["\"There -- he lies dashed to pieces at the bottom of the ravine.", "\"Brother! O my poor brother! No; this I never prayed for from the demons who had entered into me.", "\"Nay, nay, my good Herr Justitiarius; it couldn't have happened in that way.", "\"You have the presumption to tell me, the lord of the entail,", "\"Here I have the honour to present to you, gentlemen, Freiherr Roderick von R -- -- , lord of the entail of R -- sitten.", "\"Ah well! God will help us!\"", "\u201cAt last we are alone. My Elinor, you do not yet know all my happiness. Colonel Brandon loves Marianne. He has told me so himself.\u201d", "\u201cColonel Brandon\u2019s character,", "\u201cas an excellent man, is well established.\u201d", "\u201cor after such a warning, I should be the last to encourage such affection, or even to be pleased by it. But his coming for me as he did, with such active, such ready friendship, is enough to prove him one of the worthiest of men.\u201d", "\u201cHis character, however,", "\u201cTo judge from the Colonel\u2019s spirits, however, you have not yet made him equally sanguine.\u201d", "\u201cAt Delaford, she will be within an easy distance of me,", "\u201ceven if I remain at Barton; and in all probability, \u2014 for I hear it is a large village, \u2014 indeed there certainly must be some small house or cottage close by, that would suit us quite as well as our present situation.\u201d", "\u201cHis fortune too! \u2014 for at my time of life you know, everybody cares about that; \u2014 and though I neither know nor desire to know, what it really is, I am sure it must be a good one.\u201d", "\u201cMiss Wardour was formerly known to you, she tells me, Mr. Lovel?\u201d", "\u201cHe had had the pleasure,", "\u201cto see her at Mrs. Wilmot\u2019s, in Yorkshire.\u201d", "\u201cIndeed! you never mentioned that to me before, and you did not accost her as an old acquaintance.\u201d", "\u201cI -- I did not know,", "\u201cit was the same lady, till we met; and then it was my duty to wait till she should recognise me.\u201d", "\u201cWhat if I should answer your question by another,", "\u201cand ask you what is your opinion of dreams?\u201d", "\u201cYes, sir; but Cicero also tells us, that as he who passes the whole day in darting the javelin must sometimes hit the mark, so, amid the cloud of nightly dreams, some may occur consonant to future events.\u201d", "\u201cPardon me, young man,", "\u201cBut I am unconscious of possessing such powers,", "\u201cMy principal amusements being literary,", "\u201cI have been at times foolish enough,", "\u201cto nourish some thoughts of the kind.\u201d", "\u201cI have hitherto attempted only a few lyrical pieces,", "\u201cAnd that you are determined not to adopt a more active course of life?\u201d", "\u201cFor the present, such is my resolution,", "\u201cI have no instant thoughts of publishing.\u201d", "\u201cBut the invasion of Agricola was not repelled.\u201d", "\u201cNo; but you are a poet -- free of the corporation, and as little bound down to truth or probability as Virgil himself -- You may defeat the Romans in spite of Tacitus.\u201d", "\u201cAnd pitch Agricola\u2019s camp at the Kaim of -- what do you call it,", "\u201cin defiance of Edie Ochiltree?\u201d", "\u201cNo more of that, an thou lovest me -- And yet, I dare say, ye may unwittingly speak most correct truth in both instances, in despite of the toga of the historian and the blue gown of the mendicant.\u201d", "\u201cGallantly counselled! -- Well, I will do my best -- your kindness will assist me with local information.\u201d", "\u201cWill I not, man? -- why, I will write the critical and historical notes on each canto, and draw out the plan of the story myself. I pretend to some poetical genius, Mr. Lovel, only I was never able to write verses.\u201d", "\u201cIt is a pity, sir, that you should have failed in a qualification somewhat essential to the art.\u201d", "\u201cIn that case, there should be two authors to each poem -- one to think and plan, another to execute.\u201d", "\u201cBut we must consider the expense of publication,", "\u201cthat is true; -- I would wish to do something -- but you would not like to publish by subscription?\u201d", "\u201cBy no means,", "\u201cNo, no!", "\u201cit is not respectable. I\u2019ll tell you what: I believe I know a bookseller who has a value for my opinion, and will risk print and paper, and I will get as many copies sold for you as I can.\u201d", "\u201cO, I am no mercenary author,", "\u201cI only wish to be out of risk of loss.\u201d", "\u201cGuide us, Monkbarns! are things no dear eneugh already, but ye maun be raising the very fish on us, by giving that randy, Luckie Mucklebackit, just what she likes to ask?\u201d", "\u201cI thought I made a very fair bargain.\u201d", "\u201cTruly,", "\u201cIn that case,", "\u201cwe can quicken our march; why adhere to a plan whose dilatory proceeding you already disapprove?\u201d", "\u201ca man died of the plague last night!\u201d", "\u201cAgain and again,", "\u201cFarewell, Verney,", "\u201cbrother of my love, farewell; no other weak expression must cross these lips, I am alive again: to our tasks, to our combats with our unvanquishable foe, for to the last I will struggle against her.\u201d", "\u201ca little lower than the angels;", "\u201cparagon of animals,", "\u201cquint-essence of dust.", "\u2018There can be no two words concerning what we have to aim at; these Dusky Men we must slay everyone, though we be fewer than they be.\u2019", "\u2018Thou wert a boy methought when I cast my spear at thee last autumn, Face-of-god, but now hast thou grown into a man. Now tell me, what deemest thou we must do to slay them all?\u2019", "\u2018Once again it is clear that we must fall upon them at home in Rose-dale and Silver-dale.\u2019", "\u2018This is no less than sooth,", "\u2018never have men gone forth more joyously to a merry-making than all men of us shall wend to this war.\u2019", "\u2018How many men wilt thou lead into battle?", "\u2018A few, a few; maybe two-hundreds all told.\u2019", "\u2018but some special gain wilt thou be to us.\u2019", "\u2018So I deem at least,", "\u2018Scarce so many,", "\u2018some of the felons have died; we told over our silver arm-rings yesterday, and the tale was three hundred and eighty and six. Besides, they were never so many as thou deemest.\u2019", "\u2018yet at least they shall outnumber us sorely. We may scarce leave the Dale unguarded when our host is gone; therefore I deem that we shall have but one thousand of men for our onslaught on Silver-dale.\u2019", "\u2018How come ye to that?", "\u2018I say not but that there is a risk thereof, but in war we must needs run such risks, and all should be risked rather than that our blow on Silver-dale be light. For we be the fewer; and if the foemen have time to call that to mind, then are we all lost.\u2019", "\u2018Even so say I,", "\u2018besides, we might theft leave more folk behind us for the warding of the Dale. So, son, the risk whereof thou speakest groweth the lesser the longer it is looked on.\u2019", "\u2018Hail to thee, son, for thy word! Herein thou speakest as if from my very soul, and fain am I of such a War-leader.\u2019", "\u2018All hath been spoken that the others of us may speak; and now it falleth to the part of Folk-might to order our goings for the tryst for the onslaught, and the trysting-place shall be in Shadowy Vale. How sayest thou, Chief of the Wolf?\u2019", "\u2018It were good, brother, that we saw the other wardens as soon as may be, to do them to wit of this order, and what they have to do.\u2019", "\u2018Time presses on me these days; but if thou wouldest speak with me to-morrow as I would with thee, then mightest thou go on the Bridge of the Burg about sunrise, and I will be there, and we two only.\u2019", "\u2018Yea, friend, I shall be there, and fain of thee.", "\u201cYour name, if you please.\u201d", "\u201cCarmel Cumberland.\u201d", "\u201cDo you recognise the prisoner, Miss Cumberland?\u201d", "\u201cYes; he is my brother.\u201d", "\u201cMiss Cumberland, will you be good enough to tell us where you were, at or near the hour of ten, on the evening of your sister\u2019s death?\u201d", "\u201cI was in the club-house -- in the house you call The Whispering Pines.\u201d", "\u201cMiss Cumberland, was your sister with you when you went to the club-house?\u201d", "\u201cNo; we went separately\u201d", "\u201cHow? Will you explain?\u201d", "\u201cI drove there. I don\u2019t know how Adelaide went.\u201d", "\u201cYes. I had Arthur harness up his horse for me and I drove there.\u201d", "\u201cMiss Cumberland, will you describe this horse?\u201d", "\u201cIt was a grey horse. It has a large black spot on its left shoulder.\u201d", "\u201cTo what vehicle was it attached?\u201d", "\u201cTo a cutter -- my brother\u2019s cutter.\u201d", "\u201cWas that brother with you? Did he accompany you in your ride to The Whispering Pines?\u201d", "\u201cNo, I went quite alone.\u201d", "\u201cAnd how did you return? With whom, and by what means, did you regain your own house?\u201d", "\u201cIn the same way I went. I drove back in my brother\u2019s cutter and being all alone just as before, I put the horse away myself, and went into my empty home and up to Adelaide\u2019s room, where I lost consciousness.\u201d", "\u201cMiss Cumberland, do you often ride out alone on nights like that?\u201d", "\u201cI never did before. I would not have dared to do it then, if I had not taken a certain precaution.\u201d", "\u201cAnd what was this precaution?\u201d", "\u201cI wore an old coat of my brother\u2019s over my dress, and one of his hats on my head.\u201d", "\u201cMiss Cumberland, will you now give the jury the full particulars of that evening\u2019s occurrences, as witnessed by yourself. Begin your relation, if you please, with an account of the last meal you had together.\u201d", "\u201cAsk me a question,", "\u201cI do not know how to begin.\u201d", "\u201cVery well. Who were seated at the dinner-table that night?\u201d", "\u201cMy sister, my brother, Mr. Ranelagh, and myself.\u201d", "\u201cDid anything uncommon happen during the meal?\u201d", "\u201cAnd Mr. Ranelagh?\u201d", "\u201cHe did not let his fall. He set it down on the cloth. He had not drank from it.\u201d", "\u201cMiss Cumberland, where were you looking when you let your glass fall?\u201d", "\u201cAt Mr. Ranelagh,", "\u201cNot at your brother?\u201d", "\u201cAnd at whom was Mr. Ranelagh looking?\u201d", "\u201cAt -- at me.\u201d", "\u201cNot at your sister?\u201d", "\u201cWas anything said?\u201d", "\"So do I, and I've got a little tale that will just suit you, I fancy. The older boys and girls can go and play games if they don't care to hear,", "\"Thanks, we will try a bit, and if it is very namby pamby we can run,", "\"Those must be the cubs of the old bear that was killed last week,", "\"Poor little things! how will they get on without their mother? They look half scared to death, and cry like real babies,", "\"They will starve if we don't take care of them. I'll shake them down; you catch them in your shawl and we'll see what we can do for them.\"", "\"Shake easy, John, or they will fall and be killed,", "\"The wolf! the wolf!", "\"He was in my bed! He scared George! I'll thrash him!\"", "\"I wish my father would buy him,", "\"I've always wanted a menagerie, and a tame bear would be a capital beginning.\"", "\"I'll ask him, for I hate to have the poor old fellow killed,", "\"I know it was wrong, but I couldn't see him suffer,", "\"Now if you buy Tom I'll give you my five dollars to help, and Mr. Hitchcock will forgive me and be glad to get rid of both the bears.\"", "\"the pesky critter, afore he took to the woods.\"", "\"Say good by for me, and kill him as kindly as you can.\"", "\"Bullets will reach him if we can't, so blaze away, boys, and finish him off. We have fooled away time enough, and I want to get home to supper,", "\"blazed away,", "\"with his martial cloak around him,", "\"Boys' Froissart", "\"What are the Morton boys at now?", "\"Bobby wants to be a knight of the Round Table. We might take him in and have fun with the rites, and make him keep a vigil and all that,", "\"He's such a little chap he'd be scared and howl. I don't vote for that,", "\"Bob is a plucky little chap, and will do anything we put him to. He's poor and the other fellows look down on him, so that's another reason why we ought to take him in and stand by him. Let's give him a good trial, and if he's brave, we'll have him.\"", "\"So we will! Let's do it now; he's over there waiting to be asked in. He doesn't go poking his nose where he isn't wanted, as some folks do,", "\"I promise truly; hope to die if I don't!", "\"He won't know what time it is; let's leave him till after supper, and then march out with torches and bring him in to a good feed. Mother won't mind, and Hetty likes to stuff fellows,", "\"This is the battle of Beauvais, and we've set the city a-fire by flinging pitch-pots over the walls,", "\"No, it's the fall of Troy, and I'm \u00c6neas lugging off the old man,", "\"By St. Dennis, we've left that boy there all night!\"", "\"He wouldn't be such a fool as to stay; that old lock's broken easy enough,", "\"Yes, he would! He promised, and he'll keep his word like a true knight. It rained and was cold, and no one knew where he was. Oh dear, I hope he isn't dead,", "\"You've won your spurs, and we'll knight you just as soon as we get time. You're a brave fellow, and I'm proud to have you one of my men. Please don't say much about this; we'll make it all right, and we're awfully sorry,", "\"Let's buy Bob some hens. He wants some dreadfully, and we ought to do something grand after treating him so badly, and nearly killing him.\"", "\"Who's got any money? I haven't; but it's a good idea,", "\"Mamma would lend us some, and we could work to pay for it,", "\"No, I've a better plan,", "\"We ought to make a sacrifice and suffer for our sins. We will have an auction and sell our arms. The boys want them, and will pay well. My lords and gentlemen, what say ye?\"", "\"Winter is coming, and we can't use them,", "\"And by next spring we shall be too old for such games,", "\"'Tis well! Ho! call hither my men. Bring out the suits of mail; sound the trumpets, and set on!", "\"mine tottage", "\"a dint a water and dingerbed for all us ones.\"", "\"We must tie her up,", "\"I want to tut drass,", "\"I want a dint a water, pease,", "\"I wasn't frighted. You said Dod be'd all wound, so I goed wite alon, and Mis Foyd gived me a nice cold tater, and a tootie, and the bid dord washed my hands wif his wed tun.\"", "\u201cThe girl is a little hussy.", "\u201cAh, my dear Ernest,", "\u201cRich or poor, young or old, ugly or handsome, the girl is right; she has sense and judgment, she has tripped you over into the slough of self-interest and lets you know it,", "\u201cShe deserves an answer, a sincere and loyal and frank answer, and, above all, the honest expression of your thought. Examine yourself! sound your heart and purge it of its meannesses. What would Moliere\u2019s Alceste say?\u201d", "\u201cI love poetry; and I would fain expiate Leonora\u2019s cruelty to Tasso!", "\u201cThe little mischief! how she abuses her privileges,", "\u201cbut isn\u2019t she frank!\u201d", "\u201cWell, Francoise?", "\u201cYes, mademoiselle, I have one.\u201d", "\u201cYes, my friend.\u201d", "\u201cOh, that belongs to Monsieur Vilquin, the richest shipping merchant in Havre, so rich he doesn\u2019t know what he is worth.\u201d", "\u201cThere is no Cardinal Vilquin that I know of in history,", "\u201cIs there there any one staying with them at the present moment,", "\u201cbesides the family?\u201d", "\u201cThe d\u2019Herouville family is there just now. They do talk of a marriage between the young duke and the remaining Mademoiselle Vilquin.\u201d", "\u201cthere was a celebrated Cardinal d\u2019Herouville under the Valois, and a terrible marshal whom they made a duke in the time of Henri IV.\u201d", "\u201cClarissa Harlowe", "\"Striking.", "\"Looks almost too good to eat,", "\"Think so, Nirvana? Well, we'll try it.\"", "\"Good idea, signor,", "\"You'd like an electric fan, Mrs Bablove, wouldn't you?\"", "\"I think you're being very well looked after,", "\"I like being looked after,", "\"I like to think that so many people are taking so much trouble to please me.\"", "\"I should think -- er -- that that must always happen,", "\"As a rule, I take all the trouble. Ask Teddy if I don't.\"", "\"Oh, go on, you must,", "\"Oh, no. Quite wrong. Whatever makes you think that?\"", "\"There's a look in the eyes sometimes. Oh, I assure you it makes me very careful,", "\"Frightens me. Now, really, Mrs Bablove, you must have a little yellow Chartreuse with your coffee.\"", "\"And if anybody else tries to go,", "\"I shall lose my temper.\"", "\"Might have got a box at one of the halls if I'd thought about it,", "\"Much pleasanter where we are,", "\"Performances always bore me.\"", "\"Ah, well, Nirvana,", "\"Why do you call her Nirvana?", "\"Why do I call her Nirvana? Because she looks like a gipsy. She does, doesn't she?\"", "\"I don't know. I think she looks charming.\"", "\"I'd like to talk to you about that. Not now -- presently.", "\"Have a cigarette now, Mrs Bablove?\"", "\"Thanks. I think I will.\"", "\"Why wouldn't you smoke before?", "\"Too many people. The room's nearly empty now. I'm not so brave as -- Nirvana.\"", "\"I don't think you quite know what you are. You're full of possibilities.\"", "\"I like these cigarettes,", "\"Teddy gives me one sometimes, though I don't often smoke, but his are not quite so nice as these.\"", "\"I thought you were devoted to London,", "\"What you say rather surprises me.\"", "\"I surprise myself sometimes,", "\"Will you take Miss Holmes in that cab, Teddy? It's scarcely two minutes out of your way. I'll bring Mrs Bablove in the next cab.\"", "\"We shall be home before them,", "\"By the way, Mr Carver, what were you going to tell me about Nirvana?\"", "\"I don't think you know enough about yourself,", "\"That delicious mouth of yours!\"", "\"And how did you get on with Miss Holmes?\"", "\"Oh, all right. The trouble with her is that she's rather affected, and affectation is just one of those things that I can't stand.\"", "\"I didn't take much of it. To tell the truth, it's not a wine I ever met before, and the taste seemed to me rather funny. I'd sooner have a whisky-and-soda any day.\"", "\"Have one now. Do. Why not? I'll run up to bed because I'm so tired. I daresay I shall be asleep by the time you come.\"", "\"Oh, I shan't be long,", "\"I want to speak to you for a minute before you go to the city,", "\"Will you come into the drawing-room?\"", "\"Wait. You need say nothing.", "\"What do you mean?", "\"Do you think I haven't seen?", "\"I swear that I care for no woman in the world but you, Dora. I'm awfully sorry I've hurt you like this. Can you ever forgive me?\"", "\"Could you have forgiven me,", "\"if I had let a man kiss me?\"", "\"Yes, Dora,", "\"I think so.\"", "\"Then, Teddy dear, I forgive you absolutely. We will never speak of this again. And it will never happen again, will it?\"", "\"Landing Grids, Lightest Emergency, Commerce Refuges, For Use Of.", "\"I know we're stuck, Ralph,", "\"but it's nice stuff to go in the records. Too bad we don't keep coup-records like you Indians!\"", "\"You don't mean we might actually live through this! Really?\"", "\"Dr. Chuka,", "\"What's he trying to do?", "\"to prove to himself that he's the best man on this planet. Because he's physically least capable of living here! His vanity's hurt. Don't underestimate him!\"", "\"He the best man here?", "\"In his way he's all right. The refrigeration proves that! But he can't walk out-of-doors without a heat-suit!\"", "\"paleface. But he doubts himself. All the time and in every way. And that's why he may be the best man on this planet! I'll bet he does prove it!\"", "\"You suggested radiation refrigeration! What does it prove that he applied it?\"", "\"You're kind,", "\"Great Manitou forbid!", "\"What tonnage of iron can you get out, Chuka?", "\"What can you do in the way of castings? What's the elastic modulus -- how much carbon in this iron? And when can you start making castings? Big ones?\"", "\"Let's go talk to my foremen,", "\"I owe you an apology, Mr. Bordman,", "\"It won't take back the discourtesy, but -- I'm very sorry.\"", "\"Apparently I think more highly of them than they do of me!\"", "\"It must have sounded horrible! But they ... we ... all of us think better of you than you do of yourself!\"", "\"You in particular. 'Would you marry someone like me? Great Manitou, no!'\"", "\"For an excellent reason,", "\"I wish you all the contentment you look for.", "\"But what's this business about expecting more from me? What spectacular idea do you expect me to pull out of somebody's hat now? Because I'm frantically vain!\"", "\"I haven't the least idea,", "\"But I think you'll come up with something we couldn't possibly imagine. And I didn't say it was because you were vain, but because you are discontented with yourself. It's born in you! And there you are!\"", "\"If you mean neurotic,", "\"you're all wrong. I'm not neurotic! I'm not. I'm annoyed. I'll get hopelessly behind schedule because of this mess! But that's all!\"", "\"I repeat my apology,", "\"and leave you the office. But I also repeat that I think you'll turn up something nobody else expects -- and I've no idea what it will be. But you'll do it now to prove that I'm wrong about how your mind works.\"", "\"Me neurotic? Me wanting to prove I'm the best man here out of vanity?", "\"Why should I need to prove to myself I'm capable? What would I do if I felt such a need, anyhow?\"", "\"Do you want to go in the shed and cool off?", "\"I'm quite comfortable, so long as you feed me that expanded air.", "\"What's all this about? Bringing the Warlock in? Why the insistence on my being here?\"", "\"Ralph has a problem,", "\"Chuka said you needed me here. What's the matter?\"", "\"I wanted you to see,", "\"before we threw on the current. It doesn't look like that little grid could handle the sand it took care of. But Lewanika wants to report.\"", "\"We cast the beams for the small landing grid, Mr. Bordman. We melted the metal out of the cliffs and ran it into molds as it flowed down.\"", "\"We made the girders into the small landing grid. It bothered us because we built it on the sand that had buried the big grid. We didn't understand why you ordered it there. But we built it.\"", "\"We made the coils, Mr. Bordman. We made the small grid so it would work the same as the big one when it was finished. And then we made the big grid work, finished or not!\"", "\"All right. Very good. But what is this? A ceremony?\"", "\"Be patient, Mr. Bordman!\"", "\"And we rode it down, that little grid,", "\"What a party! Manitou!\"", "\"In six days,", "\"That's very good. It's excellent. I'll put it in my survey report.\"", "\"But what ... what's this?", "\"I'm going to send Martin. No one will ever suppose that we would trust this money to a child.", "\"To stop Martin,", "\"would be only to lose the money; but to stop you would be to get somebody killed.", "\"I thought Abner would be going into the upcountry.", "\"You carry a good deal of baggage, my lad.", "\"You know my father I A horse must be fed at dinner time, but a man can go till he gets it.", "\"In time for what?", "\"is it you?", "\"Who would it be but me?", "\"It might be the devil,", "\"Do you know what your face looks like?", "\"No matter what it looks like !", "\"we have got courage with this new face.", "\"Now, look here, Abner,", "\"I've had about enough of your big manner. You ride a horse to death and you come plunging in here; what the devil's wrong with you?", "\"There's nothing wrong with me,", "\"But there's something damnably wrong with you, Dix.", "\"The devil take you,", "\"Those are big words,", "\"get out of the door then and let me pass!", "\"Not just yet,", "\"I have something to say to you.", "\"and get out of the door.", "\"It's a long time un- til daylight, and I have a good deal to say.", "\"You'll not say it to me,", "\"I've got a trip to make tonight; get out of the door.", "\"You've got a longer trip to make tonight than you think, Dix,", "\"but you're going to hear what I have to say before you set out on it.", "\"It is strange,", "\"but it explains the thing. While one is the servant of neither, one has the courage of neither; but wheri he finally makes his choice he gets what his master has to give him.", "\"do you believe in the providence of God?", "\"if you are going to talk non- . sense I promise you upon my oath that I will not stay to listen.", "\"you've had a good deal of bad luck. . . . Perhaps you wish it put that way.", "\"Now, Abner,", "\"you speak the truth; I have had hell's luck.", "\"Hell's luck you have had,", "\"I have told you a hundred times,", "\"I got it from my people over the mountains. You know where I got it.", "\"I know where you got it, Dix. And I know another thing. But first I want to show you this,", "\"And I want to tell you that I believe in the providence of God, Dix.", "\"I don't care a fiddler's damn what you believe in,", "\"But you do care what I know,", "\"What do you know?", "\"I know where your partner is,", "\"Then you know something that nobody else knows.", "\"there is another man who knows.", "\"you are talking nonsense. Nobody knows where Alkire is. If I knew I'd go after him.", "\"God forgive me,", "\"it was His angel again ! I never saw Alkire after that.", "\"Nobody ever saw him after that,", "\"He got out of the hills that night.", "\"it was not in the night when Alkire started on his journey; it was in the day.", "\"you talk like a fool. If Al- kire had traveled the road in the day somebody would have seen him.", "\"Nobody could see him on the road he traveled,", "\"you will learn that soon enough.", "\"You saw Alkire when he started on his journey,", "\"but did you see who it was that went with him?", "\"Nobody went with him,", "\"Alkire rode alone.", "\"I didn't see him,", "\"you made Alkire go with him.", "\"And I made Alkire go with somebody, did I? \u2022Well, who was it? Did you see him?", "\"Nobody ever saw him.", "\"He must be a stranger.", "\"he rode the hills before we came into them.", "\"Indeed!", "\"And what kind of a horse did he ride?", "\"What are you driving at?", "\"You sit here beating around the bush. If you know any- thing, say it out; let's hear it. What is it?", "\"Lord Almighty, man!", "\"your words move some- what near the truth.", "\"Upon my soul,", "\"you compliment me. If I had that trick of magic, believe me, you would be already some distance down.", "\"what does it mean when one finds a plot of earth resodded?", "\"Your sodded plot no grave, and Alkire not within it waiting for the trump of Gabriel ! Why, man, where are your little damned conclusions?", "\"you do not deceive me in the least; Alkire is not sleeping in a grave.", "\"Then in the air,", "\"with a smell of sulphur?", "\"Nor in the air,", "\"Then consumed with fire, like the priests of Baal?", "\"Nor with fire,", "\"This is *11 fools' talk,", "\"I will answer that upon my own belief you had no accomplice.", "\"how could I have carried off the horse? Alkire I might carry; but his horse weighed thirteen hundred pounds!", "\"no man helped you do this thing; but there were men who helped you to con- ceal it.", "\"the man is going mad! Who could I trust with such work, I ask you? Have I a renter that would not tell it when he moved on tq another's land, or when he got a quart of cider in him? Where are the men who helped me?", "\"they have been dead these fifty years.", "\"In the name of Heaven!", "\"With such proofs it is a wonder that you did not have me hanged.", "\"And hanged you should have been,", "\"you robbed the grazers; you shot Alkire out of his saddle ; and a child you would have murdered 1", "\"But where shall I go, Abner?", "\"I have no money and I am cold.", "\"a hundred dollars \u2014 and there is my coat. Go ! But if I find you in the hills to-morrow, or if I ever find you, I warn you in the name of the living God that I will stamp you out of life!", "\u201cMiz Conover?\u201d", "\u201cNo, no, no!", "\u201cI couldn't, I couldn't! I'd be a liar and a cheat. But he is so nice! If he did want me!... No, no! Just for comforts! I couldn't! What a miserable wretch I am!\u201d", "\u201cVery important. Take me up.\u201d", "\u201cThe boss is out.\u201d", "\u201cYou're the doctor!", "\u201cDo you know where he went?\u201d", "\u201cNever know. But I'll be in this bird cage until he comes back.\u201d", "\u201cI shall have to wait for him.\u201d", "\u201cYou, Miss Conover?\u201d", "\u201cI have made a really important discovery. Did Cutty say when he would return?\u201d", "\u201cNo. I am not in his confidence to that extent. But I do know that you assumed unnecessary risks in coming here.\u201d", "\u201cIs Mr. Hawksley awake?\u201d", "\u201cIt appears that he left this wallet in my kitchen that night. It might buck him up if I gave it to him.\u201d", "\u201cCome, I've been trying futilely to read him asleep, but he is restless. No excitement, please.\u201d", "\u201cI'll try not to. Perhaps, after all, you had better give him the wallet.\u201d", "\u201cOn the contrary, that would start a series of questions I could not answer. Come along.\u201d", "\u201cJust when I never felt so lonely! Ripping!\u201d", "\u201cHow -- how are you?", "\u201cTop-hole, considering. Quite ready to be killed all over again.\u201d", "\u201cYou mustn't talk like that!", "\u201cOnly to show you I was bucking up. Thank you for doing what you did.\u201d", "\u201cI had to do it.\u201d", "\u201cMost women would have run away and left me to my fate.\u201d", "\u201cNot my kind.\u201d", "\u201cRather not! Your kind would risk its neck to help a stray cat. I say, what's that you have in your hand?\u201d", "\u201cIt is yours, isn't it?\u201d", "\u201cYes. I wanted you to bring it to me the way you have. If I hadn't come back -- out of that -- it was to be yours.\u201d", "\u201cWhy not? Gregor gone, there wasn't a soul in the world. I was hungry, and you gave me food. I wanted that to pay you. I'll wager you've never looked into it.\u201d", "\u201cI had no right to.\u201d", "\u201cI wasn't so stony as you thought. What? Cash and unregistered bonds. They would have been yours absolutely.\u201d", "\u201cBut I don't -- I can't quite,", "\u201cbut I couldn't have kept them!\u201d", "\u201cPositively yes. You would have shown them to that ripping guardian of yours, and he would have made you see.\u201d", "\u201cIndeed, yes! He would have been scared to death. You poor man, can't you see? Circumstantial evidence that I had killed you!\u201d", "\u201cAnd what about me?\u201d", "\u201cIf -- it wouldn't have been just as well!\u201d", "\u201cYou mustn't talk like that! You just mustn't! You're with friends, real friends, who want to help you all they can.", "\u201cWho could be friendless, with all that money?", "\u201cI didn't mean that!", "\u201cI say, you two!", "\u201cWanting to buck up a chap because you re that sort! All right. I'll stick it out! You two! And I might be the worst scoundrel unhung!\u201d", "\u201cOh, I say, now! Please!", "\u201cMiss Conover?", "\u201cYes. I'm over here on the divan.\u201d", "\u201cAnything wrong?\u201d", "\u201cAnything I can get for you?\u201d", "\u201cNo, thanks. I'll try to snatch a little sleep before Cutty returns.\u201d", "\u201cBut he may be gone all night!\u201d", "\u201cWill it be so very scandalous if I stay here?\u201d", "\u201cYou poor child! Go ahead and sleep. Don't hesitate to call me if you want anything. I have a mild sedative if you would like it.\u201d", "\u201cNo, thanks. I did not know that Mr. Hawksley played.\u201d", "\u201cWonderfully! But does it bother you?\u201d", "\u201cIt kind of makes me choky.\u201d", "\u201cI'll tell him.\u201d", "\u201cteacher and agent of the brain.", "\"Please, now, Professor, don't stop me. I'm all right, don't you see I am?\"", "\"Yes, at this precise moment you are. It's the moments to come that I am thinking about.\"", "\"What do you want us to do?", "\"Hold on to the rope, that's all.\"", "\"In other words, we are to be a sort of 'tug-of-war' team, eh? Is that it?\"", "\"I suppose it is, Ned.\"", "\"Then I hope we win.\"", "\"I sincerely hope you do, too,", "\"If I win, I'll lose. That sounds funny, doesn't it?\"", "\"that if he wins it will be because he takes a tumble to the bottom of the canyon. Understand?\"", "\"I hope Tad doesn't win, too,", "\"Now, Professor, will you please take charge of the operations?\"", "\"Certainly. But, you understand, I permit this thing under strong protest. I am doing wrong. I should use my authority to prevent it were we not already in such a serious predicament.\"", "\"Don't worry. What I want is to have you take a few turns around that small tree there with the rope, and pay it out carefully, so that I can lower myself safely. Don't give me too much rope at one time, you know.\"", "\"You know what they say happens to people who have too much rope.\"", "\"That they usually hang themselves.\"", "\"Please call that lazy Indian over here and set him to work. Little does he care what trouble we're in. See, he's asleep against a tree now.\"", "\"Yes, his head would fall off if it were not nailed fast to him,", "\"Wake up, you sleepy head!", "\"Come over here, Eagle-eye. You're wanted,", "\"Put the Indian on the end of the rope; and, Professor, you please take a hold nearest to the tree. You'll be my salvation. The rest of you, except Chunky, can stand between the Professor and Eagle-eye.\"", "\"What do you want me to do? Have I got to stand here and look on?", "\"No, Chunky. You may run the signal tower,", "\"What's that? I don't see any such thing around here?\"", "\"What? I'm what?", "\"You are the signal tower in this case. That is, you will stand here and watch me. When I give a signal you will receive and pass it on to the others.\"", "\"What kind of signals?\"", "\"That's what I'm trying to tell you, if you will give me the chance. When I hold up my hand, it means that they are to stop letting out rope. When I move it up and down, it means they are to let out on the rope a little. Understand?\"", "\"Oh, yes; that's easy. When they shake their hand, it means you want to go up or down,", "\"O Chunky, you're hopeless. No, no! Nothing of the kind. Listen. When I move my hand up and down, just like this -- Understand?\"", "\"That means I want to go down further. They don't wave their hands at all, at least I hope they don't while I am hanging in the air. Now, do you think you understand?\"", "\"Yes, I understand.\"", "\"Repeat the directions to me then, please.\"", "\"That's right. See that you don't forget. Remember, I'm depending upon you, Chunky, and if you fail me, I may be killed.\"", "\"Don't you worry about me, Tad,", "\"I can make motions as well as anybody. Eagle-eye, tend to business over there. Get hold of that rope. Twist it around your arm. There, that's right.\"", "\"Chunky's coming into his own,", "\"He'll be wanting to thrash some of us next. See if he doesn't.\"", "\"I think I am all ready now,", "\"All right, Captain,", "\"Better port your helm, though, or the rope will give you a side wipe and take you along over with Tad.\"", "\"The water's fine, Chunky,", "\"I mean, that's what Tad called,", "\"He won't find it so fine if he falls in,", "\"Bad spirits in water,", "\"Unfortunately for us, they're not all down there,", "\"Tend to business, boys,", "\"What does he want, to be lowered?\"", "\"Yes, yes, don't you understand?\"", "\"No, we don't understand motions in a foreign language,", "\"Watch my signals, then you'll know what to do.\"", "\"I'm afraid this rope is not going to be long enough,", "\"However, I believe I can crawl down the last fifteen or twenty feet if the line will only reach to them. It's not nearly so steep down there as it is higher up.\"", "\"Here you, up there! What are you trying to do?\"", "\"What do you fellows mean?", "\"Just a slip, that's all,", "\"Tell them to be careful, Chunky. This rope won't stand many such jerks as that. Remember, it's running over some sharp rocks above here and is liable to be cut in two.\"", "\"Tell him we will not make that mistake again, Chunky,", "\"All right. I'm doing well now. Just keep the line fairly steady so that I won't lose my footing.\"", "\"Who would have ever thought it so far?", "\"I'm sure now that the rope will not reach.\"", "\"Grab him! Grab him, somebody! He's going over the cliff!\"", "\"Suppose we go in now and see the pictures,", "\"We might as well take advantage of our opportunities, even if we are miserable,", "\"Let us go into one of the shops and buy a few trinkets,", "\"I would like to own one of those embroidered Russian aprons.\"", "\"In the Cathedral of St. Isaac, toward the left and in the rear of the church at three o'clock tomorrow,", "\u201cNever let me hear it again!\u201d", "\u201cHow very ungrateful!\u201d", "\u201cI don\u2019t remember,", "\u201cReally, Randal, you must rouse yourself. Surely you can tell us something. Did you meet with any agreeable people, while you were away?\u201d", "\u201cI met one person who interested me,", "\u201cA woman, of course!\u201d", "\u201ca guest like myself at a club dinner.\u201d", "\u201cCaptain Bennydeck.\u201d", "\u201cNo: formerly in the navy.\u201d", "\u201cAnd you and he had a long talk together?\u201d", "\u201cthe Captain went away early.\u201d", "\u201cThen how came you to feel interested in him?", "\u201cI can\u2019t account for it,", "\u201cI only know I took a liking to Captain Bennydeck.", "\u201cYou know I feel for you,", "\u201cI had better say no more, I shall only shock you.\u201d", "\u201cHope, my dear, as Randal tells you,", "\u201cbecause there is hope.\u201d", "\u201cHas the doctor said it?", "\u201cWhy haven\u2019t I been told of it before?\u201d", "\u201cWhen I sent for you, I heard that you had gone out.\u201d", "\u201cTell me what the doctor said,", "\u201cI want it exactly, word for word.\u201d", "\u201cWhat have you done?\u201d", "\u201cI have sent the carriage to fetch Miss Westerfield.\u201d", "\u201cI knew she would come back again! The Evil Genius of the family -- that\u2019s what I call Miss Westerfield. The name exactly fits her!\u201d", "\u201cDon\u2019t you approve of what I have done, Herbert?\u201d", "\u201cHow can I say that,", "\u201cif the poor child\u2019s life depends on Miss Westerfield? I ask one favor -- give me time to leave the house before she comes here.\u201d", "\u201cMiss Westerfield comes here,", "\u201con an errand that is beyond reproach -- an errand of mercy. Why should you leave the house?\u201d", "\u201cIn justice to you,", "\u201cDrop it, Catherine!", "\u201cAfter my experience,", "\u201chave I no reason to trust you?\u201d", "\u201cIt is part of your experience,", "\u201cthat I promised not to see Miss Westerfield again.\u201d", "\u201cOwn it at once!", "\u201cthough I may be willing to trust you -- you are afraid to trust yourself.\u201d", "\u201cDon\u2019t listen to her, Herbert. Keep out of harm\u2019s way, and you keep right.\u201d", "\u201cHold your tongue!\u201d", "\u201cAt what time do you expect Miss Westerfield to arrive?", "\u201cBefore the half-hour strikes. Don\u2019t be alarmed,", "\u201cyou will have time to make your escape.\u201d", "\u201cOne thing I beg you will remember,", "\u201cYour brother has insulted me,", "\u201cI was speaking of my brother\u2019s wife,", "\u201cYour brother\u2019s wife has allowed me to be insulted.", "\"We've secured everything we wanted,", "\"It's wonderful!", "\"Mr. Merrick is so well known as a philanthropist that his name was a magic talisman for us,", "\"Moreover, our enterprise commands the sympathy of everyone. We had numerous offers of financial assistance, too.\"", "\"I hope you didn't accept them,", "\"I claimed this expedition to be our private and individual property. We can now do as we please, being under no obligations to any but ourselves.\"", "\"We don't want to be hampered by the necessity of advising with others.\"", "\"By the way, have you found a doctor?\"", "\"Highly recommended, but homely as a rail fence,", "\"Nothing, eh? Well, wait till you see him,", "\"You'll never look Doctor Gys in the face more than once, I assure you. After that, you'll be glad to keep your eyes on his vest buttons.\"", "\"I like him immensely, though,", "\"He is clever, honest and earnest. The poor man can't help his mutilations, which are the result of many unfortunate adventures.\"", "\"Sounds like just the man we wanted,", "\"How long will it take us to reach Calais?", "\"Eight or nine days,", "\"We are not as fast as the big passenger steamers,", "\"but with good weather the Arabella may be depended upon to make the trip in good shape and fair time.\"", "\"I don't know whether I'll faint at the sight of real blood,", "\"but I shall know pretty well what to do if I can keep my nerve.\"", "\"We've a big stock of morphia, in its various forms,", "\"and I expect it to prove of tremendous value in comforting our patients.\"", "\"I'm not sure I approve the use of that drug,", "\"But think of the suffering we can allay by its use,", "\"If ever morphia is justifiable, it is in war, where it can save many a life by conquering unendurable pain. I believe the discovery of morphine was the greatest blessing that humanity has ever enjoyed. Don't you, Doctor Gys?\"", "\"that I have had a rather insignificant part in preparing this expedition, for all I have furnished -- aside from the boat itself -- consists of two lots of luxuries that may or may not be needed.\"", "\"And what may they be?", "\"Thermos flasks and cigarettes.\"", "\"Next to our anodynes and anaesthetics, nothing will prove so comforting to the wounded as cigarettes. They are supplied by nurses in all the hospitals in Europe. How many did you bring?\"", "\"She could never forgive him,", "\"for his deeds past never to make him any reproach.\"", "\"just call away the sail-trimmers from the guns, for I mean to fight these fellows under sail, and out-manoeuvre them, if I can. Tell Mr Webster I want to speak with him.\"", "\"Mr Webster,", "\"Starboard it is, sir.\"", "\"Steady; so -- that's right for the stern of the leeward vessel.\"", "\"Port it is, sir,", "\"Man both sides, my lads, and give them our broadsides as we pass.\"", "\"Capital, my lads -- capital!", "\"this is what I call good fighting.", "\"Must not try for too much, or we shall lose all. Put her about, Peter, -- we must be content with the one that is left us.\"", "\"were you ever attacked by boats when you laid at St. Pierre's?\"", "\"Yes; and that they had beaten them off.\"", "\"Did you purchase these masts of an American?\"", "\"Never mind, Peter,", "\u201cJob, Johannes, et Zacharias vel vobis vel posteris indicabunt", "\u201cI suppose I shall have to translate this,", "\u201cWell, it may as well be done first as last,", "\u201cJob, John, and Zechariah will tell either you or your successors.", "\u201chonest British face", "\u201cWell, I ham pleased, I\u2019m sure, sir, to see you. And so I\u2019m sure, sir, will master.\u201d", "\u201cHow is your master, Brown?", "\u201cWhat has been the matter \u2014 I couldn\u2019t make out from your letter? Was it an accident of any kind?\u201d", "\u201cWhat does the doctor say?", "\u201cIn God\u2019s name, who is that?", "\u201cYes, sir \u2014 me, sir, and Mr Gregory,", "\u201cBetter for seeing you, my dear Gregory,", "\u201cBut there\u2019s one thing,", "\u201cwhich I must beg you to do for me, my dear Gregory. Don\u2019t,", "\u201cWell, Somerton,", "\u201cI won\u2019t ask for any explanations till you see fit to give them. And if this bit of business is as easy as you represent it to be, I will very gladly undertake it for you the first thing in the morning.\u201d", "\u201cAh, I was sure you would, my dear Gregory; I was certain I could rely on you. I shall owe you more thanks than I can tell. Now, here is Brown. Brown, one word with you.\u201d", "\u201cNot at all. Dear me, no. Brown, the first thing tomorrow morning \u2014 (you don\u2019t mind early hours, I know, Gregory) \u2014 you must take the Rector to \u2014 there, you know", "\u201cand he and you will put that back. You needn\u2019t be in the least alarmed; it\u2019s perfectly safe in the daytime. You know what I mean. It lies on the step, you know, where \u2014 where we put it.", "\u201cOn my second visit to the chapel,", "\u201cYou hear that, Gregory?", "\u201cNow, does any explanation of that incident strike you?\u201d", "\u201cThe whole thing is so ghastly and abnormal that I must own it puts me quite off my balance; but the thought did occur to me that possibly the \u2014 well, the person who set the trap might have come to see the success of his plan.\u201d", "\u201cWell, there is my story; and, if you don\u2019t believe it, I can\u2019t help it. But I think you do.\u201d", "\u201cI can find no alternative. I must believe it! I saw the well and the stone myself, and had a glimpse, I thought, of the bags or something else in the hole. And, to be plain with you, Somerton, I believe my door was watched last night, too.\u201d", "\u201cI dare say it was, Gregory; but, thank goodness, that is over. Have you, by the way, anything to tell about your visit to that dreadful place?\u201d", "\"Yes, I'll give it back to her,", "\"when the time comes I'll hand it to her. She can wipe her eyes on it when she opens them and repents.\"", "\"Mr. Kerr, I've got a warrant for you,", "\"I guess you've made a mistake in your man,", "\"I'd know your voice in the dark -- I've got reason to remember it,", "\"There's no mistake, not by a thousand miles. You'll come along back to Glendora with me.\"", "\"There's a reward of nine hundred dollars standing for this man. If you've got any doubt of who he is, or my right to arrest him, take us both to headquarters.\"", "\"but I won't tell you which way he went unless you will warm me at your heart. I am dying of cold; I shall soon be nothing but ice.", "\"That I may not tell thee,", "\"but I may tell thee that one of the flowers was thy own child's; it was thy child's fate thou sawest, thine own child's future.", "\u201cYou've always had money in your pocket,", "\u201cSixty-two dollars,", "\u201cNot so bad for a rainy day. You might get sick, or hurt, or something happen.\u201d", "\u201cIt's perfectly safe,", "\u201cI've known him since we was kids at the Durant School together. He's straight as a die.\u201d", "\u201cThat's got nothing to do with it,", "\u201cIf you were single you'd have lent it to him immediately, wouldn't you?\u201d", "\u201cThen it's no different because you're married. It's your money, Billy.\u201d", "\u201cNot by a damn sight,", "\u201cIt ain't mine. It's ourn. And I wouldn't think of lettin' anybody have it without seein' you first.\u201d", "\u201cI hope you didn't tell him that,", "\u201cI knew, if I did, you'd be madder'n a hatter. I just told him I'd try an' figure it out. After all, I was sure you'd stand for it if you had it.\u201d", "\u201cmaybe you don't know it, but that's one of the sweetest things you've said since we got married.\u201d", "\u201c'Tis good enough for the old man,", "\u201cHe knows no better, and it would be a wicked sin to waste it on him.\u201d", "\u201cIt's worth a few dollars,", "\u201cIt cost me twenty, though that was years ago. Yet it is well worth the value of the cap.\u201d", "\u201cBut wouldn't the cap be frivolous, too?", "\u201c'Tis not for my graying hair,", "\u201cI am well satisfied with the trade,", "'in such a season? And by such roads?'", "'eight miles? In December?'", "'And why not, gentlemen?", "'How would you have such a body as that go, if she must not walk? What else has she got her feet for?'", "'Are you sure,", "'that you know the way?'", "'I was never in this part of the world till now.'", "'Ha! Ha! pleasant enough! And what are you to do about money? Did you ever find that purse of yours that you -- lost, I think, at Dover?'", "'Better and better!", "'I am sure, for one, I'll help her.'", "'Let us make a subscription,", "'look at this, and take what you will from it.'", "'How the deuce, with such a pretty face as that, could you ever think of making yourself look such a fright?'", "'But what was the whim of it?'", "'I'll convey you in my own chaise wherever you like to go;", "'Oh, you are come at last!", "'What the deuce can have made you so long in coming?", "'Why did not you stay for my chaise?", "'You must make her tell you her name, Sir!", "'Have you any objection, Ma'am, to giving me your name?'", "'Have I been making any indiscreet enquiry?", "'You? O no! You have been all generosity and consideration!'", "'They insist upon my telling my name -- or they detain my letter!'", "'Why, Harleigh! why, what the deuce can have brought you hither?", "'since charity is the order of the day, I'll see what is become of her myself.'", "'go back to Lewes without knowing whether your expectations are answered in coming hither; or whether you will permit me to tell the Miss Joddrels that they may still have the pleasure to be of some use to you.'", "'I fear to seem importunate,", "'yet I have no intention, believe me, to ask any officious questions. I respect what you have said of the nature of your situation, too much to desire any information beyond what may tend to alleviate its uneasiness.'", "'To fail finding,", "'I am ashamed to have mentioned a circumstance, which seems to call for a species of assistance, that it is impossible I should accept.'", "'at our house, so I am come hither to cool myself. Aunt Maple and I have fought a noble battle; but I have won the day.'", "'And would you, Madam?", "'Attachment? I protest to you, Madam, except at those periods when his benevolence or urbanity have excited my gratitude, my own difficulties have absorbed my every thought!'", "'I heartily congratulate your apathy!", "'for he is so completely a non-descript, that he would else incontestably set you upon hunting out for some new Rosamund's Pond. That is all I mean.'", "'How lucky it is that you are come back; for now I have got somebody to say it to!'", "'I wish you could hear,", "'how we all settle your history in the parlour. No two of us have the same idea of whom or what you are.", "'My dear,", "'don't think me such a prig as to do you any mischief; but take a hint! Don't see quite so much of a certain young lady, whom I don't wish should know the world quite so soon! You understand me, my dear?'", "'See how I have been labouring to assist and to serve you, at the very moment of your insidious duplicity!'", "'You must never mind what I say, nor what I do; for I sport all sort of things, and in all sort of manners. But it is merely to keep off stagnation: I dread nothing like a lethargy. But pray what were you all about just now?'", "'You seem mighty fond, methinks, of employing Mr Harleigh for your Mercury!'", "'He is so good as to employ himself. I could never think of taking such a liberty.'", "'Good morning,", "'I am sure of that!'", "'why who can be playing it?'", "'Hist! dear ladies,", "''tis some exquisite performer.'", "'It must be Lady Kendover, then,", "'for nobody else comes to our house that plays the harp.'", "\"We'll give him a surprise,", "\"We'll do the thing up brown,", "\"We must strike higher than that feast we had, last year.\"", "\"Oh dear, do you remember how we served Mumps that night!", "\"Dot vill pe fine!", "\"But, say, I've been thinking of having some fun with him before this spread comes off.\"", "\"Let me in on the ground floor,", "\"I will, on one condition, Frank.\"", "\"And what is that?\"", "\"That you loan me that masquerade suit you have in your trunk. The one you used at that New Year's dance at home.\"", "\"You mean that Indian rig?\"", "\"Hullo, I reckon I smell a mouse!", "\"Did you indeed.\"", "\"I did indeed; and I heard Hans say that he wanted nothing to do with the Indians.\"", "\"Well, he's going to have something to do with at least one Indian,", "\"What do you say I get the suit?\"", "\"Yes; if you'll fix it so that I can see the sport.\"", "\"All of the crowd can see it, if they don't leak about it,", "\"I dink I could chump dem sticks of I vos taller,", "\"Or the sticks were lower,", "\"That's right, Hans, you had better learn how to jump now, and to run, too.\"", "\"The Indians have come,", "\"They say a band of them are in the woods around here,", "\"If you go out you want to be careful or they may scalp you.\"", "\"Cracious, Rofer, ton't say dot!", "\"Vot is dem Indians doing here annavay?\"", "\"They came in East to hunt up some buffalo that got away. They had something like half a million in a corral, and about two thousand got away from them.\"", "\"No, I ton't vonts to meet any of dem,", "\"Da vos von pad lot alretty!\"", "\"That's right, Hans, you give them a wide berth,", "\"Now for some fun!", "\"You're a lively one!", "\"We never had such a lad as you before Master Thomas.\"", "\"Thanks, Peleg, and perhaps you'll never have one like me again -- and then you'll be dreadfully sorry.\"", "\"Mum's the word, old man.\"", "\"Oh, I never say nuthin, Master Thomas; you know that,", "\"Dutcha boy heap big scalp-me take um! Burra!", "\"It's dem Indians come to take mine hair! Oh, please, Mister Indian, ton't vos touch me!\"", "\"Dutcha boy heap nice hair,", "\"Maka nice door-mat for Big Wolf. Burra!\"", "\"No, no; ton't vos touch mine hair-it vos all der hair I vos got!", "\"Please, Mister Indian mans, let me go!", "\"White bay stop or Big Wolf shoot!", "\"No, no; ton't shoot!", "\"Dutcha boy dance for Big Wolf,", "\"Dance! Dance or Big Wolf shoot!", "\"I can't vos dance!", "\"Hoopla! keep it up!", "\"Dutcha boy take the cake for flingin' hees boots. Faster, faster, or Big Wolf shoot, bang!\"", "\"No, no; I vos dance so hard as I can!", "\"You're a corker, Hans!", "\"You ought to join the buck-and-wing dancers in a minstrel company.\"", "\"Vot -- vot -- ?", "\"Ain't you no Indian?\"", "\"To be sure I am; I'm Big Wolf, the Head Dancing Master of the Tuscaroras, Hans, dear boy. Don't you think I'm a stunner.\"", "\"You vos Tom Rofer, made up,", "\"Vot for you vos blay me such a drick as dis, hey?\"", "\"Just to wake you up, Hans.\"", "\"I ton't vos been asleep, not me!\"", "\"I mean to stir up your ideas -- put something new into your head.\"", "\"Mine head vos all right, Tom.\"", "\"To be sure it is.\"", "\"Den vot you say you vos put somedings new py him, hey?\"", "\"I mean to make you sharper-put you on your mettle.\"", "\"I ton't understand,", "\"That's so, and you won't in a thousand years, Hans. But you are the right sort, any way.\"", "\"I dink I blay me Indian mineselluf some tay,", "\"Dot vos lots of fun to make me tance, vosn't it? Vere you got dot bistol?\"", "\"Down in the barn. Look out, or it may go off,", "\"Now you tance!", "\"Tance, or I vos shoot you full of holes!\"", "\"Hi, Tom; he's got the best of you now!", "\"You can't make me dance, Hans,", "\"That old rusty iron hasn't been loaded for years.\"", "\"It ton't vos no goot? No. Maybe you vos only fool me.\"", "\"Pull the trigger and see,", "\"The problem of survivorship,", "\"Has the servant made any statement on this subject, sir?", "\"In what respect, sir, is it of interest?", "\"I think I must leave you to consider that question yourself. This is an untried case, and we mustn't make free with the actions and motives of individuals.\"", "\"Does the paper give any description of the missing man, sir?", "\u201cA Journey to the Moon,", "\u201cThe moon was this, a habitable world, inhabited before the earth. The moon is that, a world uninhabitable, and now uninhabited.\u201d", "\u201cNational Company of Interstellary Communication.", "\"reminds me of New York; and it's the first thing that has, since I left home.\"", "\"Why, Daddy, it isn't like New York at all,", "\"A rich miner; a most melancholy and peculiar person, by the way,", "\"I believe his name is Jones.\"", "\"Jones, and a miner?", "\"What's his other name -- Anson?\"", "\"No; not Anson. He is registered as C.B. Jones, of Boston.\"", "\"Oh; that's not the Jones at all,", "\"It's the Jones who is our guest,", "\"We must get back, girls, and dress for dinner -- an unusual luxury, isn't it? Our trunks arrived at the hotel two weeks ago, and are now in our rooms, doubtless, awaiting us to unpack them.\"", "\"Don't let's return just yet,", "\"I want to see the sun set.\"", "\"but we can see it from our windows, and as we're a long way from the hotel now I believe Beth's suggestion is wise.\"", "\"Look at that man down there!\"", "\"it's the Grand Canyon man.\"", "\"Why, I believe it is,", "\"What is he doing?\"", "\"But he is going to do something, I think.\"", "\"whether he really was thinking of plunging into the ocean; or whether that time at the Grand Canyon he had a notion of jumping into the chasm.\"", "\"Myrtle has saved his life twice. But she can't be always near to watch the man, and if he has suicidal intentions, he'll make an end of himself, sooner or later, without a doubt.\"", "\"I am quite wrong, and the strange man had no intention of doing himself an injury. But each time I obeyed an impulse that compelled me to cry out; and afterward I have been much ashamed of my forwardness.\"", "\"But I am not especially pleased to encounter him again,", "\"for, if I remember aright, he acted very rudely to Myrtle and proved unsociable when I made overtures and spoke to him.\"", "\"I wonder who he is?", "\"I'll inquire and find out,", "\"Can you tell me, Mr. Ross, who the gentleman is in the corner?\"", "\"is the gentleman we spoke of this afternoon -- Mr. C.B. Jones -- the man who usurped the rooms intended for you.\"", "\"Has he a large party, then?\"", "\"He is alone; that is the queer part of it,", "\"Nor has he much baggage. But he liked the suite -- a parlor with five rooms opening out of it -- and insisted upon having them all, despite the fact that it is one of the most expensive suites in the hotel. I said he was eccentric, did I not?\"", "\"You were justified,", "\"Thank you, sir, for the information.\"", "\"Well, Mr. Jones, we meet again, you see.\"", "\"Confound the fellow!", "\"He's worse than a boor. But perhaps his early education was neglected.\"", "\"Did you call him Mr. Jones, sir?", "\"Yes, my dear; but it is not your Uncle Anson. I've inquired about him. The Joneses are pretty thick, wherever you go; but I hope not many are like this fellow.\"", "\"Something's wrong with him,", "\"He's had some sad bereavement -- a great blow of some sort -- and it has made him somber and melancholy. He doesn't seem to know he acts rudely. You can tell by the man's eyes that he is unhappy.\"", "\"His eyes have neither color nor expression,", "\"At his best, this Mr. Jones must have been an undesirable acquaintance.\"", "\"You can't be sure of that,", "\"and I'm positive my theory is correct. More and more am I inclined to agree with Myrtle that he is disgusted with life, and longs to end it.\"", "\"I'm sure such a person is of no use to the world, and if he doesn't like himself he's better out of it.\"", "\"He might be reclaimed, and -- and comforted,", "\"When I think of the happiness you have brought into my life, sir, I long to express my gratitude by making some one else happy.\"", "\"You're doing it, little one,", "\u201cDo sit down, Julian,", "\u201cYou have been prancing up and down this hall until my nerves are quite on edge.\u201d", "\u201cI beg your pardon, Cousin Jane,", "\u201cI wasn\u2019t aware that my restlessness bothered you.", "\u201cI thought you had two Dresden jars on either side of the clock,", "\u201cSo I had, but that lazy, worthless parlor maid broke it when dusting this morning.\u201d", "\u201cDo put down that jar, Julian; I cannot afford to lose both,", "\u201cYes, the maid broke the other, and had the audacity to say that it was cracked in the first place.", "\u201cI let her know I thought she was cracked.\u201d", "\u201cIt\u2019s a shame to lose the pair. Perhaps I can cement the pieces together for you.\u201d", "\u201cOh, could you?", "\u201cI had them all collected and placed in this box.\u201d", "\u201cAre these all?", "\u201cI suppose so. Don\u2019t they fit?\u201d", "\u201cThe big pieces do,", "\u201cWas there, by chance, anything in the jar?\u201d", "\u201cAnything in the jar?", "\u201cNo. Nothing was ever kept in either of them. Do stop fingering those pieces, Julian, you may cut your hand on the sharp edges.\u201d", "\u201cI shall have to ask the maid if she picked up all the pieces.\u201d", "\u201cYou can\u2019t do that because she has gone.\u201d", "\u201cYou don\u2019t think I\u2019m going to keep a bull-in-the-china-shop in my employ do you, with all my valuable bric-a-brac? No, indeed; I gave her a week\u2019s wages and sent her packing.\u201d", "\u201cI can\u2019t blame you for firing her,", "\u201cThere\u2019s nothing more aggravating than losing an article you value -- through carelessness -- cursed carelessness,", "\u201cIt\u2019s good of you, Julian, to take so much interest in my jar,", "\u201cAnd sometime when you are not busy, if you will stick the jar together....\u201d", "\u201cSurely, surely,", "\u201cCould you give me the girl\u2019s full name and address, Cousin Jane, she....\u201d", "\u201cDon\u2019t tell me she has stolen something from you,", "\u201cNo, no,", "\u201cQuite the contrary, she laundered some handkerchiefs for me, and I\u2019d like to send her a tip.\u201d", "\u201cVery thoughtful of you,", "\u201cShe can take that tip out in my broken jar. Rose was a better laundress than a parlor maid, although Mrs. Leonard McLane gave her an excellent reference. Don\u2019t you want any breakfast?\u201d", "\u201cBreakfast? Have you had yours?\u201d", "\u201cRun along into the dining room, Julian; you must be starved. Why, it\u2019s nearly ten o\u2019clock.\u201d", "\u201cI\u2019m not hungry,", "\u201cComing this way, Cousin Jane?\u201d", "\u201cNo, I\u2019m going upstairs,", "\u201cHas Miss Ogden been down?", "\u201cNo, sor, she is after breakfastin\u2019 in her room. Another muffin, sor?", "\u201cNo more, thanks.", "\u201cHas Rose, the parlor maid, left the house yet?\u201d", "\u201cYes, sor. I saw her go over an hour ago, sor.\u201d", "\u201cCan you tell me her full name and address?\u201d", "\u201cRose O\u2019Day, sor. She wint direct to the station, sor, an\u2019 I understood her to say she was goin\u2019 to her home in New York, but I dunno her exact address. I\u2019ll ax the cook, sor, if you wish.\u201d", "\u201cShe lives somewhere in Cohoes, near Troy, New York, sor; but the cook doesn\u2019t know her house address.\u201d", "\u201cIs luncheon to be at the usual hour?\u201d", "\u201cHalf an hour earlier, sor.", "\u201cMrs. Ogden has engaged extra help for the dinner tonight, and I have to show them the silver and things, sor.\u201d", "\u201cI hope the new servants all come highly recommended,", "\u201cMrs. Ogden\u2019s handsome silver and jewels would be a temptation, a grave temptation, to thieves.\u201d", "\u201cThe extra footmen come from the caterer, sor. Will you take the paper, sor?\u201d", "\u201cNo, I\u2019ve read it,", "\u201cWrong number, excuse me, please,", "\u201che had no more money to spare.", "\u201cNo more money to spare,", "\u201cLuncheon is served, Miss Ethel,", "\u201cI\u2019ll be right down; tell Mrs. Ogden not to wait for me,", "\u201cJust a light lunch, Ethel,", "\u201cWalter telephoned he would not be back from the Capitol, and Julian hasn\u2019t shown up.\u201d", "\u201cHe\u2019s comin\u2019 now, Mrs. Ogden,", "\u201cBy the way, Julian, why did you disappear so mysteriously last night?", "\u201cYou did not come to my supper party.\u201d", "\u201cI owe you a thousand apologies,", "\u201cI confess I never gave it a thought, Cousin Jane,", "\u201cI hope that you will pardon my absent-mindedness when I tell you that among the crowd leaving the theater I saw Yoshida Ito.\u201d", "\u201cOh, now I recollect; the Jap who poisoned Dwight Tilghman.\u201d", "\u201cExactly. And wishing to hand him over to the police, I gave chase.\u201d", "\u201cNo, worse luck! He eluded me in the crowd and disappeared in the direction of the Mall.\u201d", "\u201cDid you find any further trace of the Jap?", "\u201cNo. I wandered about that part of the city, questioned the policemen on duty there, and came home. Do you know, Cousin Jane,", "\u201cthat you had a burglar here last night?\u201d", "\u201cI suppose my sudden and unexpected glimpse of the Jap, Ito, excited me, for I could not sleep and sat up reading. I thought I heard a window open, and stole downstairs just in time to see a man vault through the hall window.\u201d", "\u201cGood heavens! We might all have been murdered in our beds!", "\u201cAny silver missing, Charles?\u201d", "\u201cNo, madam, not a piece; I\u2019ve just been after acountin\u2019 of it,", "\u201cI locked up the house as usual, last night, madam, but this mornin\u2019 I did find the pantry window unlocked.\u201d", "\u201cProbably that girl, Rose, was a confederate,", "\u201cThat was why she was so agitated this morning. I\u2019ll notify the police. Could you identify the burglar, Julian?\u201d", "\u201cI couldn\u2019t see very well in the half light,", "\u201cI really believe I\u2019m bewitched! I only want three sentences, you see, something quite straightforward and commonplace, and I can\u2019t find \u2018em.\u201d", "\u201cI don\u2019t believe this\u2019ll do. Did your grandfather ever visit the Hebrides, Katharine?", "\u201cMy mind got running on the Hebrides, and I couldn\u2019t help writing a little description of them. Perhaps it would do at the beginning of a chapter. Chapters often begin quite differently from the way they go on, you know.", "\u201cIt\u2019s very beautiful,", "\u201cOh, I know,", "\u201cAnd that\u2019s just what I can\u2019t do. Things keep coming into my head. It isn\u2019t that I don\u2019t know everything and feel everything (who did know him, if I didn\u2019t?), but I can\u2019t put it down, you see. There\u2019s a kind of blind spot,", "\u201cthere. And when I can\u2019t sleep o\u2019 nights, I fancy I shall die without having done it.\u201d", "\u201cSurely, Katharine,", "\u201cthe men were far handsomer in those days than they are now, in spite of their odious whiskers? Look at old John Graham, in his white waistcoat \u2014 look at Uncle Harley. That\u2019s Peter the manservant, I suppose. Uncle John brought him back from India.\u201d", "\u201cWhat is nobler,", "\u201cThat\u2019s Janie Mannering,", "\u201cAnd that\u2019s Queenie Colquhoun,", "\u201cAh, you wretch!", "\u201cthat there was a kind of sincerity in those days between men and women which, with all your outspokenness, you haven\u2019t got.\u201d", "\u201cThey must have been good friends at heart,", "\u201cbecause she used to sing his songs. Ah, how did it go?", "\u201cIt\u2019s the vitality of them!", "\u201cAunt Celia!", "\u201cI think Aunt Celia has come to talk about Cyril, mother,", "\u201cAunt Celia has discovered that Cyril is married. He has a wife and children.\u201d", "\u201cNo, he is not married,", "\u201cHe has two children, and another on the way.\u201d", "\u201cWe thought it better to wait until it was proved before we told you,", "\u201cBut I met Cyril only a fortnight ago at the National Gallery!", "\u201cI don\u2019t believe a word of it,", "\u201cI didn\u2019t wish to believe it, Maggie,", "\u201cFor a long time I couldn\u2019t believe it. But now I\u2019ve seen, and I have to believe it.\u201d", "\u201cdoes your father know of this?\u201d", "\u201cCyril married!", "\u201cAnd never telling us a word, though we\u2019ve had him in our house since he was a child \u2014 noble William\u2019s son! I can\u2019t believe my ears!\u201d", "\u201cI went to Seton Street,", "\u201cI stood in the street,", "\u201cAnd what did she look like?", "\u201cOne could see how the poor boy had been deluded,", "\u201cBut they\u2019ve got nothing to live upon,", "\u201cIf he\u2019d come to us like a man,", "\u201cShe is not his wife,", "\u201cI\u2019ve never heard anything so detestable!", "\u201cWe must realize Cyril\u2019s point of view first,", "\u201cmade a life for herself,", "\u201cThis unhappy business,", "\u201cBut does he refuse to marry her?", "\u201cHe has written an absurd perverted letter, all quotations,", "\u201cHe thinks he\u2019s doing a very fine thing, where we only see the folly of it.... The girl\u2019s every bit as infatuated as he is \u2014 for which I blame him.\u201d", "\u201cShe entangled him,", "\u201cIt\u2019s no use going into the rights and wrongs of the affair now, Celia,", "\u201cThe mischief\u2019s done, and very ugly mischief too. Are we to allow the third child to be born out of wedlock? (I am sorry to have to say these things before you, Katharine.) He will bear your name, Maggie \u2014 your father\u2019s name, remember.\u201d", "\u201cBut let us hope it will be a girl,", "\u201cIt\u2019s detestable \u2014 quite detestable!", "\u201cNowadays, people don\u2019t think so badly of these things as they used to do,", "\u201cI\u2019m afraid I take a very different view of principle,", "\u201cI will go to-morrow and see him,", "\u201cBut why should you take these disagreeable things upon yourself, Celia?", "\u201cPerhaps it would be better if I married William,", "\"Why -- Mr. Biddulph!", "\"fancy meeting you like this!\"", "\"only yesterday I was thinking of you, and wondering whether you were in London!\"", "\"And only yesterday, too, Miss Pennington, I also was thinking of you,", "\"Where is your father?", "\"Oh! -- well, he's away just now. He was with me in London only the other day,", "\"But, as you know, he's always travelling.", "\"I'm going into this shop a moment. Will you wait for me? I'm so pleased to see you again, and looking so well. It seems really ages since we were at Gardone, doesn't it?", "\"I'll wait, of course,", "\"Ah! not that -- not that!", "\"I was hailed by the lady close to Chapel Street,", "\"and I drove 'er to Oxford Street, not far from Tottenham Court Road. We stood at the kerb for about ten minutes. Then she ordered me to drive with all speed over 'ere.\"", "\"Did you see her speak with any gentleman?\"", "\"She was with a dark, youngish gentleman when they hailed me. She got in and left 'im in Chapel Street. I heard 'im say as we went off that he'd see 'er again soon.\"", "\"That's all you know of her?\"", "\"Yes, sir. I've never seen 'er before,", "\"Your man's been tellin' me as how you thought I had a bank-thief in my cab!\"", "\"Yes, but I was mistaken,", "\"I must have made a mistake in the cab.\"", "\"That's very easy, sir. We're so much alike -- us red 'uns.\"", "\"I've been very anxious about you, Mr. Owen,", "\"When I went to your room this morning I found your bed empty. I wondered where you had gone.\"", "\"I've had a strange adventure, Browning,", "\"Has Mr. Marlowe rung me up?\"", "\"No, sir. But somebody else rang up about an hour ago, and asked whether you were in.\"", "\"I couldn't quite catch the name, sir. It sounded like Shuffle -- something.\"", "\"Did he leave any message?\"", "\"No, sir. He merely asked if you were in -- that's all.\"", "\"You didn't ring me up about one o'clock this morning, did you?", "\"Oh -- well, nothing,", "\"I thought perhaps it might have been you -- that's all. What time shall you be in at White's?\"", "\"About four. Will you be there?\"", "\"Right-ho! Good-bye, old man,", "\"A thousand thanks, Master Pinocchio, for saving me the trouble of breaking the shell. Adieu until we meet again. Keep well, and my best compliments to all at home!\"", "\"Perhaps I ought not to say so, but I know she has missed you,", "\"I am going to call on Miss Marjoribanks;", "\"She is sure to be in just now, and I am so glad; and, my dear, you need not mind me, for I am both your friends,", "\"Oh, I am sure I never thought of seeing you here, Mr Cavendish,", "\"Perhaps you are going to see Miss Marjoribanks,", "\"Yes, I am going to see Miss Marjoribanks,", "\"It can't be worse than ruin,", "\"Harry, if you are going to Lucilla -- -- !", "\"wait and rest yourself a little, and I will get you a glass of wine. Keep still; there's some Tokay,", "\"Don't you go and worry yourself. You shall see nobody. I'll bring it you with my own hand.\"", "\"Oh, confound the Tokay!", "\"Don't make a row about it,", "\"It's all right. I can't ask Lucilla Marjoribanks to have me after that, but I mean to put my trust in her, as she says. I was going to ask her to explain; but after all, on thinking of it, I don't see the good of explanations,", "\"The fact is, she is right, Nelly, and, stand or fall, we'll have it out to-night.\"", "\"Oh, good heavens! what does she know?", "\"Hold your tongue, Nelly,", "\"You must have been giving yourself airs on the subject,", "\"I never was so foolish as that, for my part;", "\"If you do go,", "\"It is I that have to do it, Nelly,", "\"You must let me do it my way;", "\"wished to speak to them on important business.", "\"Inconvenient, but will turn up.\"", "\"The Sacrifice of Isaac,", "\"They're your responsibility, not mine.\"", "\"Did you see Enid Glenwilliam, mother, in Palace Yard?\"", "\"I just noticed her,", "\"One can't help it, she dresses so outrageously.\"", "\"Oh, mother, she dresses very well! Of course nobody else could wear that kind of thing.\"", "\"That's where the ill-breeding comes in -- that a young girl should make herself so conspicuous.\"", "\"Well, it seems to pay,", "\"She has tremendous success. People on our side -- people you'd never think -- will do anything to get her for their parties. They say she makes things go. She doesn't care what she says.\"", "\"That I can quite believe! Yes -- I saw she was at Shrewsbury House the other day -- dining -- when the Royalties were there. The daughter of that man!\"", "\"And she's very devoted to him, too. She told some one who told me, that he was so much more interesting than any other man she knew, that she hadn't the least wish to marry! I suppose you wouldn't like it if I were to make a friend of her?", "\"Do what you like when I'm gone, my dear,", "\"Now, then, for the scene. Let's get it over!", "\"It's not respectful to mother!", "\"It's all very well to be a Socialist and a Bohemian. But there are decencies!\"", "\"Well, mother, what's up? Somebody to be tried and executed?", "\"I can't pretend to make a jest of what I'm going to say,", "\"I wanted to speak to you all on a matter of business -- not very agreeable business, but necessary. I am sure you will hear me out, and believe that I am doing my best, according to my lights, by the family -- the estates -- and the country.\"", "\"have now passed since your father's death. I have done my best with my trust, though of course I realize that I cannot have satisfied all my children.", "\"I have not wasted any of your father's money in personal luxury -- that none of you can say. The old establishment, the old ways, have been kept up -- nothing more. And I have certainly wished", "\"Ah, now we come to it!", "\"The rest was all 'but leather and prunella.'\"", "\"Corry -- old man?", "\"Coryston also knows very well,", "\"Short of the estates -- which were my right,", "\"Sold my soul and held my tongue? -- quite right!", "\"I have scores of your letters, my dear mother, to that effect.\"", "\"What! -- you think he still has them -- in the upper regions?\"", "\"Your brothers and sister, Coryston, will not allow you, I think, to insult your father's memory!", "\"Now look here, mother. Let's come to business. You've been plotting something more against me, and I want to know what it is. Have you been dishing me altogether? -- cutting me finally out of the estates? Is that what you mean? Let's have it!\"", "\"Yes -- but please tell it!", "\"Is it fair to keep us on tenter-hooks? What is that paper, for instance? Extracts, I guess, from your will -- which concern me -- and the rest of them", "\"For God's sake let's have them, and get done with it.\"", "\"I will read them, if you will sit down, Coryston.\"", "\"Coryston guessed rightly. These are the passages from my will which concern the estates. I should like to have explained before reading them, in a way as considerate to my eldest son as possible", "\"No, no! Business first and pleasure afterward!", "\"Disinherit me and then pitch into me. You get at me unfairly while I'm speculating as to what's coming.\"", "\"that Coryston is behaving abominably.\"", "\"I say, mother!\"", "\"I won't have it, mother! It's not fair on Corry. It's beastly unfair!\"", "\"I think, mother, you will hardly maintain these provisions.\"", "\"Yes, James, I shall maintain them.\"", "\"I sha'n't take it, mother! I give you full warning. Whenever it comes to me I shall hand it back to Corry.\"", "\"It won't come to you, except as a life interest. The estates will be in trust,", "\"How long have you been concocting this, mother? I suppose my last speeches have contributed?\"", "\"They have made me finally certain that your father could never have intrusted you with the estates.\"", "\"How do you know? He meant me to have the property if I survived you. The letter which he left for me said as much.\"", "\"He gave me absolute discretion,", "\"At least you have taken it!", "\"Now let's see how things stand.\"", "\"I will have all -- or nothing!", "\"Of course I don't deny it for a moment, if the property had come to me I should have made all sorts of risky experiments with it. I should have cut it up into small holdings. I should have pulled down the house or made it into a county hospital.\"", "\"You make it your business to wound, Coryston.\"", "\"No, I simply tell you what I should have done. And I should have been absolutely in my right!", "\"I have a responsibility toward my father's property,", "\"You will let me come and see you to-morrow?", "\"Good night, mother. We'll play a great game, you and I -- but we'll play fair.\"", "\"I say, Arthur, old boy, you talked a jolly lot of nonsense this afternoon! I slipped into the Gallery a little to hear you.\"", "\"Of course it was nonsense to you!\"", "\"What did Miss Glenwilliam say to you?\"", "\"Nothing that matters to you, Corry.\"", "\"Arthur, my son, you'll be in trouble, too, before you know where you are!\"", "\"Do hold your tongue, Corry!\"", "\"Why should I? I back you strongly. But you'll have to stick to her. Mother will fight you for all she's worth.\"", "\"I'm no more to be managed than you, if it comes to that.\"", "\"Aren't you? You're the darling, at present. I don't grudge you the estates, Arthur.\"", "\"I never lifted a finger to get them,", "\"And I shall find a way of getting out of them -- the greater part of them, anyway. All the same, Corry, if I do -- you'll have to give guarantees.\"", "\"Don't you wish you may get them! Well now", "\"Then Mr. Lester knows,", "\"Miss Coryston! I beg your pardon! I was just knocking off work. Can I do anything for you?\"", "\"I came for a book,", "\"I know where to find it. Please don't trouble.", "\"I suppose my brothers have been here?\"", "\"They have only just gone -- at least, Arthur and Lord Coryston. James went some time ago.\"", "\"I suppose Corry has been attacking my mother?\"", "\"I assure you, he did nothing of the kind. I should not have let him.", "\"But they've told you -- he and Arthur -- they've told you what's happened?\"", "\"I tried to stop them.\"", "\"As if anything could stop Corry!", "\"when he wants to do something he knows he oughtn't to do. And he's told you his precious plan? -- of coming to settle down at Coryston -- in our very pockets -- in order to make mother's life a burden to her?\"", "\"A perfectly mad whim!", "\"I don't believe he'll do it.\"", "\"he'll do anything that suits his ideas. He calls it following his conscience. Other people's ideas and other people's consciences don't matter a bit.\"", "\"You think he's been badly treated?\"", "\"I had rather not express an opinion. I have no right to one.\"", "\"Mayn't women care for politics just as strongly as men?", "\"I think it's splendid my mother should care as she does! Corry ought to respect her for it.\"", "\"But of course you don't, you can't, feel with us, Mr. Lester. You're a Liberal.\"", "\"I really don't agree with Coryston at all. I don't intend to label myself just yet, but if I'm anything I think I'm a Conservative.\"", "\"But you think other things matter more than politics?\"", "\"Especially -- for women?", "\"You see, I guessed what you meant to say. What things? I think I know.\"", "\"Beauty -- poetry -- sympathy. Wouldn't you put those first?\"", "\"Watch where you're going, Terrie!\"", "\"Hello, Coordinator.\"", "\"Sniff? Have a seat, Conru.\"", "\"Umm-mm, only fifty-two years old and a captain already. Remarkably able, a young man like you. And your work hitherto has been outstanding. That Vegan business....\"", "\"I know that, sir. I also know I was picked for a dangerous job because you thought I could fill the role. But I still don't know exactly what the job is.\"", "\"I'm afraid I can't tell you much more than you must already have guessed,", "\"Three billion?\"", "\"Certainly. Earth is a rich planet, Conru, and a fairly crowded one at the same time. Bickering is inevitable. It's a part of their culture, as much as cooperation has been a part of ours.\"", "\"We learned the hard way. The old Valgol was a poor planet and we had to unite to conquer space or we could not have survived.\"", "\"The problem of Earth is not quite that simple.", "\"Do you know precisely what a provocateur job is, Conru?\"", "\"A difficult problem,", "\"My opinion is that we should treat all exactly alike -- force them to abandon their unrealistic differences.\"", "\"Exactly!", "\"We're never too rough on the eager lads who come here from Valgol and kick the natives around a bit. We even encourage it when the spirit of rebelliousness dies down.\"", "\"The idealists. Brave, intelligent, patriotic. The kind who probably wouldn't be a part of this racial bickering, anyway.\"", "\"We'll give them the ammunition for their propaganda. We've been doing it. Result: the leaders get mad. Races, religions, nationalities, they hate us worse than they hate each other.\"", "\"Ideally, that would be the situation, Conru. Only it doesn't work that way.", "\"Can't use Luron here. Technologies are entirely too similar. It might shatter both planets, and we wouldn't want that.\"", "\"So what do we use?\"", "\"You'll be lucky to understand it by the time you're finished with this assignment and transferred to another ... that is, if you come out of this one alive.\"", "\"We have some influence in the underground movement, as you might logically expect. The leader is a man we worked very hard to have elected.\"", "\"A member of one of the despised races?", "\"The best we could do at this point was to help elect someone from a minority sub-group of the dominant white race. The leader's name is Levinsohn. He is of the white sub-group known as Jews.\"", "\"How well is this Levinsohn accepted by the movement?\"", "\"Considerable resistance and hostility,", "\"And if unity hasn't been achieved?\"", "\"We simply crush this rebellion and make them start all over again. They'll have learned some degree of unity from this revolt and so the next one will be more successful.", "\"That's for the future, though. We'll work out our plans from the results of this campaign.\"", "\"But isn't there a lot of danger in the policy of fomenting rebellion against us?", "\"Evolution is always painful, forced evolution even more so. Yes, there are great dangers, but advance information from you and other agents can reduce the risk. It's a chance we must take, Conru.\"", "\"Conrad,", "'At least, there shall be something for breakfast to-morrow,", "'Go and see who has got into the shed.", "'How did they come up from the beach?", "'But however they managed it, they will be very useful,", "'We are in luck! There are two devil-fish in the shed; Whoever brought them, it was very kind of him, and now we have such good bait we will go out in the morning and catch some halibut.", "'Do you know who brought them here?", "'It was our son; it is a year to-day since he was drowned, and he knows how poor we are, so he has taken pity on us. I will listen at night, and if I hear anyone whistle I will call him; for I know it is he.'", "'We have longed for you these many months. Fear nothing; no one is here except your father and I.", "'Come in, come in, my son! You have guessed how poor we are and have sought to help us,", "'Is it you, my son?", "'Is that you, my son?", "'In the morning we will go out,", "'Get up, it is time to fish,", "'Put the blanket over you,", "'and be careful not to watch me.", "'Pull in the lines and see,", "'What is the matter with my son?", "'I can only see his shadow,", "\"What do you mean by the words 'their attire'?", "\"Were they dressed in European clothes or in regular Turkish garments?\"", "\"As the cards were printed in Turkish characters you could not, of course, tell what the names were,", "\"How did you do that?", "\"They were well dressed?", "\"they impressed you as Turkish gentlemen by their features, and they wore fezzes?\"", "\"but there was a little more than that.\"", "\"It is of no importance,", "\"But really it must be,", "\"One of them, the man who spoke to me, had a bad sword-cut across his right cheek, whilst another squinted horribly; besides, they were all elderly men.\"", "\"Pardon me, inspector,", "\"but you admit, no doubt, that this is a very remarkable crime I am investigating.\"", "\"I should just think it is, sir,", "\"Well, that is very curious,", "\"And now, Mr. Sharpe,", "\"what did you observe?\"", "\"You are quite sure he was one of the members of the mission?", "\"How many of these men were there?", "\"It is quite clear, then,", "\"that two men succeeded in murdering four and in getting away with their plunder and arms without creating the slightest noise or exciting any suspicion in your mind.\"", "\"That is so,", "\"there is nothing else to be done here. Will you come with me, Mr. Winter?\"", "\u201cwe have some precautions to take.\u201d", "\u201cWhy? The island is not inhabited,", "\u201cThat is probable,", "\u201cat such a distance from land?\u201d", "\u201cYes, my boy,", "\u201cThese pirates are bold sailors as well as formidable enemies, and we must take measures accordingly.\u201d", "\u201cThat would be best,", "\u201cWho knows if we might not find on the opposite side one of the caverns which we have searched for in vain here?\u201d", "\u201cThat is true,", "\u201cThen, captain,", "\u201cThat is true, Cyrus,", "\u201cbut we have already examined all that mass of granite, and there is not a hole, not a cranny!\u201d", "\u201cNo, not one!", "\u201cWith windows to light them!", "\u201cAnd a staircase to climb up to them!", "\u201cWhat is there, Top?", "\u201cWhat\u2019s happening down there?", "\u201cTop smells some amphibious creature,", "\u201cAn alligator, perhaps,", "\u201cI do not think so,", "\u201cAlligators are only met with in regions less elevated in latitude.\u201d", "\u201cLet us pursue this exploration to the end,", "\u201cThere is no doubt this overflow exists,", "\u201cand since it is not visible it must go through the granite cliff at the west!\u201d", "\u201cBut what importance do you attach to knowing that, my dear Cyrus?", "\u201cConsiderable importance,", "\u201cfor if it flows through the cliff there is probably some cavity, which it would be easy to render habitable after turning away the water.\u201d", "\u201cBut is it not possible, captain, that the water flows away at the bottom of the lake,", "\u201cand that it reaches the sea by some subterranean passage?\u201d", "\u201cThat might be,", "\u201cand should it be so we shall be obliged to build our house ourselves, since nature has not done it for us.\u201d", "\u201cA lamantin!", "\u201cYou, you fool Ivanushka,", "\u201cSo far as in me lies,", "\u201cI will give you pleasure.", "\u201cPl-please sign this.", "\u201cKind friends I am a sick mother with three hungry children. Pray help me. Though soon I shall be dead, yet, if you will not forget my little ones in this world, neither will I forget you in the world that is to come.", "\u201cAway with you!", "\u201cYou are seeking but to trick us.", "\u201cFor Christ\u2019s sake!", "\u201cMay the Lord give unto you!", "\u201cThe beggar is overdoing it,", "\u201cHe knows the trick too well.", "\u201cFor the love of Christ give me a groat!", "\u201cand are impertinent as well. Why should poverty be so impertinent? Why should its hungry moans prevent us from sleeping?\u201d", "\u201cWell, what is it, my good sir?", "\u201cAh, Makar Alexievitch,", "\u201csurely it is not much that I am asking of you? My-my wife and children are starving. C-could you not afford me just a grivennik?", "\u201cHow these people put me to shame!", "\u201cNo, good sir, I cannot,", "\u201cWell, what you will,", "\u201cPerhaps ten kopecks?", "\u201cthat, though you are in such straits, you have hired a room at five roubles?", "\u201cOf the disgrace put upon me,", "\u201cI am innocent. True, I to a certain extent disobeyed orders, but never did I commit theft or embezzlement.", "\"I shall really experience deep regret to leave your dwelling-place, dear Katherine,", "\"for even at this season, it possesses many attractions superior to the vicinity of a great city.\"", "\"In the warmer months it is a beautiful spot,", "\"Since yesterday morning,", "\"and in that time we have formed a friendship which may never, I hope, be interrupted.\"", "\"Nay \u2014 neither kind nor considerate,", "\"Oh! welcome indeed!", "\"And now will the name of Markham go down to posterity,", "\"Would that his struggles were over, and that the civil war was put an end to in Castelcicala!", "\"I have no fears for the result,", "\"Yes \u2014 the finger of heaven was assuredly visible in all those circumstances which led to my benefactor's greatness,", "\"Oh! you wrong our noble-hearted friend \u2014 our mutual benefactor,", "\"Rank and distinction \u2014 wealth and glory cannot change his heart: he will only esteem them as the elements of an influence and of a power to do much good.\"", "\"Is this the way, young ladies, to Farmer Bennet's?", "\"You may see the roof appearing from the other side of yonder eminence. Mr. Bennet is not, however, within at this moment: he has gone to a neighbouring village on business, and will not return till two o'clock.\"", "\"Then you know Farmer Bennet?", "\"Well, Miss \u2014 do I have the pleasure of meeting you once more?", "\"Ah! Miss Wilmot!\"", "\"Is this Miss Wilmot?", "\"My name is Wilmot,", "\"Was it for me that your visit to the farm was intended?\"", "\"Neither more nor less, Miss,", "\"This person,", "\"has something important to say to you.\"", "\"Yes \u2014 and we must speak alone, too,", "\"that may not be. I am Miss Wilmot's friend \u2014 the friend, too, of one in whom she places great confidence; and whatever you may have to communicate to her cannot be a secret in respect to me.\"", "\"yes \u2014 whatever you may wish to communicate to me must be told in the presence of my friend.\"", "\"But the business is a most delicate one,", "\"Oh! I have no doubt of that,", "\"Do you know this young lady?", "\"I know that young lady well,", "\"I know you well, \u2014 do I not, Miss Monroe?\"", "\"I am not disposed to deny the fact,", "\"You will repent of this obstinacy, Miss \u2014 you will repent of this obstinacy,", "\"It may be so,", "\"nevertheless, menaces will not deter me from my purpose.\"", "\"If you thwart me, I can proclaim matters that you would wish unrevealed,", "\"Act as you please,", "\"Your impertinence only convinces me the more profoundly of the prudence of my resolution to remain with Miss Wilmot.\"", "\"for such, I learn, is your name, \u2014 I beg of you to allow my companion a few moments' conversation with your young friend. They need not retire a dozen yards from this spot; and your eye can remain upon them.\"", "\"I am desirous that Miss Monroe should hear your communications,", "\"I will not speak to Miss Wilmot in the presence of witnesses,", "\"Then we have nothing farther to prevent us from returning to the farm immediately,", "\"Neither need we remain here any longer, Mr. Tidkins,", "\"Tidkins!", "\"Tidkins!", "\"my God! what new plot can now be contemplated?\"", "\"Do you know those people?", "\"Unfortunately,", "\"What is the matter, O Emir Kh\u0431lid?", "\"Enter my house and search it.", "\"Pardon, O my lord; thou art a man in whom trust is reposed and Allah forfend that the trusty turn traitor!", "\"There is no help for it but that my house be searched.", "\"Bismillah; in the name of Allah! Mashallah; whatso Allah willeth! By the blessing of our coming a hoard hath been hit upon, wait while we go down into this hiding-place and see what is therein.", "\"Deliver her to Khatun, the Governor's lady:", "\"Keep off from me, or I will kill thee and kill myself after.", "\"O strumpet, let my son have his will of thee!", "\"O bitch, by what law is it lawful for a woman to marry two men; and how shall the dog be admitted to the place of the lion?", "\"O harlot, how canst thou make me thus to sorrow for my son? Needs must I punish thee with torture, and as for Ala al-Din, he will assuredly be hanged.", "\"And I will die for love of him,", "\"The reward for thy constancy shall be to break up fire-wood and peel onions and set fire under the cooking-pots.", "\"I am willing to suffer all manner of hardships and servitude, but I will not suffer the sight of thy son.", "\"Where did ye find them?", "\"In the very middle of the house belonging to Ala al-Din Abu al-Shamat;", "\"O Ala al-Din, where is the lanthorn?", "\"I stole it not, I know naught of it; I never saw it; I can give no information about it!", "\"O traitor, how cometh it that I brought thee near unto me and thou hast cast me out afar, and I trusted in thee and thou betrayest me?", "\"This is the reward and the least of the reward he shall receive who doth treason against the Caliphs of True Belief!", "\"O Captain Ahmad, O Danaf! thou sittest at thine ease with water flowing at thy feet,[FN#100] and thou knowest not what hath happened.", "\"They have gone down to the gallows with thy son Ala al-Din, adopted by a covenant before Allah!", "\"What is the remedy here, O Hasan Shuuman, and what sayst thou of this?", "\"Assuredly Ala al-Din is innocent and this blame hath come to him from some one enemy.\"[FN#10", "\"What counsellest thou?", "\"We must rescue him, Inshallah!", "\"Give us some one who deserveth death.", "\"Give me room to do my duty.", "\"O accursed, take this man and hang him in Ala al-Din's stead; for he is innocent and we will ransom him with this fellow, even as Abraham ransomed Ishmael with the ram.\"[FN#10", "\"O my sire and chief, Allah requite thee with the best of good!", "\"O Ala al-Din", "\"By the Most Great Name, O my father and chief,", "\"I had no hand in this, nor did I such deed, nor know I who did it.", "\"Whither shall I go, O my chief?", "\"O my son, I will bring thee to Alexandria, for it is a blessed place; its threshold is green and its sojourn is agreeable.", "\"I hear and I obey, O my chief.", "\"Be mindful and, when the Caliph asketh for me, say, 'He is gone touring about the provinces'.", "\"Give me the black-mail.\"[FN#10", "\"Why should we pay thee black mail?", "\"Because I am the watchman of this valley.", "\"O my son, the shop and the room and that which is therein are become thine; so tarry thou here and buy and sell; and repine not at thy lot for Almighty Allah blesseth trade.", "\"Abide here till I go back and bring thee the Caliph's pardon and learn who hath played thee this trick.", "\"No, nor hast thou come to his thought.", "\"See, O Ja'afar, how Ala al-Din dealt with me!", "\"O Commander of the Faithful, thou hast requited him with hanging and hath he not met with his reward?", "\"O Wazir, I have a mind to go down and see him hanging;", "\"Do what thou wilt, O Commander of the Faithful.", "\"O Wazir, this is not Ala al-Din!", "\"How knowest thou that it is not he?", "\"Hanging stretcheth.", "\"Ala al-Din was fair and this one's face is black.", "\"Knowest thou not, O Commander of the Faithful, that death is followed by blackness?", "\"O Wazir, Ala al Din was a Sunnite, and this fellow is a Rejecter, a Shi'ah.", "\"Glory be to Allah who knoweth the hidden things, while we know not whether this was Ala al-Din or other than he.", "\"What wilt thou name him?", "\"Were his father well he had named him; but now I will name him Asl\u0431n.\"[FN#10", "\"Come hither, O damsel.", "\"He is my son and the fruit of my vitals.", "\"And who is his father?", "\"His father was Ala al-Din Abu al-Shamat, but now he is become thy son.", "\"In very sooth Ala al-Din was a traitor.", "\"Allah deliver him from treason! the Heavens forfend and forbid that the 'Trusty' should be a traitor!", "\"When this boy shall grow up and reach man's estate and say to thee, 'Who is my father?' say to him, 'Thou art the son of the Emir Kh\u0431lid, Governor and Chief of Police.'", "\"I hear and I obey.", "\"O my father!", "\"O Captain, give me this lanthorn;", "\"I cannot give it to thee.", "\"Because lives have been lost for it.", "\"There came hither a man who was made Chief of the Sixty; he was named Ala al-Din Abu al-Shamat and he lost his life through this lanthorn.", "\"And what was that story, and what brought about his death?", "\"Thou hadst an elder brother by name Hahzalam Bazazah, and when he reached the age of sixteen and was ripe for marriage, thy father would have bought him a slave-girl named Jessamine.", "\"Haply this slave-girl was my mother Jessamine, and my father was none other than Ala al-Din Abu al-Shamat.", "\"Glory be to Him unto whom none is like!", "\"Whereat dost thou marvel, O my chief?", "\"At the make of yonder boy Aslan, for he is the likest of human creatures to Ala al-Din Abu al-Shamat.", "\"She is called the damsel Jessamine;", "\"Hearkening and obedience,", "\"Thy sire is the Emir Kh\u0431lid!", "\"my father was none other than Ala al-Din Abu al Shamat.", "\"Who acquainted thee with this, O my son?", "\"Ahmad al-Danaf, Captain of the Guard.", "\"What aileth thee, O Aslan?", "\"I know now for certain that my father was Ali al-Din Abu al-Shamat and I would have thee take my blood-revenge on his murderer.", "\"And who was thy father's murderer?", "\"Ahmad Kamakim the arch-thief.", "\"Who told thee this?", "\"I hear and obey;", "\"I would fain have thee arm and harness me like thyself and take me with thee to the Divan.", "\"Allah bless thee, O Aslan!", "\"Who tempted thee to do this thing and art thou friend or foe?", "\"I am thy foe and it was my purpose to kill thee.", "\"And wherefore? Art not a Moslem?", "\u201cGibbon\u2019s History of the Roman Empire. May I have it?\u201d", "\u201cPlease say that again,", "\u201cGibbon! What on earth d\u2019you want him for?", "\u201cSomebody advised me to read it,", "\u201cBut I don\u2019t travel about with a miscellaneous collection of eighteenth-century historians!", "\u201cGibbon! Ten big volumes at least.\u201d", "\u201cwhich shall it be?\u201d", "\u201cor have you the Speech on the American Revolution, Uncle Ridley?\u201d", "\u201cThe Speech on the American Revolution?", "\u201cAnother young man at the dance?\u201d", "\u201cNo. That was Mr. Dalloway,", "\u201cWhat is it to be in love?", "\u201cI ought to have told you: you see that region of the wood? \u2019tis forbidden ground. The Doctor will have none go there; and woe to the man who disobeyeth him! I may tell you,", "\u201cthat a deadly swamp is there.\u201d", "\u201cIs nothing there besides the swamp?\u201d", "\u201cI do not know,", "'What does it all mean?", "\"Eh? oh! ah! second master -- yes, yes, yes; to be sure!", "\"Algy, give Mr. Diamond your chair,", "\"You don't mind, do you, Algernon?", "\"Not at all, Miss Bodkin. You have merely cast another blight over my young existence. I am growing to look like the reverend Peter, in consequence of your ill-usage. Don't you perceive a ghastly hue upon my brow? No? Ah, well, you would if you had any feeling. Here, let me put this cushion better for you. Will that do?\"", "\"Capitally, thanks. And, look here, Algy; I can't bear any music to-night, so will you get mamma to set the McDougalls down to a round game? And play yourself, there's a good boy!\"", "\"Oh, Minnie, you ought to have been Mrs. Nero. There never was such a tyrant. Well, Pawkins and I must make ourselves agreeable, I suppose. For England, home, and beauty -- here goes!", "\"Isn't he a nice fellow?", "\"But now, tell me -- do sit down here; I want to talk to you. You come so seldom. I wonder why you came to-night?\"", "\"I chanced to meet Mrs. Bodkin in the street, and she asked me so pressingly -- she is so good!\"", "\"It is a pity mamma should have teased you,", "\"I am not fit to go to evening parties,", "\"The very wax-lights dazzle me. I feel like a bat or an owl.\"", "\"Too wise for your company, that means!\"", "\"How can you say so? No: I assure you I was compared to an owl the other evening by a lady, and I felt the justice of the comparison.\"", "\"By a lady! What lady?\"", "\"The lady was Mrs. Errington,", "\"She called you an owl? That eagle? Well, she has this aquiline quality; I believe she could stare the sun himself out of countenance!\"", "\"To tell me -- -- ? Oh, yes; about the Methodist preacher. That caricature is not like him, you say?\"", "\"Not at all. It is a vulgar conception of the man.\"", "\"And the man is not vulgar? I am glad of that! Tell me about him.\"", "\"The man is like a flame of fire,", "\"It is wonderful! He must be like Garrick, according to the descriptions I have heard. And, then, this fellow is so handsome -- wild and oriental-looking. I always long to clap a turban on his head, and a great flowing robe over his shoulders.\"", "\"That is for his manner,", "\"The man is an enthusiast, you know,", "\"But as to his doctrine? Give me some idea of the kind of thing he says.\"", "\"Excuse me; I cannot enter into the subject now.\"", "\"Perhaps. I don't know.\"", "\"that Algernon Errington should have refused his cousin's offer?\"", "\"Ah! you think Mr. Filthorpe of Bristol is not to be condoled with on the occasion?\"", "\"Who tells you that I do not like him? You are mistaken in fancying so. I think Errington one of the most winning fellows I ever knew in my life.\"", "\"Y-yes; but you don't think so well of him as I do.\"", "\"I know nothing about your thoughts on the subject!", "\"Forgive my interrupting you; but when I am to have a cold shower-bath, I like to pull the string myself. Now it's over.\"", "\"You think me a terrible bear,", "\"To be spoiled?\"", "\"For him to have lost his father when he was a child. Otherwise he might not have been so pampered: though fathers spoil their children sometimes!\"", "\"Mine spoils me, I think. But then there is an excuse, after all, for spoiling me.\"", "\"My dear Miss Bodkin, you cannot suppose that I had any such meaning.\"", "\"You? Oh, no! You are honest: you never speak in innuendoes. But it is true, you know. My father and mother have spoiled me. Poor father and mother! I am but a miserable, frail little craft for them to have ventured so much love and devotion in!\"", "\"who would not embark all their freight of affection in such a venture as the hope that you would love them again? I think your parents are paid.\"", "\"Why, how do you do, Mr. Diamond? Dear me! I little expected to see you this evening. Dear Minnie, how are you now? Well, this is a surprise!\"", "\"Now, I hope, Minnie, you won't owe me a grudge for it; but I must confess that if it hadn't been for me, you wouldn't have had that gentleman to entertain this evening.\"", "\"What on earth do you mean?", "\"he told me himself that he had been a sizar.\"", "\"Papa, was Mr. Diamond a sizar?\"", "\"I don't know, child. Very likely. None the worse for that, if he were.\"", "\"Pooh! Ten to one it isn't true then. She has her good points, poor woman, but the Ancrams are all liars; every one of them! Greatest liars in all the Midland Counties. It runs in the family, like gout.\"", "\"It does not seem likely, certainly, that Mr. Diamond should have confided the circumstance to Mrs. Errington,", "\"Confided! No; I never knew a man less likely to confide anything to anybody.\"", "\"However, after all, it is a thing which all the world might know, isn't it, papa?\"", "\"It doesn't follow that I'm sleepy because you yawn, papa!", "\"You are tired though, puss! I see it in your face. Go to bed. Mrs. Bodkin, get Minnie off to rest.\"", "\"Say 'God bless' me, papa,", "\"Don't I always say it? God bless you, my darling!\"", "\"I'm sure he doesn't appreciate you at all, Algy,", "\"But, my dear boy,", "\"how can we expect him to recognise talents like yours -- gentlemanly talents, so to speak? The man himself is a mere plodder. Why, he was a sizar at college!\"", "\"stand up for old Diamond,", "\"Well, ma'am, plenty of great men have been poor scholars. Dean Swift was a sizar.\"", "\"And Dean Swift died in a madhouse! So you see, Algy!\"", "\"You could not broach a subject less interest- ing to my mother,", "\"I am not fool enough to suppose that you care what I think,", "\"And wherefore then did you ask me?", "\"Because I love you,", "\"I know it's hopeless: I felt it the moment I had said it. But I can't always act like a man of the world. I wish I had never met you.", "\"T^5S