| James Thomas Farrell - 1993 - 936 pages
...spread out, arms on each other's shoulders, and moved along singing: Hail, hctil, the gangs all herel What the hell do we care, What the hell do we care now. They walked on along the tennis courts on South Park Avenue, talking away. Studs didn't listen... | |
| Ernest Hebert - 1993 - 478 pages
...mean snow to be moved except by his own forces of wind, rain, and sunshine. Ollie was singing now, "Hail, hail, the gang's all here, what the hell do we care? Do dum, dee dum. Hail, hail" ... the song drifted away. These moments of pursuit were not so bad anymore,... | |
| 1995 - 88 pages
...come up.) ALL. Hail! Hail! The gang's all here. What the hell do we care? What the hell do we care? Hail! Hail! The gang's all here. What the hell do we care now! (The Mammoths are engaged in a huge celebration in Bruce and Author's hotel room. Author enters... | |
| William Maxwell - 1995 - 440 pages
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| Arthur Sullivan, William Schwenck Gilbert - 2001 - 1222 pages
...heard at the New York opening night Its tune was subsequently taken up by Americans for the chant: Hail! Hail! The Gang's all here. What the hell do we care? What the hell do we care? The first known printing of this transatlantic version of the pirate's chorus dates from 1908. It was... | |
| Nathaniel Lande - 1998 - 434 pages
...and voices which they thought were gone came back. They could cheer. Those who could not applauded. "Hail, hail, the gang's all here. What the hell do we care?" The 23rd Engineers went by. A roar went up from the crowds that would have done well on Armistice Day.... | |
| Tammy Rose - 2002 - 158 pages
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| Tammy Rose - 2002 - 157 pages
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