30970 | You''ve heard me talk of poor Tom Cayley, Harold? |
30970 | You_ are_ a lady, child, and you could n''t help being one; why trouble to be_ like_ what nature made you? |
30970 | Yours?'' |
30970 | [ Illustration: HAROLD, YOU VIPER, WHAT DO YOU MEAN BY TRYING TO AVOID ME?] |
30970 | [ Illustration: HOW FAR AHEAD THE FIRST MAN?] |
30970 | [ Illustration: I MAY STAY, MAYN''T I?] |
30970 | [ Illustration: THAT SUCCEEDS? |
30970 | [ Illustration: WASN''T FRA DIAVOLO ALSO A COMPOSAH?] |
30970 | [ Illustration: WHO''S YOUR BLACK FRIEND?] |
30970 | [ Illustration: YOU WISHED TO SEE ME, SIR?] |
30970 | _ Are_ you going to produce him?'' |
30970 | _ Are_ you prepared to consider it?'' |
30970 | _ Ca n''t_ you manage it somehow?'' |
30970 | _ Have_ you secured that_ coupé_ at Ostend?'' |
30970 | _ Who_ put the forged will in Mr. Ashurst''s desk? |
30970 | _ You''re_ not anybody''s grandmother, are you?'' |
30970 | and those_ s_''s? |
30970 | was_ this_ the Filippo Lippi, the Michael Angelo I dreamed of? |
30970 | you there, Engländerin?'' |
56961 | A message? 56961 Am I to see Miss Underwood this morning?" |
56961 | An Indian basket, is n''t it? 56961 And Miss Hadley?" |
56961 | And Selby was one of them? |
56961 | And baskets? |
56961 | And did you tamper with my medicines, Ben? |
56961 | And his family consists of--? |
56961 | And if I do mind? |
56961 | And my watch- chain? 56961 And so you want to be on the field of battle?" |
56961 | And then when you got into the hall, what was it that called your attention to your father''s room? 56961 And they are coming this evening?" |
56961 | And what of my family? |
56961 | And you heard no noise of any one entering the house or leaving it? |
56961 | And you really remember back to those days? 56961 And you went directly up to your room?" |
56961 | And you wo n''t take me into your confidence? |
56961 | Any city ordinance against it? |
56961 | Anything else? 56961 Anything queer about her?" |
56961 | Are n''t there some more tenable hypotheses that you have overlooked? 56961 Are n''t you going to tell, yourself?" |
56961 | Are there any Indians living in or near town? |
56961 | Are there any specific charges against them? |
56961 | Are you Ben Bussey? |
56961 | Assault? 56961 Being knotted in among the lilac bushes for safe keeping? |
56961 | Ben Bussey? |
56961 | Ben, you say? 56961 But how? |
56961 | But if it were not for that,--am I the sort of girl that she would be apt to like? |
56961 | But it is signed, is n''t it? |
56961 | But not that Henry would seem to be the responsible person? |
56961 | But not wise? |
56961 | But the point is, is everything yours that you think is? |
56961 | But they ca n''t connect father with this, can they? |
56961 | But why should any one wish to? |
56961 | But you are going on with me, are n''t you? |
56961 | But you are positive that he did n''t give it to you and that you did n''t unconsciously drop it into your own pocket? |
56961 | But you would n''t let that frighten you into silence, when your word would mean so much to him? |
56961 | But your face--? |
56961 | But, Rachel,--for heaven''s sake, what do you mean? 56961 But-- where is Henry?" |
56961 | Can Selby shoot? |
56961 | Can they speak English? |
56961 | Can you tell me if this is where Dr. Underwood lives? |
56961 | Can you tell me where to find the Agent? |
56961 | Counsel? 56961 Did Selby learn how to make baskets like Ehimmeshunka?" |
56961 | Did he say anything? |
56961 | Did he send you? |
56961 | Did he take any interest in Indian basketmaking? |
56961 | Did it never occur to you that Henry and Selby hated each other so bitterly because they both cared for Miss Hadley? |
56961 | Did it sound like a cry for help? |
56961 | Did n''t the police investigate them? |
56961 | Did n''t you see him at all? 56961 Did n''t you think it was time?" |
56961 | Did something fix that fact in your memory? |
56961 | Did you come here to look for him? |
56961 | Did you gather that from my letters? |
56961 | Did you get any of the original papers? 56961 Did you get any satisfaction out of your conversation?" |
56961 | Did you make any attempt to find out how the advertisement came to the paper, Doctor? |
56961 | Did you make that basket? |
56961 | Did you notice what he did with it,--whether he gave it to your father, or left it on the mantel, or anywhere else? |
56961 | Did you see him come in? |
56961 | Did you tell him that you had just left Mr. Underwood in the garden last night? |
56961 | Did you touch the bottle I had prepared for old man Means? |
56961 | Did you use all of it? |
56961 | Did you want something? |
56961 | Did you want to tell me something? |
56961 | Do I have to have one? |
56961 | Do the people consider that Selby is justified in his charges? |
56961 | Do you always use that sort of a pencil? |
56961 | Do you find any market for your carving? |
56961 | Do you happen to have one of those handbills you speak of about? |
56961 | Do you hear that, Ben? 56961 Do you know where Dr. Underwood lives?" |
56961 | Do you mean that I am lying? |
56961 | Do you mean your promise to Philip? |
56961 | Do you suppose Dr. Burton wanted that hot water to meliorate the temperature of the room? 56961 Do you think that if Dr. Underwood had had such an incriminating piece of evidence he would have kept it instead of destroying it? |
56961 | Do you think there will be anything more than talk? 56961 Do you wish me to arrest Henry Underwood?" |
56961 | Does Henry understand that he is to be watched? |
56961 | Does Mrs. Overman have the same feeling about it? |
56961 | Does Selby come here with his orders? |
56961 | Does her habit of eavesdropping suggest nothing to you but idle curiosity? |
56961 | Does n''t it seem curious that the knife was only discovered now, considering how many people have been back and forth over the place all forenoon? |
56961 | Does your brother know it? |
56961 | Engaged? 56961 Goes free?" |
56961 | Had it crawled in by itself? |
56961 | Had you been asleep? |
56961 | Had you been in your room long? |
56961 | Has Philip nothing to say on the subject himself? |
56961 | Have you a Blue Book? |
56961 | Have you an enemy, then? |
56961 | Have you any enemies? 56961 Have you any ground for that opinion, beyond an optimistic disposition and a natural desire to spare the family of your patient?" |
56961 | Have you anything to say to me? |
56961 | Have you heard from Philip lately? 56961 Have you made any arrangement for counsel?" |
56961 | Have you searched yourself? |
56961 | He could n''t own that, could he? |
56961 | He was n''t great for much of anything else, was he? |
56961 | Henry, where have you been tonight? 56961 Henry, will you see the gentlemen to the door?" |
56961 | Henry? 56961 Henry? |
56961 | Here? 56961 How are you, Bussey? |
56961 | How can I tell? |
56961 | How can they believe it? |
56961 | How could I see, with my eyes tied up? |
56961 | How dare you let yourself go down like that? |
56961 | How did he get out? 56961 How did it come to be under the Sprigg ruins? |
56961 | How did they live? 56961 How did you get into my room?" |
56961 | How do you do, Mrs. Bussey? 56961 How do you know?" |
56961 | How does he do it? |
56961 | How is my patient? |
56961 | How is your cut finger? 56961 How long have you been doing this sort of thing?" |
56961 | How long is it necessary to know a person before falling in love? |
56961 | How much did you hear? |
56961 | How old a man is the doctor? |
56961 | How old was Henry at that time? |
56961 | How so? 56961 How would Washitonka know it, if I had?" |
56961 | How would we have got Ben down from that second floor where he lies like a log, if the house had gone? |
56961 | I am glad that he is better, but why did n''t he come with you, instead of going across the water? |
56961 | I hope nothing has,said Burton abruptly,"--but--""But what?" |
56961 | I? |
56961 | If Dr. Underwood did n''t do it, who did? 56961 If I succeed, will you have a different answer to send to Philip?" |
56961 | In America, the families of the high contracting parties come in only for secondary consideration, do n''t they? |
56961 | In practice? |
56961 | In the name of wonder, why not? |
56961 | Is Miss Underwood at home? |
56961 | Is Philip with you? |
56961 | Is Selby an old friend of yours? |
56961 | Is Selby one of them? |
56961 | Is a big man necessary if the case is to turn on facts? 56961 Is he fond of the place,--Oversite? |
56961 | Is it beyond question that it is Henry''s? |
56961 | Is it possible that it really is-- Ben Bussey? |
56961 | Is it possible that she is still friendly to Selby? |
56961 | Is it pure humanitarianism? |
56961 | Is she contemptuous of those who do not dress exquisitely? 56961 Is she dark?" |
56961 | Is she so much the savage that she admires him the more for striking her? |
56961 | Is that chain yours? |
56961 | Is that evidence or is n''t it? 56961 Is that outside door locked at night?" |
56961 | Is that work you are doing an order? |
56961 | Is there any least possibility of your caring for me? 56961 Is there any one else more likely?" |
56961 | Is there anything peculiar about him? |
56961 | Is there some one you would prefer? |
56961 | Is this Dr. Underwood''s house? |
56961 | Is your custom in the matter generally known? |
56961 | It was the same knife you used to pry up the hearthstone with, the evening that your comrades(??) 56961 It was the same knife you used to pry up the hearthstone with, the evening that your comrades(??) |
56961 | It was to please her, rather than Philip, that you came here? |
56961 | Just for instance,--does Selby know? |
56961 | Looking at my Indian things? |
56961 | Makes what worse? |
56961 | May I come in? |
56961 | May I venture a word? 56961 Meaning me?" |
56961 | Miss Underwood belongs to the doctor''s family then, does she? |
56961 | Mr. Underwood came here last night to see you, did n''t he? |
56961 | Mrs. Bussey, may I trouble you to bring some more hot water? 56961 Must I see her?" |
56961 | My things? 56961 Not the hold- up?" |
56961 | Not your brother? |
56961 | Now do you see? |
56961 | Now what''ll we do? 56961 Of what?" |
56961 | Oh, Lord, what will happen to me if I do? |
56961 | Oh, ca n''t I? |
56961 | Oh, doctor, doctor, for the love of heaven what have you been in, now? 56961 Oh, why did n''t you take me up?" |
56961 | Or write anything? |
56961 | Other baskets, too, did n''t they? 56961 Perhaps you did n''t know what an outcast I am,--or did you?" |
56961 | Poor papa, does it hurt? |
56961 | Professional rivals? |
56961 | Really? |
56961 | Right here? 56961 Risk? |
56961 | Selby? |
56961 | Still unable to bear moving? |
56961 | Suppose I do n''t agree with you? |
56961 | Suppose I just do n''t play? |
56961 | Take me up? 56961 That is,--if their name were cleared? |
56961 | That was before the Indians were put on a Reservation, was n''t it? |
56961 | That was n''t the first time he had come, though, was it? 56961 That''s all I am to know?" |
56961 | That''s what you have to say, is it? 56961 The back hall that runs by the door of the surgery?" |
56961 | The man that struck you? |
56961 | Then Ben would be likely to know whether Selby learned weaving from the Indians, would n''t he? |
56961 | Then how about me? 56961 Then this is goodbye?" |
56961 | Then you absolutely refuse to give me any help? |
56961 | Then you do n''t love Philip? |
56961 | Then you have found something? |
56961 | Then you know nothing of the personal history of Washitonka or who his friends are? |
56961 | Then you really have no suspicion to better my own? |
56961 | Then you think Miss Underwood overstates the case? |
56961 | There was something more than these anonymous letters, then? |
56961 | There, does n''t that begin to feel more comfortable? |
56961 | These have been distributed generally? |
56961 | This evening? |
56961 | Those old tricks that we all laid up against Henry,--did you do that, too? |
56961 | Time for what? |
56961 | Was any one hurt? |
56961 | Was anything done about investigating it? |
56961 | Was it proved against him? |
56961 | Was that when you were with Selby? |
56961 | Was the baby lost? |
56961 | Was the fire incendiary? |
56961 | Was there a light in the room? |
56961 | Was there any talk of-- arrest? |
56961 | Well, Henry Underwood has n''t sprained an ankle, has he? |
56961 | Well, have you made ready for them? |
56961 | Well, then, why does Selby hate your brother? |
56961 | Well, what next? |
56961 | Well, what of it? |
56961 | Well, what of it? |
56961 | Well? |
56961 | Well? |
56961 | Were the orders received by mail, as in the other cases? |
56961 | Were there any accusations of the other members of the family? |
56961 | Were you? |
56961 | What about that basket? 56961 What am I arrested for?" |
56961 | What am I to think of this? |
56961 | What are you waiting for, Higgins? |
56961 | What business is it of yours? |
56961 | What can we do? 56961 What did he mean by saying I had a charmed life?" |
56961 | What did you do with it? |
56961 | What did you do with the rest,--the ball? |
56961 | What difference does it make about these people? 56961 What do I know about it? |
56961 | What do you know about Ben Bussey? |
56961 | What do you know yourself about these people? |
56961 | What do you mean by a search, if I may ask? |
56961 | What do you mean by bringing his name in? |
56961 | What do you mean? |
56961 | What do you mean? |
56961 | What do you think of it? |
56961 | What does Selby pay Ben Bussey for that woodcarving he buys? |
56961 | What does Selby pay you for a piece of work like that? |
56961 | What does he expect to happen? |
56961 | What does he pay for a piece of work like this? |
56961 | What does she look like? 56961 What does this mean?" |
56961 | What form does it take? |
56961 | What have you discovered? |
56961 | What have you done with Ben? |
56961 | What have you got to say about this, anyhow? |
56961 | What if I do? |
56961 | What if something happens while you are away? |
56961 | What in particular? |
56961 | What in the world is the matter? 56961 What is Ben''s attitude? |
56961 | What is he shooting at? |
56961 | What is it for? |
56961 | What is it? 56961 What is it?" |
56961 | What is it? |
56961 | What is the matter? |
56961 | What kid? |
56961 | What made you say_ to_ Selby, instead of of, by, for, or from Selby? |
56961 | What makes you laugh? |
56961 | What makes you think anything could have happened to Selby? |
56961 | What makes you think so? |
56961 | What matter about a few towels, Mrs. Bussey? 56961 What of it?" |
56961 | What of it? |
56961 | What sort of a girl are you? |
56961 | What sort of a man is Selby? |
56961 | What sort of things? |
56961 | What specific reason is there for connecting the doctor with the robbery? |
56961 | What the devil have you got to say about it? |
56961 | What then? |
56961 | What was her condition? |
56961 | What would happen if you did n''t? |
56961 | What you want, Washitonka? |
56961 | What''s that? 56961 What''s this about Henry''s escape?" |
56961 | What-- what do you mean? |
56961 | When did he say that? |
56961 | Where are your things, Hugh? 56961 Where did the wind come from? |
56961 | Where did you get this? |
56961 | Where did you know the Indians? |
56961 | Where was it? |
56961 | Who are you? |
56961 | Who found it? |
56961 | Who is that man,--the smaller one? |
56961 | Who left this? |
56961 | Who make this basket? |
56961 | Who received the letters? 56961 Who says I was talking to a strange man?" |
56961 | Who says so? |
56961 | Who started that fire? |
56961 | Who that is human would not wish to forget? 56961 Who tied it in?" |
56961 | Who wants me? |
56961 | Who was it gave the alarm? 56961 Why are you so provoking, Hugh?" |
56961 | Why ca n''t you? |
56961 | Why do you ask that? |
56961 | Why do you look so depressed, father? |
56961 | Why do you wish to forget? |
56961 | Why does your brother hate Selby? |
56961 | Why not? |
56961 | Why this pious gratitude? |
56961 | Why, you do n''t think Henry will shoot Selby at sight for carrying off his girl, do you? |
56961 | Why,--Henry_ has_ got away, has n''t he? |
56961 | Why? 56961 Why? |
56961 | Why? 56961 Why?" |
56961 | Why? |
56961 | Will he? |
56961 | Will you direct me to Dr. Underwood''s house now? |
56961 | Will you explain to him that I want to find out about basket- weaving? |
56961 | Will you take her my card, please? |
56961 | Would n''t any one hate him? |
56961 | Would you know if there were any one? 56961 Would you rather not?" |
56961 | Writing a book? |
56961 | Yes? |
56961 | You are a great friend of hers, are you not? |
56961 | You are going away to- morrow? 56961 You are going to see that girl?" |
56961 | You are not going on with her? |
56961 | You attach so much importance to this-- idea of yours? |
56961 | You ca n''t be sure about it? |
56961 | You came in through the window in the drawing- room, did n''t you? |
56961 | You do n''t know the house? |
56961 | You do n''t think he will ever tell that I met him in the garden? |
56961 | You do n''t, by any chance, recognize that handwriting? |
56961 | You have nothing definite, then, to go upon? |
56961 | You have seen her working, then? |
56961 | You mean he does n''t own it? |
56961 | You mean that you will help him? |
56961 | You really mean that, do n''t you? 56961 You really mean that? |
56961 | You still think--? |
56961 | You want his office? |
56961 | You will see father before you leave, will you not? |
56961 | You wished to see me? |
56961 | You wo n''t tell him that I accused him? |
56961 | You''re very clever at making speeches, are n''t you? 56961 You-- you do n''t think Mr. Underwood would tell?" |
56961 | _ No!_"Did n''t you ever love him? |
56961 | _ You_ want him, Higgins? 56961 ( Had n''t he been crazy about Ellice Avery a year before?) 56961 A little change passed over her sensitive face,--could it have been a flicker of amusement? 56961 And have you preserved them? |
56961 | And how''s Ben? |
56961 | And if you really think it wise to visit the scene of disaster this morning, will you not permit me to accompany you?" |
56961 | And scissors?" |
56961 | And she dresses exquisitely, does n''t she?" |
56961 | And then, as he was turning away, she added quickly,"How long has Mrs. Overman been a widow?" |
56961 | Any more damages?" |
56961 | Anything else?" |
56961 | Are people in High Ridge in the habit of publishing cards of this sort?" |
56961 | Are you to be in High Ridge for some time?" |
56961 | Ben Bussey?" |
56961 | Bring them here,--here to this room, do you understand?" |
56961 | Burton waited a moment, then he asked suddenly:"Did Selby give you back your knife, before he left the surgery the other night?" |
56961 | Burton''s inquiry was specific and definite: Had any white men been among them and learned how to weave baskets? |
56961 | Burton?" |
56961 | Burton?" |
56961 | Bussey?" |
56961 | But did he have occasion to hate him to the death? |
56961 | But did you do anything, and how long did it take you? |
56961 | But how are we going to make it clear to the world at large? |
56961 | But if Henry was innocent, who was the man who was so bent on making him appear guilty? |
56961 | But if in fact it had been Henry, how could he challenge him, here in his own room? |
56961 | But if it was sperrets they could a took the baby clear over to some house, could n''t they? |
56961 | But perhaps she did not notice the omission, for as she withdrew her hand from his she asked gayly:"Well, what luck?" |
56961 | But what suggests the question?" |
56961 | But what was the outcome to be? |
56961 | But why are you so curious about Selby''s Indian experiences? |
56961 | But why should he be so secretive about it? |
56961 | But you are not inquiring into his morals?" |
56961 | By hunting and fishing?" |
56961 | By the way, you did n''t have any reward for your vigil last night, did you? |
56961 | By the window or the door?" |
56961 | Can I talk to Ben Bussey?" |
56961 | Can you give no description?" |
56961 | Can you suggest how I can find it?" |
56961 | Can you tell me--?" |
56961 | Could he not buy better baskets in the stores, not to mention buckets of beautiful tin? |
56961 | Could it be that she entertained any of his own uncomfortable doubts as to the accidental character of the fire? |
56961 | Could it possibly be Selby who was eavesdropping? |
56961 | Could n''t she see that he had to present the best side of his cause? |
56961 | Did Ben object?" |
56961 | Did Rachel Overman know how heavily she was drawing on his friendship? |
56961 | Did anything come of that?" |
56961 | Did he go among them also?" |
56961 | Did he leave anything in the room?" |
56961 | Did n''t your mother tell you that Henry had cut his finger?" |
56961 | Did some one enter your bedroom?" |
56961 | Did they do any kind of work like carving?" |
56961 | Did they make no discoveries, have no theories?" |
56961 | Did they think to frighten him off? |
56961 | Did you buy a ball of stout twine at Proctor''s the other day?" |
56961 | Did you buy it of him?" |
56961 | Did you copy it or design it yourself?" |
56961 | Did you ever try to color your carvings? |
56961 | Did you hear about the rescue of the Sprigg baby?" |
56961 | Did you meet Leslie in Washington?" |
56961 | Did you put something behind it?" |
56961 | Did you read anything after you went to your room?" |
56961 | Did you rob Selby, Ben?" |
56961 | Did you tell Ben that I did n''t pay him enough for his work?" |
56961 | Did you want lunch?" |
56961 | Discharged servants, for instance?" |
56961 | Do n''t you agree with me?" |
56961 | Do n''t you consider it probable?" |
56961 | Do n''t you think you might go and see him and tell him that you believe in him? |
56961 | Do you believe in evil spirits that carry out the secret wishes of men who are-- criminally insane?" |
56961 | Do you know any one in town who could weave one for me?" |
56961 | Do you know any one in town who has a personal acquaintance with the Indians?" |
56961 | Do you know where to find some court- plaster? |
56961 | Do you mean now that it was I who robbed you?" |
56961 | Do you remember whether you gave the knife to Henry or to the doctor when you left?" |
56961 | Do you want me to go back home, or would you rather send some one to show me the way to jail?" |
56961 | Does Selby-- again, just for instance,--have access to your house?" |
56961 | Does he write those typewritten accusations on your machine while Mrs. Bussey plays sentry? |
56961 | Does that make you curious? |
56961 | Does that mean nothing?" |
56961 | Does that prove anything or does n''t it?" |
56961 | Every one of us might have been burnt to death, and where are our things and our clothes and our home, and where are we going to live? |
56961 | Exactly what feeling was it that brought such a challenging light into her eyes? |
56961 | Friends of yours? |
56961 | From whom? |
56961 | Go west? |
56961 | Had he drugged him or tied him up as Hadley had been tied, or merely and effectively killed him? |
56961 | Had he gone far enough in his hint to the doctor? |
56961 | Had it been used? |
56961 | Had she been listening at the window? |
56961 | Hadley?" |
56961 | Hadley?" |
56961 | Have they found him out? |
56961 | Have they found him out?" |
56961 | Have you had any narrow escapes?" |
56961 | Have you happened to hear of the lively times Henry gave the town some six years ago? |
56961 | Have you seen the morning paper?" |
56961 | Have you thought of that possibility?" |
56961 | He is n''t here now, is he?" |
56961 | Henry? |
56961 | Her father? |
56961 | Here? |
56961 | How could you refuse a fellow mortal a paper of tobacco when he came and took it out of your pocket? |
56961 | How did it get there?" |
56961 | How did this curious and unexpected situation affect the commission with which he was charged? |
56961 | How did you always know so surely how to strike, Ben?" |
56961 | How did you come to learn carving?" |
56961 | How did you discover what had happened to your father?" |
56961 | How did you get word to them to hold their tongue, Ben?" |
56961 | How did you guess?" |
56961 | How did you happen to be here? |
56961 | How did you happen to send to inquire?" |
56961 | How far did you-- exercise diplomacy?" |
56961 | How is that?" |
56961 | How is that?" |
56961 | How long were you in your room before you remembered about the window?" |
56961 | How much?" |
56961 | How was he going to break to Miss Underwood the news that Philip had jilted her? |
56961 | How was he to pin this irresponsible child down to the facts of the situation? |
56961 | How young does she look?" |
56961 | How?" |
56961 | How_ can_ we ever tell him?" |
56961 | I guess that''s all they had time to get in,--""Who?" |
56961 | I suppose you have heard that I have an evil temper?" |
56961 | If I went up to the Reservation, should I find any of those old neighbors of yours?" |
56961 | If he had so hidden it, would he have invited you here to search? |
56961 | If he were bound to keep it, do you think he would hide it where the first careless search would bring it to light? |
56961 | If it had been a stranger, would Henry not have been aroused by the opening and shutting of the outside door? |
56961 | If it really had been he who had been guilty of that midnight attack, was it in human power for him to conceal all trace of his consciousness? |
56961 | In High Ridge?" |
56961 | In short, does Selby supply the venom, and Mrs. Bussey the easy, ignorant and vindictive tool? |
56961 | Instead, he asked abruptly:"What made you take that letter out of my room?" |
56961 | Is he a regular physician?" |
56961 | Is he resentful?" |
56961 | Is she very beautiful?" |
56961 | Is that beside the mark? |
56961 | Is that it?" |
56961 | Is that so?" |
56961 | Is that you?" |
56961 | Is the basket rare?" |
56961 | Is there any one in town who can weave in the Indian fashion?" |
56961 | Is there anything worth getting off for, or shall we just sit and talk?" |
56961 | Is there anything you want now?" |
56961 | Is this room locked at night?" |
56961 | It was with deliberate intention that he said to the hotel clerk, after he had registered:"How far is it to Dr. Underwood''s house?" |
56961 | Jerusalem, what do you think it is now? |
56961 | Just take them off, will you?" |
56961 | Just what had he gained? |
56961 | Know the doctor?" |
56961 | Look at that, will you?" |
56961 | May I go home with you, and report the affair to him?" |
56961 | May I see it?" |
56961 | May I stay, Doctor?" |
56961 | Must I hunt Mr. Selby up, and apologize for the liveliness of my imagination?" |
56961 | Oh, father, what has happened?" |
56961 | Or about anything?" |
56961 | Or an oak, like that one, fulfilling its nature without blame and without harm?" |
56961 | Or enemies?" |
56961 | Or his mother?" |
56961 | Or is it common knowledge that you use a carpenter''s pencil?" |
56961 | Or merely tolerant?" |
56961 | Or, rather, was there a possibility that it was not Henry? |
56961 | Proctor?" |
56961 | Rachel trivial? |
56961 | Ralston handed it over to Burton, asking in an undertone:"What do you make of it?" |
56961 | Remember him?" |
56961 | Shall I burn it up?" |
56961 | Shall I let loose the dog?" |
56961 | She smiled enigmatically, and instead of answering at once she asked in turn:"Exactly what did you say to Miss Underwood? |
56961 | Should he confess himself beaten and take the afternoon train back to High Ridge? |
56961 | So will you take me up to his room at once, before he hears me or takes an alarm?" |
56961 | Some one I know?" |
56961 | Surely there is nothing to connect him with a highway robbery?" |
56961 | Take you there?" |
56961 | Taking these things together, how far am I responsible for Selby''s death?" |
56961 | That is the name of their estate at Putney?" |
56961 | Then she asked:"May he talk now?" |
56961 | Then, as an afterthought, she asked:"Is Philip with her?" |
56961 | There was no attempt to enter the surgery?" |
56961 | There were a dozen Underwoods,--a baker, a banker, a coal heaver, a doctor, a merchant,--where did Miss Leslie belong? |
56961 | They are made at the Reservation, are n''t they?" |
56961 | Underwood''s?" |
56961 | Underwood''s?" |
56961 | Underwood?" |
56961 | Underwood?" |
56961 | Was he a stranger?" |
56961 | Was he being purposely blocked in his investigation? |
56961 | Was his door open?" |
56961 | Was it Henry who was persecuting the doctor? |
56961 | Was it I, or was n''t it?" |
56961 | Was it his fancy, or did the curtain stir with something more palpable than the wind? |
56961 | Was it not straining incredulity to doubt that it was Henry who had tried to enter his room a few minutes later? |
56961 | Was it possible that Leslie Underwood''s brother was criminally insane? |
56961 | Was it possible that he connected the shot through Burton''s window, which had been talked of merely as an accident, with Selby? |
56961 | Was it possible that he was trying to make an escape? |
56961 | Was it possible that just because he hated Selby he was so scrupulous not to implicate him? |
56961 | Was there a door open?" |
56961 | Was there anything more, Miss Underwood?" |
56961 | Well, now that these polite preliminaries have passed, what is the real object of your visit?" |
56961 | Were you frightened?" |
56961 | What about?" |
56961 | What can one do?" |
56961 | What d''ye mean?" |
56961 | What difference did it make to him what sort of a look there was in the eyes of Philip''s betrothed? |
56961 | What do you do for mental exercise when you are at home?" |
56961 | What does he mean by this? |
56961 | What else, Miss Underwood?" |
56961 | What for?" |
56961 | What for?" |
56961 | What have I to commend me to her? |
56961 | What have you been doing?" |
56961 | What have you done to yourself? |
56961 | What is he afraid of?" |
56961 | What made you stir up such a hullaballoo about my merely temporary absence?" |
56961 | What made you think of him? |
56961 | What sort of people were the Underwoods, anyhow? |
56961 | What troubles you?" |
56961 | What would you have done?" |
56961 | What''s a few dollars more or less to make a fuss over? |
56961 | When did this happen?" |
56961 | Where did you get hold of them?" |
56961 | Where does that lead?" |
56961 | Where had Henry been when he came back from town at two o''clock in the night? |
56961 | Where in the world did it come from? |
56961 | Where is Philip?" |
56961 | Where is your father?" |
56961 | Where was Henry when that fire started?" |
56961 | Where''s your equanimity? |
56961 | Who are they that you should care?" |
56961 | Who comes frequently and familiarly to your house? |
56961 | Who else could use this room without exciting comment? |
56961 | Who really was behind the High Ridge mystery? |
56961 | Who that is human would not wish at times that he were a tulip, blooming in perfect beauty, and so doing all that could be asked of him? |
56961 | Who was in the back room? |
56961 | Who was this young woman after all, that she should dare to smile at Rachel Overman''s anxiety for her boy? |
56961 | Who would know your ways? |
56961 | Who would say that?" |
56961 | Who''s the other?" |
56961 | Whom did he assault, in the name of Goshen?" |
56961 | Whom was he trying to help, except the Underwoods? |
56961 | Why do n''t the parties who send out a bill like this sign it?" |
56961 | Why do you speak of him?" |
56961 | Why had he ever come? |
56961 | Why had n''t Henry Underwood had sense enough to be satisfied with his narrow escape of the night before? |
56961 | Why had n''t he called the porter in the first instance, if he felt it his affair? |
56961 | Why should any white man wish to weave baskets? |
56961 | Why should you help him? |
56961 | Why the mischief did everybody grin at the mention of Dr. Underwood''s name? |
56961 | Why was the message written this time instead of typewritten? |
56961 | Why, what sort of a man is Dr. Underwood? |
56961 | Why? |
56961 | Why?" |
56961 | Will you see my father first?" |
56961 | Will you take me to his room, or shall I hunt for it myself?" |
56961 | Wo n''t you play some more for me?" |
56961 | Wo n''t you sit at my table, to give the fiction some verisimilitude?" |
56961 | Would he wish to live there?" |
56961 | Would n''t it be better to send Ben away?" |
56961 | Would n''t it be possible to get Henry out of town? |
56961 | Would n''t you have been frightened then? |
56961 | Yet how could he have been posted? |
56961 | You are suspected of firing the house,--you know that, do n''t you?" |
56961 | You coming to visit, or are you going to write him up?" |
56961 | You do n''t think they''ll try to pot you again, do you?" |
56961 | You have never had a glimmering of an idea as to who it is that is persecuting you?" |
56961 | You mean a lawyer? |
56961 | You never saw him hanging about your house, did you, Doctor?" |
56961 | You understand?" |
56961 | You wo n''t mention that to your father, will you? |
56961 | You wo n''t object?" |
56961 | You''ve heard about the fire?" |
56961 | You, Miss Hadley? |
56961 | _ Who in High Ridge knew how to tie that peculiar knot?_ He must consult Dr. Underwood at once. |
56961 | that he had turned special pleader in the case,--but for heaven''s sake, why could n''t the girl have pretended with him for a little while? |
5405 | ''And- out? |
5405 | ''Ow much a month will you be getting for such h''engagements? |
5405 | A joke, hey? 5405 A little poker game on the way down, eh?" |
5405 | A-- WHAT? |
5405 | After lunch, shall we climb the mountain? |
5405 | Ah, you know? |
5405 | Ai n''t you goin''? |
5405 | All the way from St. Louis for a telephone call, eh? |
5405 | Am I committed? |
5405 | Am I hopeless? |
5405 | And I can come to see you now? |
5405 | And I for Ramon? 5405 And I suppose you wish me to give you back to her?" |
5405 | And all the romance is gone? |
5405 | And did you tell Mr. Cortlandt what I did? |
5405 | And had n''t you intended taking an ocean trip? |
5405 | And how about those gambling debts? |
5405 | And if I do n''t agree you will tell Mr. Garavel that I''m going to make trouble? |
5405 | And if he is n''t? |
5405 | And live off me for another week, I suppose? 5405 And now, as for you, senor?" |
5405 | And put it together again? |
5405 | And really do n''t you know anything about the Panama Canal? |
5405 | And she was-- petite? |
5405 | And small? |
5405 | And what said your female upon your proposal of marriage? |
5405 | And why not? 5405 And why not? |
5405 | And why should I not be practical? 5405 And yet there is nothing really wrong about it, is there? |
5405 | And you have never been to the tropics? |
5405 | And you married one of these Panamanicures, eh? |
5405 | And you never doubted me? |
5405 | Another thing,Kirk went on, desperately:"do you suppose that if what you believe were true I could have the inhuman nerve to come here to- night? |
5405 | Anthony? 5405 Anthony? |
5405 | Anthony? |
5405 | Any cats and dogs you''d like to have drawing salary from me? 5405 Any luck?" |
5405 | Anybody I know? |
5405 | Are n''t there any beautiful ladies left? |
5405 | Are you absolutely broke? |
5405 | Are you diplomatting now? |
5405 | Are you helping to dig this canal? |
5405 | Are you joking? |
5405 | Are you out of breath that you stop so soon? |
5405 | Are you really afraid to do anything? |
5405 | Are you sure? |
5405 | Are you sure? |
5405 | As for to- night, do you attribute any meaning to my father''s request that you dine with us? |
5405 | At twenty- five cents a word? 5405 Back to town, I think,"Edith told him,"And you?" |
5405 | But could he win? 5405 But do n''t you want to have a voice in your own affairs?" |
5405 | But do you think it was wise for you to come? |
5405 | But how about the girl who is to sour the syrup of my being and make it ferment? |
5405 | But how will you handle Anthony? |
5405 | But surely you were called in time? |
5405 | But those men who swore they saw me? |
5405 | But what has all this to do with my coming to see you? |
5405 | But why did you select such a ridiculous combination? 5405 But why do n''t they try me or let me get bail? |
5405 | But you do n''t bet on all these miraculous whales and things? |
5405 | But, Kirk, what about me? |
5405 | But-- isn''t she beautiful? |
5405 | But-- suppose you should not clear yourself of this-- murder-- would you wish to drag down my daughter''s name? |
5405 | By the way, what is her name? |
5405 | By- the- way, when are you going into business with him? |
5405 | Ca n''t you guess? |
5405 | Ca n''t you understand that such obligations do n''t exist between friends? 5405 Can I get you something, sir-- a little champagne, perhaps, to settle your stomach?" |
5405 | Could n''t you telephone? |
5405 | D''jou hit him? |
5405 | D''you know what that unnatural parent did? |
5405 | DO I? 5405 Delays to trains, I suppose?" |
5405 | Did I hurt you? |
5405 | Did he claim that? |
5405 | Did he tell the truth? 5405 Did n''t I read that he had been sent to jail recently?" |
5405 | Did n''t he promise you the job? |
5405 | Did n''t you go away on a ship? |
5405 | Did they hurt you much? |
5405 | Did you SEE her? |
5405 | Did you buy a ticket? |
5405 | Did you ever hear him swear? |
5405 | Did you ever see them? |
5405 | Did you expect her to yield so tamely? |
5405 | Did you just arrive here? |
5405 | Did you know he had been maltreated in prison? |
5405 | Did you lock him in? |
5405 | Did you not trick us also? 5405 Did you see Cortlandt again after I left you?" |
5405 | Did you send Annette for me? |
5405 | Did you send for me? |
5405 | Did you stay here? |
5405 | Did you tell him I was in the affair? |
5405 | Did-- did you do all that? |
5405 | Do I look as if I were? |
5405 | Do n''t they love each other? |
5405 | Do n''t you believe I''m Kirk Anthony? |
5405 | Do n''t you know anybody? |
5405 | Do n''t you see you must stay and explain to those men? 5405 Do n''t you see-- before we could get acquainted nicely people would be talking?" |
5405 | Do n''t you think Miss Garavel is a pretty girl? |
5405 | Do n''t you think that is going a bit too far? 5405 Do you drink, Kirk?" |
5405 | Do you feel that? 5405 Do you find him so amusing?" |
5405 | Do you intend to hunt orchids to- morrow? |
5405 | Do you know the Chiquitas? |
5405 | Do you live around here? |
5405 | Do you live in Panama? |
5405 | Do you love me? |
5405 | Do you mean it? |
5405 | Do you mean that Stein is a-- detective? |
5405 | Do you mean the gentleman in thirty- two? |
5405 | Do you mean to say you do n''t love him? |
5405 | Do you promise? |
5405 | Do you realize that you ca n''t live at the Tivoli? |
5405 | Do you really want your relatives to tell you whom to meet, whom to love, and whom to marry? |
5405 | Do you speak Spanish? |
5405 | Do you think Anthony is worth it? |
5405 | Do you think I could ever give you up? |
5405 | Do you think I will raise the standard of efficiency? |
5405 | Do you think I would have come riding with you if I had? |
5405 | Do you think it would be safe? |
5405 | Do you think that is quite fair to her? 5405 Do you think they intend to leave us?" |
5405 | Do you want me to lose my job? |
5405 | Do you wish to cross the stream? |
5405 | Does n''t anybody know I''m here? |
5405 | Does that mean you wo n''t even allow me to see your daughter? |
5405 | Down in your heart do you really think so? |
5405 | Dwarf, eh? |
5405 | Eh? 5405 Eh? |
5405 | Eh? 5405 Eh? |
5405 | Embezzle? 5405 Enjoying yourself?" |
5405 | Ever see any rubber- trees? |
5405 | For instance? |
5405 | Friend of yours? |
5405 | Funny how I found you, was n''t it? |
5405 | Funny, is n''t it, how I got called down and Ramen Alfarez got fired on his account? 5405 Funny, is n''t it?" |
5405 | General Alfarez could n''t very well step in after he had publicly stepped out, could he? 5405 Gentlemen, you will be so kind as to geeve the names, yes? |
5405 | Going to work on the canal? |
5405 | Got you some games yesterday? |
5405 | Great doings, eh? 5405 H- how have they treated you, Buster?" |
5405 | Hallan? |
5405 | Has he said anything? |
5405 | Have I lost my senses? |
5405 | Have n''t you any resentment? 5405 Have you any baggage?" |
5405 | Have you been drinking? |
5405 | Have you been thinking about that girl I spoke of? |
5405 | Have you done your penance? |
5405 | Have you heard? |
5405 | He gave you that fairy tale, eh? 5405 He is, then, of blue blood?" |
5405 | He recovered, did he? 5405 He''s a worthless sort of chap, is n''t he?" |
5405 | He-- he''s alone, you say? |
5405 | Here in the hotel? |
5405 | Honest? |
5405 | How CAN you be so calm? |
5405 | How about that, Alfarez? |
5405 | How are the other boys coming on? |
5405 | How did I come aboard? |
5405 | How did it happen? |
5405 | How did you beat me home? |
5405 | How did you find out? |
5405 | How did you get here? |
5405 | How do we get in? |
5405 | How do you know? |
5405 | How does a fellow ever get acquainted with a girl down here? 5405 How far is it?" |
5405 | How is Hig-- the bony fellow? |
5405 | How is our little''stag''coming on? |
5405 | How long will it take to hear from your people? |
5405 | How much did he send? 5405 How should I know his number? |
5405 | How so? |
5405 | How so? |
5405 | How the deuce did you make it? |
5405 | How would you like an inside position? |
5405 | Huh? |
5405 | Huh? |
5405 | Huh? |
5405 | I do n''t know you, Mr.--what''s the name again? 5405 I have n''t any special yearnings in that direction, but-- what do you think about me?" |
5405 | I have seen you every day, every hour-"Indeed? |
5405 | I informed you concerning those good fortunes some time since, eh? |
5405 | I presume you consent? |
5405 | I suppose the Alfarez family is one of the first settlers-- Mayflower stock? |
5405 | I suppose they were alarmed at the hotel? |
5405 | I trust I need not insist upon seeing the prisoner? |
5405 | I will-- I mean, is that so? |
5405 | I-- I shall leave you, perhaps? |
5405 | I? 5405 I?" |
5405 | If I choose not to give up Chiq-- Miss Garavel, then what? 5405 If Ramon is n''t satisfactory to her, ought you to force her inclination?" |
5405 | If it is in my power to oblige, w''at matter the law? 5405 If there were n''t so much politics in this job, he''d be Master of Transportation of the P. R. R. That''s doing pretty well, is n''t it? |
5405 | If you have cut him off, why do you care what becomes of him? |
5405 | In a hurry to get to Colon? |
5405 | In other words, you intend to make it hot for me, eh? |
5405 | In what capacity is he employed, may I ask? |
5405 | In what way may I be of service to you? |
5405 | In what way? |
5405 | Indeed, why should I imagine such things? |
5405 | Indeed? |
5405 | Is he badly hurt? |
5405 | Is he short and thick- set? |
5405 | Is he your father? |
5405 | Is he, then, an old friend? |
5405 | Is it Ramon Alfarez? |
5405 | Is it because-- I''m with you? |
5405 | Is it really signed, sealed, stamped, and delivered in the presence of? |
5405 | Is it that I am dreaming? |
5405 | Is she growing rebellious? |
5405 | Is that why you do n''t want to apply there? |
5405 | Is that your first or last name? |
5405 | Is there a good one handy? |
5405 | Is there more than one? |
5405 | Is there no-- girl, for instance? 5405 Is this the best you''ll do for me?" |
5405 | It does wake up your patriotism, does n''t it? 5405 It''s awful to marry somebody you do n''t like,"he declared, with such earnest conviction that she inquired, quickly:"Ah, then are you married?" |
5405 | Joke? 5405 Kirk, I used to think you were an unusually forward young man, but you''re not very worldly, are you?" |
5405 | Know what? |
5405 | Letter? 5405 Line?" |
5405 | Lottery ticket, eh? |
5405 | Love her? |
5405 | May I have a word with you, sir? |
5405 | May I inquire the cause of this-- estrangement? |
5405 | May I sit beside you, then? 5405 Maybe you intended to take some other ship?" |
5405 | Me? |
5405 | Mistake? |
5405 | Money? |
5405 | More money? 5405 Must have coin in advance, eh?" |
5405 | My dear boy, do you suppose Mrs. Stephen Cortlandt cares what these people say? |
5405 | My friend does not possess a card at the moment, eh? |
5405 | My what? |
5405 | Never? 5405 Night? |
5405 | No? 5405 No? |
5405 | Not midnight? 5405 Not very bad?" |
5405 | Nothing is to be said until Miss Gar-- Mrs. Anthony gives the word; you understand? 5405 Now what do you intend doing?" |
5405 | Now, speaking as one gentleman to another, do you happen to know where we can get a hand- out? |
5405 | Of course not, but--"What? |
5405 | Of course you know the general lay- out? |
5405 | Of course, you will live beyond your salary? |
5405 | Oh, now, you wo n''t cut me out just because I pull bell- cords and you pull diplomatic wires? 5405 Oh, will you?" |
5405 | Or is it because of our row? |
5405 | Overslept? 5405 Panama is in Central America or Mexico or somewhere, is n''t it?" |
5405 | Perhaps I can help you to find your way, senor? |
5405 | Perhaps you had better have the doctor? |
5405 | Praise God, boss, we are''appy gentlemen to- day, are we not? |
5405 | Pretty spot, is n''t it? 5405 Proof? |
5405 | Proof? |
5405 | Provided---"What? |
5405 | Rather a long drive, is n''t it? |
5405 | Really, did that effect it? |
5405 | Really, is n''t there? |
5405 | Really, now, could n''t you bring yourself to marry a chap who was n''t aristocratic, rich, and handsome? 5405 Really? |
5405 | Really? |
5405 | Really? |
5405 | Really? |
5405 | Ride back and forth every day? |
5405 | Right? 5405 Row, eh?" |
5405 | Rubber velvet? |
5405 | Runnels did n''t offer you that sort of position? |
5405 | Say, why did you do that? |
5405 | See here, Miss Chiquita, may I call on you? |
5405 | Send the purser to me, will you? 5405 Senor Anthony, it is?" |
5405 | Seriously, now, do n''t you really---? |
5405 | Shall I come again to- morrow? |
5405 | She''s a corker, is n''t she? |
5405 | She''s the dearest thing I ever saw; and was n''t she game? 5405 So Clifford is your man?" |
5405 | So I must stand up all the way to Panama, eh? |
5405 | So soon? |
5405 | So, your engagement to Miss Garavel is broken? |
5405 | Still politics, I suppose? |
5405 | Suppose I do n''t choose to accept what it pleases people to hand me? |
5405 | Suppose I should show you a family tree that you could n''t throw a stone over? |
5405 | Swam ashore to rest, I suppose? |
5405 | Taboga? |
5405 | Tell me first why I must give you up? |
5405 | That''s Chiriqui Prison, is n''t it? |
5405 | That''s awfully-- nice,gasped Anthony;"but-- er-- what''s the idea?" |
5405 | That''s rather rough on them, is n''t it? |
5405 | The bugs? |
5405 | The queen? |
5405 | The senor is reech man''s son, eh? 5405 The what?" |
5405 | The work, too? |
5405 | Then he''s coming later? |
5405 | Then how did I get this ticket? |
5405 | Then it''s really coming off? 5405 Then of course you know?" |
5405 | Then they have patched up a truce with Alfarez? 5405 Then this would seem to end our fine hopes, eh?" |
5405 | Then you WILL let her go with us? |
5405 | Then you also are a great man, eh? |
5405 | Then you do n''t know? |
5405 | Then you have lost your money as well as your baggage and your identity? |
5405 | Then you have proof? |
5405 | Then you have seen the Colonel? |
5405 | Then you- you ca n''t send a message-- possibly? |
5405 | There is nothing else? |
5405 | They were looking for a short cut to the East Indies, were n''t they? |
5405 | Thief, eh? 5405 This quarrel you speak of? |
5405 | This? 5405 This?" |
5405 | Tip h''off? 5405 To- morrow?" |
5405 | W''at is your bizness? |
5405 | W''at is your name? |
5405 | W''ere do you leeve-- w''at''otel? |
5405 | WAS I? |
5405 | WHAT? 5405 WHAT?" |
5405 | WHO IS IT? |
5405 | Wanted to rob my old friend, Mr.--What''s his name? |
5405 | Was she wearing a denim dress when you saw her? |
5405 | Well, SHE''S all white, and I want you to find her to- day-- TO- DAY, understand? 5405 Well, are you equal to it?" |
5405 | Well, well, I suppose your mother taught you to speak English? |
5405 | Well, what can you offer? 5405 Well, what do you think of that? |
5405 | Well, what has a vivid dead whale to do with me? |
5405 | Well? |
5405 | Well? |
5405 | Wellar? 5405 Wha''for?" |
5405 | What about that? 5405 What ails you these last few weeks? |
5405 | What ails you, Stephen? |
5405 | What am I arrested for? |
5405 | What are some of the other leading families? |
5405 | What are they good for? |
5405 | What are you doing here? |
5405 | What are you doing? |
5405 | What can you do? |
5405 | What canal? 5405 What d''you think he wrote me, Mrs. Cortlandt? |
5405 | What did he say when you reported? |
5405 | What did you call me? |
5405 | What difference would that make, if the young people love each other? |
5405 | What do they amount to, anyhow? 5405 What do you mean by that?" |
5405 | What do you mean by that? |
5405 | What do you mean to do? |
5405 | What do you mean? |
5405 | What do you mean? |
5405 | What do you think I said? 5405 What do you want here?" |
5405 | What do you wish me to do? |
5405 | What does a person do in that case? |
5405 | What does he look like? |
5405 | What does she look like? 5405 What for? |
5405 | What for? 5405 What for?" |
5405 | What for? |
5405 | What happened to it? |
5405 | What happened to the cathedrals and the velvet fellows and all that? |
5405 | What happened? |
5405 | What has become of Higgins? |
5405 | What has gone wrong? 5405 What has happened? |
5405 | What has happened? |
5405 | What has that to do with it? |
5405 | What has this to do with me, madame? |
5405 | What is it like? |
5405 | What is it that keeps you so busy? 5405 What is it?" |
5405 | What is it? |
5405 | What is it? |
5405 | What is it? |
5405 | What is that? |
5405 | What is your destination? |
5405 | What lake? |
5405 | What made you take it for a proper name? |
5405 | What makes you think he''ll wire you money? |
5405 | What may be a carker? |
5405 | What news? |
5405 | What ship is this-- if it is really a ship? |
5405 | What sort? |
5405 | What the devil has got into you the last few days? |
5405 | What university? |
5405 | What was the trouble? |
5405 | What we call a''bad Catholic''? |
5405 | What will you think of me? |
5405 | What''s all this trouble about? |
5405 | What''s coming off? |
5405 | What''s happened? |
5405 | What''s her name? |
5405 | What''s that? |
5405 | What''s that? |
5405 | What''s the idea? 5405 What''s the trouble?" |
5405 | What''s the use of putting it off? 5405 What''s the use of struggling? |
5405 | What, for instance? |
5405 | What? |
5405 | What? |
5405 | What? |
5405 | What? |
5405 | What? |
5405 | What? |
5405 | What? |
5405 | What? |
5405 | When a fellow has n''t any of those qualifications, then what? 5405 When are you going back to Las Savannas?" |
5405 | When did you arrive? |
5405 | When shall we tell the lad to bring us off? |
5405 | When will you learn--? |
5405 | Where are you going? |
5405 | Where did they catch him? |
5405 | Where did you go after I left you last night? |
5405 | Where do you think you are? |
5405 | Where is Chiquita? 5405 Where is that?" |
5405 | Where is the Gatun dam I''ve heard so much about? |
5405 | Where shall we go? |
5405 | Where''d you get it? |
5405 | Where''s Edith? |
5405 | Where''s that girl? |
5405 | Where? |
5405 | Where? |
5405 | Which one? |
5405 | Which way? |
5405 | While you were in jail? |
5405 | Who is Colonel Jolson? |
5405 | Who is he? |
5405 | Who made me a manikin? |
5405 | Who said so? |
5405 | Who would have expected you to be here? |
5405 | Who--? |
5405 | Who? |
5405 | Who? |
5405 | Whose room is this? |
5405 | Why are you looking at me like that? 5405 Why did n''t he notify me at once? |
5405 | Why did n''t you hide under the waterfall? |
5405 | Why did n''t you say so? |
5405 | Why do n''t somebody make him work? |
5405 | Why do n''t they send him up? |
5405 | Why do n''t you ask for a job? |
5405 | Why do n''t you quit? |
5405 | Why do n''t you rejoice? 5405 Why do n''t you send him away where he''ll have to rustle? |
5405 | Why do n''t you stay in Panama and go to work? |
5405 | Why do you take pleasure in annoying me? |
5405 | Why do you think he was crazy? |
5405 | Why do you want him? |
5405 | Why do you want this orchid? |
5405 | Why does the whole family sit around and watch me? 5405 Why have you come to me?" |
5405 | Why in the world did n''t you say so? |
5405 | Why not, I''d like to know? |
5405 | Why not? 5405 Why not?" |
5405 | Why poor? |
5405 | Why should I? |
5405 | Why the devil do n''t they get closer? |
5405 | Why, I thought old man Alfarez--"It seems your country does not like him because he hates Americans- see? 5405 Why, do you think, I made a man of you? |
5405 | Why-- why did you do this, senor? |
5405 | Why? 5405 Why?" |
5405 | Why? |
5405 | Will he die? |
5405 | Will they really finish it? 5405 Will you cable my father?" |
5405 | Will you catch it for talking to me? |
5405 | Will you come to the dance to- morrow night? |
5405 | Will you dance with me? |
5405 | Will you go over to Panama City, or will you stay in Colon? |
5405 | Will you h''accost her h''openly? |
5405 | Will you introduce me to the best hotel in town? 5405 Will you lend me enough money to cable again?" |
5405 | Will you promise not to whisk yourself away if I look down? |
5405 | Will you stand for that? 5405 Will you take me to a telephone?" |
5405 | Will you teach me? 5405 Will you tell some of the men at the Wayfarers that I''m here?" |
5405 | Wo n''t you go to your room and let me call a doctor? |
5405 | Woman, eh? |
5405 | Women are apt to be jealous, are n''t they, Runnels? 5405 Work? |
5405 | Working, hey? 5405 Would he accept?" |
5405 | Would you do me a favor, Master h''Auntony? |
5405 | Would you like to join? |
5405 | Would you like to play a joke on him? |
5405 | Would you retire in favor of some one who could afford it? |
5405 | YOU do n''t believe I did-- that? |
5405 | You are Keerk''s father, yes? 5405 You are joking, are you not?" |
5405 | You are, then, a Catholic? |
5405 | You came, did n''t you? |
5405 | You did not know it was the cow- nettle, eh? |
5405 | You do n''t object to such gambling? |
5405 | You do n''t really call it luck, do you? |
5405 | You do not like him? |
5405 | You don''work on the Canal? |
5405 | You expect, then, to prove your innocence easily? |
5405 | You girls down here have a pretty tough time of it; you are guarded pretty closely, are n''t you? |
5405 | You have effected a lease of the Martinez home, I believe? |
5405 | You heard what those two men testified? |
5405 | You know all the circumstances, of course? |
5405 | You know what it means? |
5405 | You mean Miss Garavel? |
5405 | You mean, then, that he shot himself? |
5405 | You remember, for instance, I told you there was one man at Taboga whom I did not wish to see? |
5405 | You riffuse? |
5405 | You say he''s below? |
5405 | You say some one is ill? |
5405 | You say you did n''t know, then what about that afternoon in the jungle? 5405 You say you were sick afterward?" |
5405 | You see, I have n''t given up my horse in spite of your neglect,she said, as she gave him her hand,"You got my note?" |
5405 | You think I will forget easily? 5405 You told him to wait?" |
5405 | You''re a rich man, eh? 5405 You''re not going out again in the heat, sir?" |
5405 | You''re not going to lecture me again? 5405 You''re not still thinking of-- that night at Taboga? |
5405 | You''ve been nothing of the sort, and who is Stephanie? |
5405 | You, of course, know that there is opposition to him? |
5405 | Your father is-- many times a millionaire, is n''t he? |
5405 | Your promotion came just in time, did n''t it? 5405 _ I_? |
5405 | 2?" |
5405 | A delicate way to acknowledge a debt, eh?" |
5405 | A terrible thing, was it not, this death of our good friend? |
5405 | After a pause he said:"May I tell him you said so?" |
5405 | After all, why not invite the young fellow to his house? |
5405 | After that will come-- who knows what? |
5405 | Alfarez''s countenance was sallow as he inquired:"Does Senor Ant''ony discover our climate to be still agreeable?" |
5405 | Am I so unattractive that you really want to rush off after those horses?" |
5405 | And now will you take me to him?" |
5405 | And where is Ramon?" |
5405 | And yours?" |
5405 | Anthony? |
5405 | Anthony?" |
5405 | Anthony?" |
5405 | Anthony?" |
5405 | Anthony?" |
5405 | Anthony?" |
5405 | Anthony?" |
5405 | Anthony?" |
5405 | Are n''t you my wife?" |
5405 | Are you Mr. Locke, sir?" |
5405 | Are you going to stay here until morning?" |
5405 | Are you going?" |
5405 | Are you ready?" |
5405 | Are you related?" |
5405 | Are you sick?" |
5405 | Are you the clerk?" |
5405 | Are you''behind the ribbons''at the local Wanamaker''s?" |
5405 | At last he heard the door open and a voice inquire:"Did you ring, sir?" |
5405 | At length, after clearing his throat impressively, the interpreter began again:"Of course, you have been expecting this visit, senor?" |
5405 | Because a woman marries without love, is it right for her to forego love all her life? |
5405 | Besides, who''s going to know?" |
5405 | Besides, would such a strangely impassive person resent any little indiscretion in which his wife might choose to indulge? |
5405 | Bot,''ow am I reward for those neglec''? |
5405 | But I must have some luggage-- a fellow would n''t make a trip like this without baggage, would he?" |
5405 | But do you suppose I would allow my great ambition to be thwarted by the whim of a girl-- to be upset by a stranger''s smile? |
5405 | But do you think I can get away with it?" |
5405 | But honestly now, did n''t you WANT to come?" |
5405 | But is it true that Garavel is practically elected?" |
5405 | But what are promises? |
5405 | But what has all that to do with my sleeping aboard the Santa Cruz?" |
5405 | But what is coming to pahss?" |
5405 | But why did n''t she come? |
5405 | But why do you tell me now, when the morning will do just as well? |
5405 | But why select her of all people? |
5405 | But why this consuming curiosity? |
5405 | But, Stephanie, tell me what it is all about?" |
5405 | But-- you both got more than you bargained for, did n''t you?" |
5405 | By- the- way, do you happen to remember that he''s to be our guest for supper to- morrow night? |
5405 | By- the- way, do you notice the thickness of those walls? |
5405 | By- the- way, this canal affair is something new, is n''t it?" |
5405 | By- the- way, what is your name?" |
5405 | By- the- way, what size collar do you wear?" |
5405 | By- the- way-- pardon the personal nature of the question-- but-- what size shirt do you wear?" |
5405 | Ca n''t you guess? |
5405 | Ca n''t you lead me to a banana vine or a breadfruit bakery? |
5405 | Ca n''t you see we must make haste while the curtain is down?" |
5405 | Ca n''t you show me a tree where we can sit and wait for something to drop?" |
5405 | Call the chief or the man in charge, will you? |
5405 | Can a Garavel be President of the Republic with his daughter we d to a murderer?" |
5405 | Can you? |
5405 | Come, are you on?" |
5405 | Come, then, must I insolt you further?" |
5405 | Cortlandt''s a nice fellow-- but-- Did you really think that she''d let you start at the bottom?" |
5405 | Cortlandt''s voice was thoroughly non- committal as he inquired:"Where have you been keeping yourself?" |
5405 | Cortlandt?" |
5405 | Cortlandt?" |
5405 | Cortlandt?" |
5405 | Could he gain the favor of Chiquita''s father under false pretences? |
5405 | Could it be one of Higgins''s senseless pranks, or was there something deeper, more sinister behind it? |
5405 | Could it be that he had really blundered irretrievably? |
5405 | Could n''t you FEEL it?" |
5405 | Could n''t you tell then? |
5405 | Could you h''arrange to h''ahsk those fatal questions h''adjoining the window so that I might h''overhear?" |
5405 | Did n''t I tell you''s old man puts up reg''lar? |
5405 | Did n''t you know I was looking for you? |
5405 | Did n''t you realize what you were doing?" |
5405 | Did n''t you think it strange that I should be the one to discover you? |
5405 | Did you call me out to hear this news?" |
5405 | Did you ever hear of Darwin K. Anthony, of Albany, New York?" |
5405 | Did you ever stop to think how brave those men must have been who first went venturing into unknown seas in their little wooden boats?" |
5405 | Did you ever try rising at five- thirty-- in the morning, I mean? |
5405 | Did you make it?" |
5405 | Did you not use the General, your father, to make me give up the man I love? |
5405 | Did you see to- night''s paper?" |
5405 | Did you think you had made good by your own efforts?" |
5405 | Do YOU understand what it means, eh? |
5405 | Do n''t I know anything? |
5405 | Do n''t you see?" |
5405 | Do n''t you see?" |
5405 | Do n''t you understand, I love you-- love you? |
5405 | Do n''t you understand? |
5405 | Do n''t you understand?" |
5405 | Do n''t you understand?" |
5405 | Do n''t you want to see''em? |
5405 | Do you fear to climb so high?" |
5405 | Do you get me? |
5405 | Do you know it?" |
5405 | Do you know the governor?" |
5405 | Do you know what it is which you are fighting from your neck?" |
5405 | Do you know what you are saying?" |
5405 | Do you know you''ve made it rather hard for me staying away all this time?" |
5405 | Do you know, I''m going to nestle up to your father and make him like me?" |
5405 | Do you promise?" |
5405 | Do you realize that this soil will raise sugar- cane the size of your-- of my-- thigh, and once you plant it you ca n''t keep it cut out?" |
5405 | Do you realize the skyrockety nature of your progress, young man? |
5405 | Do you realize what it means-- if-- well, if he were mistaken? |
5405 | Do you realize what that means to a fellow? |
5405 | Do you really mean it?" |
5405 | Do you remember two nights ago? |
5405 | Do you see that?" |
5405 | Do you see what an awful light it puts me in? |
5405 | Do you see?" |
5405 | Do you think that was right? |
5405 | Do you think you could hold down my job?" |
5405 | Do you understand what that means? |
5405 | Do you understand? |
5405 | Do you want to know what I think of you, Mr.--Anthony Locke?" |
5405 | Does Mr. Cortlandt know how I am fixed?" |
5405 | Does it interest you?" |
5405 | Does it mean that you''ll forgive me?" |
5405 | Does that penetrate your teakwood dome? |
5405 | Does your ivory cue- ball encompass that thought?" |
5405 | Embezzler, eh? |
5405 | Even if he did suspect, what then? |
5405 | Even now pure mischief looked out of her eyes as she asked:"Have you rested enough to attack the orchid?" |
5405 | Ever been to New Haven? |
5405 | Ever hear of a fellow called Locke?" |
5405 | Ever you been in love with a female, sar?" |
5405 | Feeling some menace in their coming, Kirk, who had seated himself dejectedly, arose to ask:"What''s coming off?" |
5405 | For a long time she made no reply, but at last she said:"Do you think I ought ever to see you again after this?" |
5405 | For years I have longed to show myself a man, and now-- what have I done? |
5405 | Funny, is n''t it? |
5405 | Get the idea?" |
5405 | Has n''t it been whispering at my ears ever since you said it? |
5405 | Has she come?" |
5405 | Has some senorita struck your fancy?" |
5405 | Have another highball?" |
5405 | Have n''t you more than one bell- hop in this place?" |
5405 | Have you been abused?" |
5405 | Have you been ill?" |
5405 | Have you lost your head over shooting, or do n''t you care to work?" |
5405 | Have you never been in love?" |
5405 | Have you never had political aspirations?" |
5405 | Have you no pride?" |
5405 | Have you no thanks to give him?" |
5405 | Have you not learned our customs?" |
5405 | Have you?" |
5405 | He continued firm, therefore, even when Stein gibed at him good- humoredly:"I suppose it''s against your principles to drink, as well as to gamble?" |
5405 | He has his father''s gift for handling men---""You know his father?" |
5405 | He hurried toward him and inquired, breathlessly:"Have you got him?" |
5405 | He is then a t''ief?" |
5405 | He regained his feet, then warned the onlookers:"But you''ll have to keep your traps closed, understand?" |
5405 | He repeated Kirk''s words as he remembered them,"What do you think of that?" |
5405 | He said his name was Anthony and his father was a railroad president, did n''t he? |
5405 | He said- but how shall I speak of such a secret?" |
5405 | He says he has no son; is n''t that enough?" |
5405 | He turned away as if ashamed of his show of feeling, only to whirl about with the question,"Who is this''other party''?" |
5405 | He was a- box- fighter, what?" |
5405 | He''d be at sea by the time he woke up; he could n''t get back; he''d have to work; do n''t you see? |
5405 | He''s a great old party, is n''t he?" |
5405 | Hell''s bells, madam, do you think these little black people can shoot MY son? |
5405 | His old man has plenty of coin, has n''t he?" |
5405 | His place of business you will have noticed upon the water- front, perhaps?" |
5405 | Hope I do n''t shock you?" |
5405 | How am I going to ask you to marry me?" |
5405 | How are you anyhow, Kirk? |
5405 | How could human tongue make such caressing music of the harshest language on the globe? |
5405 | How dared they treat an American so, no matter what the charge? |
5405 | How did I do it? |
5405 | How did it happen?" |
5405 | How did you get up there?" |
5405 | How do I get to Panama?" |
5405 | How does he get a chance to propose?" |
5405 | How far would this fellow dare to go, he wondered? |
5405 | How goes it with you?" |
5405 | How have you been getting along with your work?" |
5405 | How in the devil had he managed to get into this mess? |
5405 | How long do you think I''d last with these people if I did that?" |
5405 | How sad that would be, eh?" |
5405 | How so? |
5405 | How then could you be interested to meet a Spanish family?" |
5405 | How will the senorita understand?--she in whose breast is awakened already an answering thrills?" |
5405 | However, let us hope that you meet some nice American girl--""Why not a senorita? |
5405 | I could n''t let him get away with that, could I? |
5405 | I do n''t dare get into trouble, do n''t you understand? |
5405 | I fear I owe you a great apology, my boy; but if I consent that you take my little girl away to your country, will that be reparation?" |
5405 | I found a place for her--""Not at the SANITARIUM?" |
5405 | I suppose if I had to hustle I could, but-- what''s the use?" |
5405 | I suppose it was a joke to impose on me?" |
5405 | I suppose there is room at the bottom, and a fellow can work up?" |
5405 | I suppose you meant it for one?" |
5405 | I suppose you ride?" |
5405 | I think it''s coming to him, do n''t you?" |
5405 | I was about to say, if she really loves him, I ca n''t make any difference; but suppose she should care for me?" |
5405 | I''ave explain the frightful indignity to the honor of my person, yes? |
5405 | I''m going alone, understand? |
5405 | I''m sick-- awful sick--""Can you vomit?" |
5405 | I''m-- I''m alone in New York, understand? |
5405 | If I do not obey, my father can not be President, do you see?" |
5405 | If by any chance you should be convicted of guilt, what satisfaction could you derive from injuring me and mine?" |
5405 | If he finds out he''s mistaken, what will HE do?" |
5405 | If he''d been a stranger, now-- Honestly, is n''t it true?" |
5405 | If you are really strapped, as you say you are, how does it happen that you are occupying the best suite on the ship?" |
5405 | If you did n''t wish to accept anything from him, why did you go?" |
5405 | If you had reason to think that your suit would be acceptable, why did you not come to me before?" |
5405 | Instead of picking up his gun, he inquired:"May I rest a moment? |
5405 | Is Ramon engaged to your daughter?" |
5405 | Is it a go?" |
5405 | Is it believed that he was murdered? |
5405 | Is it not wonderful? |
5405 | Is it not you who have laid siege to her these many days?" |
5405 | Is it not you who have stood beneath her window nightly? |
5405 | Is n''t that reason enough?" |
5405 | Is not that all?" |
5405 | Is not that enough?" |
5405 | Is not that enough?" |
5405 | Is not that sufficient?" |
5405 | Is she dark?" |
5405 | Is that a prescription?" |
5405 | Is that all you have seen of her?" |
5405 | Is that it? |
5405 | Is that it?" |
5405 | Is that so strange?" |
5405 | Is that true?" |
5405 | Is that where it is?" |
5405 | Is there absolute proof that the man is guilty, Ramon?" |
5405 | Is there any sensation?" |
5405 | Is there anything more you would like to ask me?" |
5405 | Is-- it indeed true?" |
5405 | It does n''t look much like a dam, does it? |
5405 | It has a fonny sound, has it not?" |
5405 | It is h''exciting, is it not?" |
5405 | It is too much, and yet a man can not refuse the gift of his friend and not seem ungracious, can he? |
5405 | It is very h''annoying, is it not?" |
5405 | It isn''t- Alfarez?" |
5405 | It means the end of me here, is that it?" |
5405 | It seemed certain that he must have had his hand in this affair, else how would Anthony now find himself in possession of his ticket? |
5405 | It was nearly dark when he strolled in, to inquire:"Well, did you get an answer?" |
5405 | It''s a heavenly name-- Why do n''t you make a joyful noise?" |
5405 | It''s a joke, is n''t it, this international good feeling?" |
5405 | It''s funny, is n''t it, with all his credit, that I ca n''t get a shirt until I put up a diamond ring? |
5405 | Jail?" |
5405 | Jealous? |
5405 | Kind of a joke now, trying to thank him for what he''s done, is n''t it?" |
5405 | Kirk said, gently:"Does that mean that we can forget all about it and be good friends again? |
5405 | Let me have about six, will you?" |
5405 | Let us stay here all night?" |
5405 | Locke glanced at the prostrate figure, then inquired in a low tone:"On the level, will he make it?" |
5405 | Locke stirred himself, and, leaning forward, said:"You and he are good friends, eh?" |
5405 | Locke went away on a ship, but_ I_ stayed in New York; understand? |
5405 | Locke?" |
5405 | Locke?" |
5405 | Makes it you to laugh, then?" |
5405 | Maria Tor-- What the deuce are you loafing for? |
5405 | May I ask where you are bound for?" |
5405 | May I speak frankly?" |
5405 | Money does n''t mean much to you, hey?" |
5405 | Mr.--What''s your name, again?" |
5405 | Mrs. Cortlandt let her eyes dwell upon him curiously for a moment; then she said:"Have you no ambition?" |
5405 | Not Ramon?" |
5405 | Not here?" |
5405 | Now wo n''t you please tell me how you chanced to be here? |
5405 | Now, Doctor, granting, just for the sake of argument, that this is a ship and that I am Jefferson Locke, when is your next stop?" |
5405 | Now, are you going to let me out, or do you want my people to pull this jail down around your ears?" |
5405 | Now, can you remember to do as I have told you?" |
5405 | Now, do you remember anything more?" |
5405 | Now, where is to be the scene of our revel?" |
5405 | Of course, Runnels would like to ingratiate himself with you--""Funny spectacle, eh? |
5405 | Of course, such arrangements are frequently altered for various causes, even at the last moment, but-- quien sabe?" |
5405 | Oh, I beg pardon, letter for ME?" |
5405 | Oh, Mrs. Cortlandt, what can I say?" |
5405 | Oh, it will be a big night all around, wo n''t it? |
5405 | One is truly foolish for resis''the policemans, yes?" |
5405 | Perhaps what? |
5405 | Perhaps you know something about the railroad opposition to the canal?" |
5405 | Pleasure trip?" |
5405 | Pressing her gloved fingers to her temples she turned her head blindly from side to side, whispering as if to herself:"What will become of me?" |
5405 | Promise?" |
5405 | Ramon--""Have you agreed to marry him?" |
5405 | Really? |
5405 | Receiving no reply to this request, Kirk broke out:"Well, then, what ARE you going to do? |
5405 | Remember? |
5405 | Remember?" |
5405 | Runnels is fired, eh?" |
5405 | Runnels?" |
5405 | Say, did you ever feel like dancing?" |
5405 | Say, how have you been getting along, anyhow?" |
5405 | Seeing the look in his face, she cried, sharply,"You do n''t mean-- that you''re in earnest?" |
5405 | Shall it be a church wedding?" |
5405 | She beat her hands together distractedly,"What have you done? |
5405 | She began to rock, while he studied her profile; then, conscious of his look, she inquired,"Are n''t you dancing?" |
5405 | She loves me, do n''t you see?" |
5405 | She stared at him curiously for a moment before inquiring:"Is that really the reason, or do you think the work will be easier?" |
5405 | So why discuss it? |
5405 | So you love one whom you do not know? |
5405 | Some day you will thank me, and then perhaps you will honor our house again, eh?" |
5405 | Stephanie laid a great copper hand soothingly upon her shoulder, and growled at Kirk in a hoarse, accusing voice:"You see?" |
5405 | Suddenly he laid his hand on Anthony''s arm, and said:"See this fellow coming down the stairs?" |
5405 | Suppose I should get lost some day-- tomorrow, for instance?" |
5405 | Suppose he went home and squared his account with the police, what would he do then? |
5405 | Suppose we have another stroll after the next act?" |
5405 | Surely Kirk knew of the Ferminas? |
5405 | Surely you know what people say-- that I am her office- boy?" |
5405 | Take the Colombian trouble, for instance--""What trouble?" |
5405 | That dam you saw building at Gatun will form a lake about thirty miles long-- quite a fish- pond, eh? |
5405 | That day I caught you together in the jungle-- have you forgotten that? |
5405 | That''s final, understand?" |
5405 | That''s not merely a rumor about Blakeley? |
5405 | The fellow''s dialect was so strange that Kirk inquired:"Where did you come from?" |
5405 | The officer managed to say with dignity:"You wish to raise money on this, I presume? |
5405 | Then you are perhaps acquainted with Senor Torres by reputation? |
5405 | Then, savagely:"What do you suppose I came down here for? |
5405 | Then, with a painful assumption of seriousness:"How is the train, sar, may I ahsk?" |
5405 | There could be no other explanation, else why had Higgins and the rest fled the country? |
5405 | There you are, eh?" |
5405 | They wanted you to marry some fellow you do n''t like?" |
5405 | They wo n''t say anything, but they''ll know, and you ca n''t stand that, can you? |
5405 | They''no spiggoty English''; understand?" |
5405 | Thought you had this with Anthony?" |
5405 | To Higgins he exclaimed,"You idiot, did n''t you see I had his hands?" |
5405 | To be sure, I have had one little dream--""Did n''t you follow me to the Garavels''?" |
5405 | Turning her bright eyes upon him, she inquired,"How does it feel to be disinherited?" |
5405 | Turning his triumphant little red eyes upon the prisoner, he puffed,"Got you, did n''t we?" |
5405 | VIII EL COMANDANTE TAKES A HAND"Where are we?" |
5405 | W''at is this?" |
5405 | WILL you help me? |
5405 | Was he enhancing his triumph by jeering at the husband of whom he had made a fool? |
5405 | Was it possible that he had offended his best friend past forgiveness? |
5405 | Was it possible that his friends believed this incredible accusation? |
5405 | Was there ever such a beautiful name? |
5405 | Was there ever such a ravishing little wood- sprite? |
5405 | Weeks?" |
5405 | Weeks?" |
5405 | Well, I''m going to get out-- understand? |
5405 | Well, how would you both like to come North and give me some lessons?" |
5405 | Were you mad?" |
5405 | What about that night at Taboga? |
5405 | What am I saying? |
5405 | What are YOU going to do?" |
5405 | What are you going to do when you get back, for instance?" |
5405 | What are you going to do?" |
5405 | What are you laughing at?" |
5405 | What are you laughing at?" |
5405 | What consideration will come to the firm of Garavel Hermanos, think you?" |
5405 | What could he do if his father refused to help? |
5405 | What did he care for the things she could give or withhold when all the glad open world was beckoning to him and to his bride? |
5405 | What did it all signify? |
5405 | What did they get him for?" |
5405 | What did you say is your whole name?" |
5405 | What do you do?" |
5405 | What do you say? |
5405 | What do you say?" |
5405 | What do you suppose she''d do?" |
5405 | What do you want to do?" |
5405 | What does anything matter to you and me?" |
5405 | What does it matter who is President? |
5405 | What does it mean?" |
5405 | What does it mean?" |
5405 | What does this treatment mean?" |
5405 | What else was there to say about Kirk Anthony? |
5405 | What else were my prayers for? |
5405 | What for? |
5405 | What for? |
5405 | What had become of Higgins''s unfortunate victim with the cracked head? |
5405 | What had become of the rightful occupant of Suite A? |
5405 | What had happened to it, and to the urchin he had left in charge of it? |
5405 | What has become of him?" |
5405 | What has caused this so sudden change of sentiment?" |
5405 | What have I done? |
5405 | What have I done? |
5405 | What is crops?" |
5405 | What is it about?" |
5405 | What is the matter with you? |
5405 | What is the plan?" |
5405 | What is your last name?" |
5405 | What is your reward?" |
5405 | What mattered her threats? |
5405 | What motive inspired him thus to pose before his friends, and openly goad his victim under the cloak of modesty and gratitude? |
5405 | What seems to be the trouble this time?" |
5405 | What shall I be climbing, sar?" |
5405 | What shall I do, sir?" |
5405 | What the deuce had made Mrs. Cortlandt do that? |
5405 | What will Stephanie say?" |
5405 | What will those men think? |
5405 | What would Benny Glover think when he failed to show up or even telegraph? |
5405 | What''s her name? |
5405 | What''s the name of it?" |
5405 | What''s the number?" |
5405 | What''s your idea of a fair division of the profits?" |
5405 | When the prisoner is decide to insurrect, who can say those gallant soldier don''be too strong? |
5405 | When these Spaniards court a girl they hang around her window and roll their eyes, do n''t they? |
5405 | When? |
5405 | When? |
5405 | Where did you hear about that?" |
5405 | Where''s Cortlandt?" |
5405 | Where''s our boat?" |
5405 | Where? |
5405 | Where?" |
5405 | Where?" |
5405 | Which kind are you?" |
5405 | Which of us, then, is the better?" |
5405 | Who are you?" |
5405 | Who can blame for making roff-''ouse?" |
5405 | Who has been teaching you Spanish?" |
5405 | Who is he? |
5405 | Who is he?" |
5405 | Who is she?" |
5405 | Who knows what to- morrow may bring? |
5405 | Who knows? |
5405 | Who the devil was Locke, anyhow? |
5405 | Why are you in line for the best position on the railroad? |
5405 | Why could n''t you be all good or all bad and save me this?" |
5405 | Why did I force you up and up and over the heads of others? |
5405 | Why did n''t they give me a good room? |
5405 | Why did n''t they try him or give him a hearing? |
5405 | Why did n''t you come back as you promised?" |
5405 | Why did n''t you tell me? |
5405 | Why did n''t you think of that long ago?" |
5405 | Why did n''t you try him?" |
5405 | Why did you go half- way? |
5405 | Why did you let them commit you?" |
5405 | Why do n''t they finish it up?" |
5405 | Why do n''t you make him work?" |
5405 | Why do you think that?" |
5405 | Why does she leave you alone? |
5405 | Why had his father been so cautious in communicating with him? |
5405 | Why is n''t she here? |
5405 | Why make plans or promises? |
5405 | Why this face of tragedy?" |
5405 | Why try to fool me? |
5405 | Why was he followed? |
5405 | Why? |
5405 | Will you take me to my seat?" |
5405 | With money, almost anything could be achieved; without it, and particularly without his father''s influence, what would happen? |
5405 | With the blandest of smiles the coachman started his horses, then, turning, he inquired, politely:"''Otel Tivoli?" |
5405 | Wo n''t something happen?" |
5405 | Wo n''t you go with me, dad?" |
5405 | Wo n''t you sit down?" |
5405 | Would he come? |
5405 | Would n''t they give you a razor? |
5405 | Yet how could he explain his change of front? |
5405 | You admire from a distance, is it not so? |
5405 | You are fickle, senor- or is it that you prefer dark people?" |
5405 | You did n''t tell him that? |
5405 | You do n''t believe it?" |
5405 | You do n''t call them outsiders?" |
5405 | You do n''t doubt me, do you, really, old man?" |
5405 | You do n''t go out alone, or let fellows take you to lunch, or to the matinee, or anything like that?" |
5405 | You do n''t like them, do you? |
5405 | You do n''t mind my calling you Kirk, do you?" |
5405 | You do n''t mind my frankness, I hope?" |
5405 | You do not-- believe it was my fault?" |
5405 | You foolish boy, you''re always in trouble, are n''t you? |
5405 | You got around finally, did n''t you?" |
5405 | You have a telephone?" |
5405 | You have met before?" |
5405 | You have n''t forgotten your name, too?" |
5405 | You have n''t forgotten-- those wonderful hours we had together?" |
5405 | You have your money for that ticket?" |
5405 | You know the dark place across from the church?" |
5405 | You know who he is?" |
5405 | You love her, do n''t you? |
5405 | You may know him-- Clifford? |
5405 | You never thought for a moment that I did what they claim?" |
5405 | You saw her? |
5405 | You see what must be done?" |
5405 | You still wish me to cease my attentions?" |
5405 | You understand how I feel?" |
5405 | You will not think me bold?" |
5405 | You will see now that I did well in sending him off-- eh, Chiquita?" |
5405 | You wo n''t give in, will you?" |
5405 | You would n''t do a thing like that?" |
5405 | You would n''t spoil the fun?" |
5405 | You''ll pardon my limited vocabulary?" |
5405 | You''re a little premature in talking about my marriage, are n''t you?" |
5405 | You''re living at the country place again, are n''t you? |
5405 | You''re not going?" |
5405 | You''re not married?" |
5405 | You''ve heard about the Anthony bill at Albany?" |
5405 | You''ve heard of the Cortlandts?" |
5405 | You?" |
5405 | have I slept all day?" |
5405 | in PRISON?" |
5405 | why could n''t you be consistent? |
5405 | you''re going to hold my trial, eh?" |